Quiz 5 part 2 Flashcards

1
Q

when is the rearrangement of heavy chain gene segments happening

A

in early pro-B and late pro-B

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2
Q

is it likely that heavy chain rearrangement will succeed or fail?
EXPLAIN

A

there is a high probability that it will fail.

junctional diversity (P and N nucleotides) can shift the reading frame of the nucleotide sequence, resulting in a non multiple of 3 and nonfunctional genes

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3
Q

explain why junctional diversity (P&N nucleotides) is both good and bad

A

good – it can generate a lot of diversity

bad — high probability of a frameshift mutation and ultimate failure

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4
Q

what is the probability of Pro-B cell rearrangements failing/succeeding

A

66% chance of NONproductive rearrangements
33% chance of productive rearrangements and development proceeding

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5
Q

between early pro-B and late pro-B, which has a better chance of a productive rearrangement?

EXPLAIN

A

early pro-B has a better chance at productive rearrangement
this is so because early pro-B is DJ recombination and D gene segments are functional in all 3 reading frames

the variable region only has ONE reading frame for the V-DJ recombination, so it’s less likely to be productive (1/3 chance)

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6
Q

explain how chromosomes play a role in heavy chain recombination

A

in early pro-b, since there’s a high chance of development, recombination happens on BOTH loci (chromosomes)

however, in late pro-b, recombination happens at 1 locus at a time. if rearrangement is not productive on one chromosome, we move to another and try again

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7
Q

if heavy chain rearrangement is successful, what happens?

A

the B cell differentiates into LARGE, dividing B cells, producing mu heavy chain

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8
Q

approximately what% of large pre B cells produce a functional mu heavy chain?
what happens if unsuccessful?

A

~50%
apoptosis

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9
Q

what is the checkpoint for late pro-B cells

A

testing to see if produced mu heavy chain is functional (productive)

tested if it’s able to associate with light chain

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10
Q

HOW is this checkpoint of the mu heavy chain conducted?

A

cells produce a SURROGATE light chain

VpreB — similar to variable region of light chain
lambda5 — similar to constant region of light chain

mu chain homodimers assemble with surrogate light chain, Iga and IgB IN THE ER

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11
Q

explain what the pre-B cell receptor is

A

the pre-B cell receptor IS THE CHECKPOINT PROCESS to test the mu heavy chain

mu heavy chain homodimers assemble with surrogate light chain, and coreceptors Iga and IgB IN THE ER

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12
Q

If the first checkpoint is passed, (the newly made mu functional chain CAN FORM A large pre B cell receptor)

WHAT HAPPENS

A

Iga and IgB have cytoplasmic tails that signals to the pro-b cell to:

-terminate gene rearrangements. no longer needed

-stimulate several rounds of cell division

-VpreB and lambda5 promote pre b cell receptor oligomerization

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13
Q

if the first checkpoint is NOT passed, what happens?

A

Iga and Igb do NOT give survival signals and the cell undergoes apoptosis

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14
Q

upon successful passing of the first checkpoint, several important signals are sent via transcription factors to stop further recombination.
explain this further

A

RAG complex proteins are ceased to be expressed

Degradation of existing RAG complex proteins

chromatin structure is remodeled, INHIBITING transcription

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15
Q

what is the purpose of these important signals, sent via transcription factors, to STOP FURTHER RECOMBINATION?

A

ALLELIC EXCLUSION

– no heavy chain rearrangement on the second locus

if both loci were allowed to produce heavy chains, B cell receptor binding would be suboptimal (low avidity)

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16
Q

allelic exclusion gives _______ B cell receptors with high avidity binding

A

HOMOGENEOUS

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17
Q

NO allelic exclusion gives ____ B cell receptors with low avidity binding

A

heterogeneous

18
Q

structurally, what exactly are large pre-B cells?

A

large oligomers of repeating preBCRs

19
Q

what happens to large pre-B cells?

A

they divide, producing ~100 clones of small pre-B cells.
this is called CLONAL EXPANSION

20
Q

the large pre-B cells divide, producing ~100 clones of small pre-B cells (clonal expansion)

are all of these small pre-B cells producing the same heavy chain?

A

YES – -we turned everything off to prevent transcription of another heavy chain

21
Q

do small pre-B cells still express the surrogate light chain?

A

NO – it was just a test

22
Q

WHERE are small pre-B cells producing their heavy chain?

A

in the ER – the heavy chains are ready to assemble

23
Q

is the small pre-b cell still expressing preBCR?

A

NO

24
Q

in small pre-B cells, the rearrangement of _____ begins

A

light chain (VJ) rearrangement

25
Q

in order for small pre-B cells to do light chain rearrangement, what has to happen?

A

RAG complex proteins must be reactivated

26
Q

small pre-B cells are ______ of ______ with identical ________

A

small pre-B cells are HUNDREDS of CLONES with IDENTICAL HEAVY CHAINS

27
Q

does the light chain rearrange 1 locus at a time or both? explain

A

one locus at a time

K rearranges first.
if unsuccessful, lambda locus is rearranged

28
Q

light chains are able to produce _____ rearrangements. explain this

A

SUCCESSIVE rearrangements

if the first attempt fails, rearrangement occurs on the same allele until the gene segment availability is exhausted

29
Q

what is the success rate of light chain rearrangement?

A

85% success rate

30
Q

light chain successive rearrangements usually results in more ____ chains than _______ chains

A

more kappa chains than lambda chains

31
Q

there is EXCLUSIVE lambda chain expression where?

A

IgD in upper respiratory tract

32
Q

light chain rearrangement with K light chain on one chromosome was not successful.
explain the chain of events that happens now (successive rearrangement process)

A

we will move to K region on the other chromosome.
if this is also unsuccessful, we will recombine the lambda light chain

33
Q

true or false:

the majority of the time, light chain rearrangement will be successful

A

true – 85% of the time

34
Q

what is the second checkpoint?

A

can the new light chain form a functional B cell receptor with the mu chains in the ER?

35
Q

at the time of the second checkpoint, are mu ready chains in the ER and ready to be assembled?

A

YES

36
Q

If the second checkpoint is passed, (the new light chain can form a functional BCR with the mu heavy chain) what will happen?

A

the BCR will be formed

further assembly of Iga and Igb allows expression on the cell surface

this surface expression initiates signaling to HALT LIGHT CHAIN REARRANGEMENTS

37
Q

If the second checkpoint is not passed, what happens?

(new light chain is not able to form a BCR with mu heavy chain)

A

the cell undergoes apoptosis

38
Q

out of the 100 clones of small pre-b that were formed, around how many will become fully formed?

A

around 85

39
Q

the expression of the BCR on the surface with a light chain and a heavy chain and all rearrangements are stopped.

what B cell is this?

A

immature B cell

40
Q

all the heavy chains are ____ and all the light chains are ___

A

all the heavy chains are IDENTICAL and all the light chains are DIFFERENT

–diverse population of antigenically distinct B cells

41
Q
A