Santangelo - T Cells Flashcards

1
Q

Clonal selection hypothesis

A
  • The lymphocyte precursor cell matures and generates many different types of naive T cells.
  • they make their way to the secondary lymphoid organs such as lymph nodes and the spleen where they are introduced to specific antigens.
  • If one of the T cells is a good match to an antigen present then that T cell will be cloned many more times.
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2
Q

T Cell receptor recognition of peptide-MHC complex

A

The T cell Receptor does not only recognize the peptide within the MHC complex, but it actually also recognizes some of the AAs that are on the MHC as well.

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3
Q

Co-stimulating of T cells

A

Signal 1 is the MHC/Peptide complex and the TCR
Signal 2 is B7 from the dendritic cell with the CD28 of the T cell.
- IMPORTANT - when the dendritic cell is activated it up regulates B7 (As well as MHC) on its surface in order to increase co-stimulation.

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4
Q

How does the co-stimulation using B7 create tolerance?

A

Because only in true attacks are the dendritic cells activated to express B7 on their surface. It is possible usually that you can have MHC molecules expressing peptides. Without the co-stimulator though nothing will happen.

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5
Q

WHy is co-stimulation. An. Issue in cancer?

A

Because they are out own cells, the dendritic cells will not be activated and therefore there will be a lack of B7. This is because it is our own cells. The MHCs will still be presenting our peptides, but without co-stimulation, nothing will happen.

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6
Q

How are T cells turned off???

A

A molecule called CTLA-4.

  • this molecule is up regulated shortly after the T cell is activated and it comes to the cell surface.
  • it binds B7 in order to disrupt co-stimulation and therefore there will be no T cell response.
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7
Q

How is CDLA-4 involved in treatment?

A

They give a soluble version of CDLA-4 that is not bound to anything. It will then float around and eventually bind to the dendritic cells B7 so that there is no co-stimulation and thus lessening of the immune response.
- used to treat autoimmunity or overactive immune systems.

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8
Q

How can we manipulate CTLA-4 to treat people with tumors?

A

We can add something that blocks CTLA-4 from interacting with B7, so the immune response is prolonged. Therefore the tumor can have a better chance of being cleared.
- YERVOY - ipilimumab

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9
Q

Components of T cell receptor complex

A

You have the alpha and beta chains which are on the outside that interact with the antigen.
Then we have to have something on the inside to relay the message, that is called CD3 (epsilon and gamma chains). We also have a zeta chain to do this.
Attached to CD3 and the zeta chain we have these ITAMs.

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10
Q

Early signaling events in T cell activation

A

1) When there is a ligand attached to the alpha and beta portion of the T cell receptors, the ITAMs gets phosphorylated by an enzyme called LCK.
2) ZAP-70 then binds to the phosphorylated tyrosines, which then itself causes ZAP-70 to be phosphorylated. ZAP70 then goes on to phosphorylate and activate an enzyme called LAT

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11
Q

ICAM/VCAM

A

Adhesion molecules found on the dendritic cells that help the TCR bind to the dendritic cells.

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12
Q

We know that MHC Class II molecules activate CD4 cells. What happens next?

A

They can either become Th1, Th2, or Th17 cells depending on what they are fighting.

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13
Q

Th1

A

Produces IFN-gamma and is involved in macrophage activation.

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14
Q

Th2

A

Secreted IL-4, IL-5, and IL-13
Involved in allergic responses and fighting off parasites.
- mast cell, eosinophil activation

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15
Q

Th17

A

Secreted IL-17A, IL-17F- and IL22

Involved in inflammation and organ specific autoimmunity

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16
Q

Treg

A

Another possible outcome from CD4. It is responsible for inhibiting T cell activation. There are various mechanisms in which this occur that we don’t have to know.

17
Q

SIV

A

The viruses act on the peptide so that the “anchor” amino acids that are supposed to fit into the pocket of the MHC are mutated and therefore the peptide can’t be presented on the cell surface and thus CD8 T cells are not activated.

18
Q

T Cell Development

A

First you have every combination of T cells with various TCRs in the thymus.
Then there is positive selection where only like 5% of the thymocytes have useful T cells with useful TCRs
Then there is negative selection where of the ones with useful TCRs, some have TCR that bind too tightly so they are killed off too, leaving only a handful.

19
Q

Central Tolerance

A

When the affinity is too tight they are killed in the thymus.

20
Q

WHere do T cells mature?

A

They start on the outside of the. Thymus and. Slowly move into the middle of the thymus as they mature more.

21
Q

How does the thymus change with age? WHat is the consequence of this?

A

The thymus will shrink as you get older. The consequence of this is That there will be less thymocytes being made and thus less T cells will be made.

22
Q

T cell activation.

A
  • We have our naive T cells, which are T cells that have yet to be exposed to an antigen.
  • once the naive T cell is exposed to an antigen it likes it begins to proliferate. It makes effector cells and memory cells.
  • the effector cells are what will actually clear the infection and they make IL-4 and IFN-gamma
  • memory T cells are long lived cells that are antigen specific and will respond quickly upon reexposure.
23
Q

Ipilumimab

A

Binds to CTLA4 and doesn’t allow it to turn of T cells. Increased immune activity and killing of cancer cells.

24
Q

What are the basic mechanisms of Tregs?

A

Inhibitory Cytokines
Targeting dendritic cells
Cytolysis
Metabolic disruption