Dendritic Cells Flashcards

1
Q

Characteristics of DCs?

A

Dendrites - long processes
Immature migrate from bone marrow to blood
Sense the environment for damage/infection and migrate towards the site
Several pathways of antigen uptake (better than macrophages)

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2
Q

Types of DC?

A

Classical - cDC, in tissues, subsets 1 and 2
Plasmacytoid DCs
Sentinels for viral infections, secrete class 1 interferons
Also includes intracellular PRRs TLR7 and 9 for viral recognition
Monocyte-derived/inflammatory DCs
Respond to infection with monocyte factor and CCR2
Support effector T cells
Langerhans cells
In skin, can self renew

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3
Q

cDCs?

A
cDC1 - needs BATF3 or IRF8
Cross-present to CD8+ T cells
Express CD8aa, DEC-205 or CD103
Produce more IL-12
Express TLR3 for biral recognition

cDC2 - IRF4 dependent
Good at priming naive t cells
TD4 responses
Express CD11b, DCIR2, CD301b, CD4 or SIRPa

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4
Q

Intestinal DCs?

A

Needed for gut homeostasis, for protective immunity and tolerance of commensal bacteria
Tolerance via CD103+ DCs, using TGFbeta and retinoic acid, to generate Tregs

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5
Q

cDCs in normal tissues?

A

Immature
Dendrites
Low expression of costimulatory molecules
Chemokine receptors for migration
Endocytosis of soluble antigens, containing many vesicles with MHCII and lysosomal proteins

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6
Q

Antigen uptake in DCs?

A

Uses phagocytic receptors like complement Rs, FcRs, C-type lectins

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7
Q

Types of antigen processing in DCs?

A
Receptor mediated phagocytosis
Macro-pinocytosis
Viral infection
Cross-presentation (after first 2)
Transfer from incoming to resident DC
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8
Q

Cross presentation in DCs

A

Uses MHCI molecules (which act endogenously) for exogenous antigens
Uptake into phagolysosome, digested, antigens processed and presented on MHC1

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9
Q

DC maturation

A
  1. Pathogen recognition
    Uses PRRs = pathogen induced ‘licencing’

TLR signalling changes DC chemokine receptors, inducing CCR7 for CCL21 and down-regulating those needed for migration

  1. DCs move in lymph to lymph nodes
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10
Q

Morphology of mature DCs?

A

In circulation, membrane folds to increase surface area
In lymph nodes, MHC-peptide complexes expressed

High levels of costimulatory molecules
Reduced antigen uptake
Stable MHC molecules
Attract naive T cells with adhesion molecules and CCL18 chemokine secretion

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11
Q

How do DCs activate T cells?

A

Priming - Ag presented to naive T cells, called polarising the immune response
Depend son accessory cells, DC subtype, TLR ligands (licensing DCs)
Cytokines
Cell type

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12
Q

Main APCs?

A

Macrophages and DCs, activated by PRRs
B cells, activated by BCRs

BCs and macrophages interact with already primed effector CD4 t cells, so do not initiate the immune response like DCs do

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13
Q

Application of DCs?

A

Can be used to boost immunity
In cancer, specific licencing of DCs with tumour cells may help recognise tumour self cells as dangerous (not very successful)

DC Vaccines
1st gen - safe, not effective
Second gen - better antigen prep and better clinical use

Next-gen - seems both safe and effective

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