Cell mediated immunity and lymphocyte ontogeny Flashcards

1
Q

Review:

C3a and C3b

A

C3a for vasodilation and chemotaxis

C3b for opsonisation and focus for late component assembly into membrane pore

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2
Q

Why do we have different antibody classes

A

each carry out slightly different roles

all made at slightly different times in our development

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3
Q

IgM

A
Largest antibody molecule (pentamer) 
Mostly blood and lymphatics 
About 10% of the antibody pool 
First in primary antibody response 
Very effective agglutinator 
Efficient complement activator 
Important defence against blood- bonre spread of infectious organisms such as bacteria
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4
Q

Primary vs secondly response IgM, IgG

A
IgM composes the first component of the primary response and often a major component of the primary response, and docent change much (in amplitude) in the secondary response 
IgG comes up later in the primary response and comprises most of the secondary response 
There is a class switch when the B cells go from making IgM to IgG, but there is no change in specificity, still the same antigen binding sites
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5
Q

IgG

A
Small monomer 
70-75% of the immunoglobulin pool 
Diffuses into extravascular spaces 
Potent antitoxin antibody 
Effective barrier against virus infections 
Actively transported across placenta 
Good complement activator 
Strongly bound by phagocytic cells 
Enhancement of phagocytosis (opsonisation)
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6
Q

IgA

A

15-20% of human blood antibodies
Predominant class in seromucous secretions
Main role is protection of external body surfaces
Surface protection of gut, respiratory and GU tracts

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7
Q

IgD

A

Trace amounts in blood and other body fluids (because should only be on the surface to B cells)
Found on the surface of antigen sensitive naive B cells
receptor for antigen binding to activate naive B cells

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8
Q

IgE

A

Generally only trace amounts in blood
Binds strongly to mast cells (differentiated basophils)
Important in parasitic infections and allergies
Allergens binding to mast cell associated IgE, activates processes that lead to symptoms of allergy or asthma

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9
Q

How antibodies are used diagnostically and therapeutically

A

good stable molecules
High specificity against particular shapes
could be used as a detection test molecule

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10
Q

The problems with antisera antibodies

A

they’re always polyclonal, so you get heterogenous population and heterogeneous range of affinities, and a relatively small amount of what you are after
Can be used diagnostically but not therapeutically

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11
Q

Treating B-CLL

A
Indolent 
if aggressive 
RFC chemotherapy
R = rituximab (anti-CD20 Mab) 
F = fludarabine (purine analog) 
C = cyclophosphamide (alkylating agent)
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12
Q

Responses to grafts

A

initially CD8 cytotoxic responses

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13
Q

T cell colonel activation

A

In secondary lymphoid organs theres a large repitore of CD8 bearing T cells
Like all other lymphocytes they’re specific for a certain antigen, by their TCR
an antigen presented by either HLA-A,B or C will select out of this repitore the small number of CD8 bearing T cells that have high enough affinity to bind and get the first activation signal and then the additional signals will trigger the cell to respond or not
Proliferation and differentiation = clone of cytotoxic effector cells which move out of the secondary lymphoid organs go around the body looking for the same peptide presented on the same MHC and having the ability to use their TCR’s to bind to that and then to kill those targets, producing a memory cell population, larger in number and more longer circulating than the virgin cell from which they’re derived

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14
Q

The killing mechanisms

A
  1. release perforin + enzymes for polymerisation (similar to the late components)
  2. Hydrolytic enzymes (granzymes)
  3. cytokines TNFalpha, IFNbeta and gamma, that induce apoptosis
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15
Q

B cell ontogeny

A

Uncommitted stem cell
Pre-B cell (cytoplasmic mu chains)
Immature B cell (surface IgM)
Mature Bcell (surface IgM anf IgD)

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16
Q

Immunoglobulin genes

A

we have two sets of genes that code for antibodies, one set that codes for the heavy chain and two other similar sets that code for the light chains (kappa and lambda)
V, D and J axons, which combine to give the variable region and then downstream a series of Constant region axons that will code for the heavy chains. In the bone marrow there is random reassortment of Ib, Id and Ij cutting out the intervening material, this is a random process that happens independently of antigens what we can do is generate a coding region that contains VD and J that is going to code for the variable region of the heavy chain, the way we mix the axons gives us diversity

17
Q

B cell ontogeny and immunoglobulin genes - important points

A
  • Development in the bone marrow (primary lymphoid organ)
    Multiple V,D and J exons recombine –> V region
    Recombination independent of antigen
    variable region diversity arises from this
    B cells become committed to one Vh and one Vl
    Single constant region axons for each class
    Negative selection to remove strong self reactivity
    Class switching retains V region, changing C region
18
Q

Important points

A

Development in the thymus (primary lymphoid organ)
Multiple V,D and J axons recombine - Vregion
Recombination indépendant of antigen
T cells become committed to one Valpa and one Vbeta
Positive selection for HLA class I or II recognition
Negative selection against strong self reactivity