B cell development & Ab maturation (1/3) Flashcards

1
Q

What are teh 2 locations that B cells develop?

A

Marrow and lymph nodes (including spleen)

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2
Q

What is allelic exclusion?

A

That one B cell expresses only one antibody

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3
Q

How is immunological tolerance generated

A

By deleting self-reactive clones

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4
Q

What is the order of rearrangement of Ig genes during B cell development in the marrow?

A

First, heavy chain arrangement occurs

Then the light chain develops

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5
Q

What occurs during heavy chain rearrangement?

A

First, VDJ recombination creates a variable region

If it’s a funcitonal heavy chain (no stop codons, frame is ok), it’s expressed with a surrogate light chain

Signals tell the cell that it has a functional heavy chain

1/9 generate a functional heavy chian; it’s a limiting step

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6
Q

What is a pre B cell receptor?

A

Proteins that resemble a light chain

includes membrane lambda 5 (like a constant region) & VpreB(similar to variable region), two proteins that bind miu heavy chains in a way that mimics a light chain

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7
Q
A
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8
Q

Once the the heavy chain has done VDJ rearrangement & assembled a preBCR, then what happens?

A

Heavy chain rearrangement stops & light chain rearrangement begins

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9
Q

How many light chain recombinations occurs?

A

There are three VJ recombinations in the light chain at the same locus (can lead to rescue of nonproductive rearrangements)

There is a higher chance of generating a funcitonal light chain: 1/3 (as compared to 1/9 for making heavy chain)

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10
Q

How many checkpoints are there for B cells? When do they occur?

A

2 checkpoints: one at the pre B cell receptor before light chain rearrangement. A second at the end after light chain rearrangement (BCR)

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11
Q

How is regulation at these checkpoints accomplished?

A

Changes in levels of proteins involved in rearranging the Ig genes i.e. RAG 1/2 expression is reduced, access of the HC locus to the recombinase machinery is reduced

There’s also testing of the quality of Ig chains

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12
Q

What is the BTK gene?

A

It’s downstream of the BCR and is required for B cell development

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13
Q

What are the 2 types of B cell tolerance and where do they develop?

A

Central tolerance: to self antigens. Occurs in lymphocytes in central lymphoid organs i.e. marrow. Clonal deletion is the main mechanism (cell death)

Peripheral tolerance: to self antigens. Occurs in lymphocyt4es in the peripheral tissues i.e. spleen/lymph nodes. Clonal deletion, anergy (nonresponsive to signals), and clonal ignorance (cells don’t die)

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14
Q

What is the GC reaction?

A

Germinal center reaction: antigen-dependent B cell development

3 main steps:

  1. T cell dependent activation of antigen specific naive B cells (the precursor cells of GC rxn)
  2. Somatic hypermutation & Ig class switch –> high-affinity antigen-specific B cells with specialized effector functions
  3. Differentiation of antigen-selected GC B cells into memory B cells & plama cells, the carriers of antibody-dependent immunity
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15
Q

What 3 processes occur in 3 specific compartments of the GC?

A
  1. T cell zone = T-cell dependent activation
  2. GC dark zone = somatic hypermutaiton (SHM) & proliferation
  3. GC light zone = class switch recombination (CSR) & memory cell/plasma cell differentiation & selection for high-affinity B cell clones/against newly generated self-reactive B cell clones
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16
Q

What is somatic hypermutation (SHM)?

A

random mutagenesis, mostly single bp changes

limited to V(D)J regions (not C)

hypermutation is 10^6 more than normal mutation rate

Occurs only in mature, antigen-activated B cells

Combined with selection, results in clones making Ab’s with increased affinity for antigen (affinity maturation), particularly prominent in memory immunizations

17
Q

What is class switch recombination? (CSR)

A

A DNA rearrangement that allows the same VDJ to be expressed with different heavy chain constant regions

Allows you to have a particular V region but a different effect/use of it

18
Q

What are the two mechanisms of CSR’s?

A
  1. RNA processing: IgM to IgD
  2. DNA rearrangement: IgM to IgG, IgA, or IgE
19
Q

What are the 2 differentiated B cell states that result following the GC reaction?

A

Memory B cell: no Ig secretion, but rapid response to renewed Ag encounter w/high affinity & switched isotypes. Circulate b/w lymphoid tissues through the blood

Plasma cell: Ig secretion of high affinity and switched isotypes; home to the bone marrow

20
Q

What is X-linked agammaglobulinemia?

A

A human immunodeficiency syndrome caused by loss of Btk tyrosine kinase –> no B cells

Pt’s are susceptible to extracellular bacteria & viruses

21
Q

What is hyper IgM syndrome?

A

Human Immunodeficiency syndrome caused by deficiency of: AID, CD40 ligand, CD40, or NEMO (IKK). Result is no isotope switching and/or no somatic hypermutation. Susceptible to extracellular bacteria, pneumocystis carinii, and cryptosporidium parvum

22
Q

What is common variable immunodeficiency?

A

A human immunodeficiency syndrome caused by ICOS deficiency. It causes defective IgA and IgG production & leaves patients susceptible to extracellular bacteria

23
Q

What causes most B cell lymphomas?

A

Most derive from GC somatic mutations. You can tell because the cancer cells have undergone the class switch. Many GC-derived lymphomas are characterized by reciprocal balanced chromosome translocations i.e. follicular lymphoma is due to t(14;18) and affects the BCL2 gene