T cells and Antigen Presenting cells Flashcards

1
Q

There are two major groups of T cells which are they?

A
  • Cytotoxic T-cells
  • Th-cells
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2
Q

What does the T cell receptor consist of?

A

The TCR complex consists of
- α chain and β chain (both together
form the antigen binding site)
- CD3 molecules for signal transduction
Co-receptors:
- T helper cells => CD4 on surface
- cytotoxic T cells => CD8

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3
Q

Somatic recombination of TCR genes increases the diversity of TCRs, what is combinational and junctional diversity?

A
  • Combinatorial diversity: combination of different V(D)J genes to generate diverse α and β-chains
  • Junctional diversity: non-template encoded (N) and palindromic (P)
    nucleotides are randomly added
    between the V-(D-)J sequences
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4
Q

Recognition of antigens by T cells requires antigen-presentation, what is Major histocompatibility complex (MHC)?

A

They are surface molecules for antigen presentation. MHCs present peptides.
All nucleated cells are APCs and express MHC class I. Other APCs, such as dendritic cells, B-cells, macropahge, MHC class II-expressing cells.

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5
Q

MHC polygenicity, polymorphisms and co-dominant expression of alleles increase…

A

the diversity of presented
peptides

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6
Q

For antigen processing and presentation, where do the MHC 1 and 2 pathways occur?

A

MHC class 1 => intercellular antigen
MHC class 2 => extracellular antigen

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7
Q

Activation/priming of naive T cells in lymph nodes requires three signals which?

A

Signal 1: Recognition of
antigen presented on MHC I
or II
Signal 2: co-stimulation
Signal 3: cytokines pass on
additional information – next
lecture

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8
Q

Name the consequences of T cell activation for CD4 cells and CD8 cells?

A
  • Activation of CD4 cell
    → clonal expansion,
    → polarisation into T helper cell subsets
    → effector phase
    → immune memory
  • Activation of CD8 cell
    → clonal expansion
    → effector phase (cytotoxicity)
    → immune memory
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9
Q

The effiency of B cell memory is reliant on the number of responses?

A

After the second (infection) response B cells produce more antibodies, is quicker to react, and there is a higher antibody affinity

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10
Q

What is immunological tolerance?

A

The state of unresponsiveness to molecules that the immune system could recognize and attack

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11
Q

What are self antigens?

A

They are peptides that originate from our own body and are continously presented on MHCs. Immunological tolerance is needed to avoid T-cells attacking endgenous tissues

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12
Q

Where and how the does body test that TCR can recognize MHC and peptide combo and that it is not recognized with too high affinity?
(4 outcomes)

A

Its carried out in the thymus.

If there is no affinity between TCR and MHC the T-cell will not be selected and go through apoptosis

If there is a low affinity between TCR and MHC then its selected. It will have either CD4 or CD8, depending on if it recognized MHC II or I

If the affinity was intermediate the T-cell be selected, however it will become a regulatory T cell (Treg)

If there is a high affinity there will be a negative selection. Apoptosis.

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13
Q

What are the effector functions of cytotoxic T cells CD8+ ? (2 types of killing)

A

There is perforin/granzyme mediated cell killing and FAS/FAS-L mediated cell killing.

In perforin/granzyme mediated killing, the t-cell binds to the target cell releases perforin and granzyme into the target cell. perforin induces the uptake of granzyme into the endosome. the granzyme => apoptosis of cell

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14
Q

There are 2 ways T helper cells CD4+ contribute to activation of
cytotoxic T cells, which?

A
  • CD4+ helper Tc produces cytokines that stimulates CTL differentiation
  • CD4+ helper Tc enchances the ability of APCs to stimulate CTL differentiation
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15
Q

Antibodies can change its affinity maturation, change from membrane to sectreted form, and in isotype switching. Which are Th-cell dependent?

A
  • affinity maturation requires Th-cells
  • change from membrane to sectreted form is Th-cell independent
  • isotype switching is Th-cell dependent
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16
Q

What are dendritic cells? (An antigen presenting cell)

A

Dendritic cells are specialized macrophages that functions as a bridge between the innate and the adaptive immune system.