Antigen Capture and Presentation to Lymphocytes Flashcards

1
Q

TCR and MHC interaction

A

TCR/ T cells require MHC (MHC dependent)
peptide Ag at the MHC will interact with the variable region of the TCR
anchor residues of the peptide will anchor the Ag in the MHC pockets

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2
Q

Recognition of antigens by antibodies

A

can be mem bound or soluble

broaber specifity than TCR: can recognize more than just peptides

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3
Q

Migration of T lymphocytes

A

naive lymphocytes present in the LN, sample Ag

may encounter Ag and become active as an effector cell (Tc or Th), migrate to site

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4
Q

APCs

A

macrophages
dendritic cells
b cells

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5
Q

dendritic cell role

A
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6
Q

macrophage APC role

A
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7
Q

b cells APC role

A
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8
Q

Function of cytotoxic T cells (CTLs)

A
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9
Q

Role of Dendritic cells in antigen capture and presentation/ other important APCs?
what molecules does the DC use to recognize Ag?

A

found at skin, lungs, and GI: will capture Ag and migrate to peripheral LN or spleen
capable of recognizing the Ag via TLR or lecithin
once Ag is captured, cells lose adhesiveness for tissue and migrate and there is an increased expression of MHC and costimulators in the cell surface
will then interact with naive t cells to stimulate a t cell response

Macrophages and B lymphocytes are also important APCs

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10
Q

Costimulators are important for?

A

antigen presentation by dendritic cells to activate naïve T cells.

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11
Q

MHC

A

on APCs, will display Ag to TCR

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12
Q

MHC genetics

A

complex genes, class I and II loci that are highly polymorphic

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13
Q
class I MHC 
polymorphic regions 
peptide-binding cleft size
what binds TC coreceptor 
which t cells respond to these?
A

Polymorphic regions: a1 and a2
Peptide-binding cleft for peptides 8-9 aa long
a3 binds CD8 T-cell co-receptor
CD8+ T cells can only respond to antigen presented
by MHC class I molecules

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14
Q
class II MHC 
polymorphic regions 
peptide-binding cleft size
what binds TC coreceptor 
which t cells respond to these?
A

Polymorphic regions: a1 and b1
a2 and b2 bind CD4 T-cell co-receptor
Peptide-binding cleft for peptides 10-30 aa long
CD4+ T cells can only respond to antigens presented by MHC class II molecules

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15
Q

class II MHC on what cells

A

APCs

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16
Q

class I MHC on what cells

A

all nucleated cells

17
Q

expression pattern of MHC alleles

A

codominant

18
Q

significance of polymorphic MHC genes

A

many alleles in population

different people can present and respond to different microbial antigens

19
Q

codominant expression of MHC significance

A

increases the number of possible MHC molecules

20
Q

broad specificity of MHC

A

many peptides can bind the same MHC

21
Q

how many peptides can each MHC molecule display at one time? why?

A

only one, each t cell responds to only one peptide at a time

22
Q

MHC molecules bind only?

A

peptides

23
Q

when are the peptides of MHC molecules acquired?

A

during intracellular assembly, I and II can display Ag/peptides from different intracellular compartments

24
Q

stable surface expression of MHC requires?

A

a peptide to be bound

25
Q

off rate of MHC

A

very slow, displays peptide long enough for T cell recognition

26
Q

CD8+ Cytotoxic T cells (CTLs) recognize?

A

endogenous (cytosolic) antigen presented by MHC class I molecules on an infected cell

27
Q

endogenous (cytosolic) antigen presentation mechanism?

A
28
Q

CD4+ Helper T cells recognize?

A

exogenous antigen presented by MHC class II molecules on a professional antigen presenting cell (APC)

29
Q

exogenous antigen presentation mechanism

A
30
Q

cross-presentation

A

Class I MHC-restricted cross-presentation of microbial antigens from infected cells by dendritic cells

31
Q

class II MHC pathway: Ag presentation to Th possible ways

A

two ways possible

microbe uptake by macrophage, present in endosome> use of class II to present Ag to CD4= cytokines to activate macrophage and kill microbe

Ag specific b cells bind extracellular Ag, present to Th via MHC II=cytokine production causing b cell to produce secreted Ab

32
Q

class I MHC pathway: presentation to Tc

A

cytosolic Ag> Ag peptide associated with MHC I and presented to CD8 which then activates killing function and kills infected cell