Lecture 18 - Tumor Immunology and Immunotherapy Flashcards

1
Q

What are the two methods in which the immune system can respond to pathogens/abhorrent cells.

A

1 - Humoral immunity

2 - Cellular immunity

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2
Q

Describe both the humoral and cellular antibody response of the immune system.

A

Antibodies molecules are a humoral immune response and are capable of binding/recognizing certain antigens.

Antibody-bound cells are then destroyed via Macrophages - WBCs natural killer cells

The cellular immune response are the cytotoxic T-lymphocytes (CTLs) that bind and destroy targeted cells.

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3
Q

What is an adaptive immune response? How does it happen?

A

An adaptive immune response is when the immune system responds to a previously encountered pathogen.

Here, a sample of the antigen is taken up and recognized by a dendritic cell. The productive interactions between APC and helper T cells then leads to antibody production via the MHC class II and T-cell receptor.

The antigen antibody interactions attract complement proteins that open channels in the antigen presenting cell. MHC class I then displays a portion of all recently synthesized proteins on the target cell.

Killer T cells recognize MHC I and target the antigen displaying cell for destruction.

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4
Q

How to T cells kill? 2 step process.

A

1 - Perforin punches holes through plasma membrane of target cell (Granzymes enter cell)
2 - T cell introduces FasL ligand to the extracellular Fas receptors stimulating the extrinsic apoptosis pathway.

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5
Q

What is immune tolerance? What are regulatory T cells used for?

A

Immune tolerance is the fact that the immune system must be able to differentiate between self vs. non-self.

Regulatory T cells, T-reg’s, block cytotoxic T cells before they can eat healthy components in the environment.

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6
Q

What is immunosurveillance?

What are TSTAs, TATAs?

What happens if normal cells express the same antigens as the cancer cells?

A

The immune system, like a totalitarian state, monitors tissues for the presence of tumors.

Tumor cells can have specific antigens

Tumor specific transplantation antigens (TSTAs or TSAs)

Tumor associated transplantation antigens
(TATAs or TAAs)
***Melanomas often have high TATA expression & autoimmune response ensues

If the normal cells express the same antigens as the cancer cells then the immune system will attack the healthy normal cells.

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7
Q

Why are nude mice to awesome in cancer research?

What is IFN-y?

A

Nude mice lack thymus and the ability to properly train their T-cells (immunocompromised). However, they still retain some natural killer cells (NK).

Mice lacking interferon-y (IFN-y) are more susceptible to tumorigenesis. IFN-y is released by NK cells and attracts other immune macrophages. It leads to increased MHC-1 production in cells.

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8
Q

Macrophages, are they for or against cancer?

A

Macrophages can have both a pro-tumor and anti-tumor effect depending on the signal that is released. The signal determines which kind of macrophage is released.

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9
Q

How can the body detect cancerous cells a.k.a neoplastic tissues?

A

The body can distinguish between normal and cancer cells through antigens, MHC I and II complexes, etc…

Unusually shaped antigens such as p53, RAS, etc…

Overexpression of a single antigen (HER 1/2)

Abnormal location and timing of embryonic precursors.

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10
Q

How can cancer cells avoid the immune system?

List 3 ways.

A

1 - Cancer cells can reduce their expression of MHC-1 preventing T cells from recognizing them. However… NK cells will still attack cells with low MHC-1 expression.

2 - Cancers can block the FasL pathway avoiding destruction (extrinsic apoptosis initiation avoidance)

3 - Cancer cells can launch counter-attacks on lymphocytes by altering the function of T-regs to inhibit T-regs AND Tcs.

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