T Cells 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the different types of T cells?

A
  • Helper T cells (CD4)
  • Cytotoxic T cells (CD8)
  • Natural killer cells (innate immunity)
  • Gamma and Delta T cells
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2
Q

What types of cells will develop from CD4+ T helper cells?

A
  • Th0 (will become Th1 or Th2)
  • Treg cells (anti-inflammatory)
  • Th17 (pro-inflammatory)
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3
Q

Treg cells will further develop into what?

A
  • Natural
  • Adaptive (Th3 cells)
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4
Q

What is the general name for CD4+ and CD8+ T cells

A

Helper cells and effector cells

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5
Q

When a pathogen (virus or bacteria) penetrates the skin barrier, where does it then go?

A
  • Virus has to enter a cell to work
  • Bacteria can stay in the interstitium (extracellular) or it can enter the cell
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6
Q

How does the immune system extract or attack pathogens once they are in the cell?

A

They can’t. Once they are inside cells we have no way to attack them directly. We have to kill the cell.

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7
Q

What immune cell decides between extracellular or intracellular response to a pathogen?

A

Niave T cell (T 0) in response to stimulation from macrophage (IL12) or unknown [ninja] cell (IL4)

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8
Q

Th1 and Th2 cells will respond to intracellular or extracellular pathogens?

A
  • Th1 = Intracellular pathogens (cytotoxic)
  • Th2 = Extracellular pathogens (chemical/Ig)

Sometimes the wrong signal will be activated

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9
Q

What do Th reg cells do?

A

They dampen the immune response

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10
Q

What do Th17 cells do?

A

They are pro-inflammatory and recruit neutrophils to the site of an infection

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11
Q

Can T helper cells become memory cells?

A

Yes. All of the different types can become memory cells

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12
Q

What do cytotoxic T cells do?

A

They attack and kills cells with intracellular pathogens

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13
Q

What proteins are expressed on the surface of a thymocyte after it has come out of the bone marrow?

A

VLA 4, 5, 6

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14
Q

Where does the thymocyte go after it has come out of the bone marrow?

A

To the thymus

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15
Q

VLA 4, 5 and 6 are expressed on the thyocyte. What does VLA stand for and why is it called that?

A

VLA = Very Late Antigen. They are proteins that were produced at a later stage.

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16
Q

What do VLA 4 and 5 connect with in the thymus?

A

They connect with fibronectin

17
Q

What does VLA 6 connect with in the thymus?

A

Laminin

18
Q

What is the purpose of VLA 4, 5 & 6 attaching to Fibronectin and Laminin in the thymus?

A

It allows the thymocyte to home in on the thalamus and to stay there for further development