T cells, effector functions and MHC Flashcards
MHCI structure; where is it expressed; how does it work
single alpha-chain that associates with beta-2-microglobulin non-covalently;
expressed endogenously on all nucleated cells;
virus infects cell-> hijacks protein production machinery-> host cell breaks down a sample of all proteins produced in a cell (proteosome) on RER-> load onto MHCI-> present at cell surface
MHC II structure; where is it expressed; how does it work
alpha-beta heterodimer
expressed on APC eg monocyte/macrophage/dendritic cell/b cell
fusion with bacterial antigens after phagocytosis
polymorphisms in MHC genes implications
these determine the aa that form peptide binding groove and what MHCs will present
each MHC has many gene variants-> codominant expression possible
tcr structure
heterodimer
two types: alpha-beta; gamma-delta
each chain has 1 varaible and 1 constant domain
variable domain comes from genes that undergo rearrangements from germline before translation
what kind of signals cause upregulation of co-stimulatory molecules (CD 28 AND 86)
infection
inflammation
what happens when T cells are activated
proliferation
cytokine production
what happens when CD4 is activated into Th1?
releases IFN-gamma-> activation and differentiation of macrophages
releases IL2+ IFN-gamma-> CD8 differentiates and proliferates
what happens when CD4 is activated into Th2?
th2 produces IL2/IL4/IL5/IL13
this promotes for b cells…
cell division/class switching/affinity maturation/differentiation into plasma cells/parasite clearance by activating eosinophils
what happens when CD4 is activated into Th17?
th17 produces IL17/IL21/IL22
helps epithelium/fibroblasts secrete antimicrobial peptides-> aid wound healing
attract neutrophils to infection site