T4L6 - B cells and antibody Flashcards

1
Q

Antigen-specific definition

A

The antibody binds to a particular antigen (eg measles) with high affinity, but not to other antigens (eg pneumococcus)

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2
Q

Antigen binding site

A

(FAB) is made up of light chains and heavy chains
VARIABLE
Antibodies recognise epitopes

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3
Q

Antibody isotopes

A

Different heavy chains

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4
Q

B cells and antibodies

A

Antibodies attach to cells at Fc region

Each B cell produces 1 antibidy

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5
Q

IgA

A

Found in secretions - gut, tears and saliva
Forms dimers
Secretory component

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6
Q

IgM

A

1st produced
Low affinity for antigen
Pentamers

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7
Q

Opsonisation

A

Bacteria coated by circulating antibody
Phagocytic cells have receptors for the Fc portion of the antibody
This enhances phagocytosis by reducing the repulsion between two negatively charged membranes

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8
Q

Mast cell activation

A

Cells have Fc receptors
Coated with IgE
Antibodies crosslink and degranulate them
Histamine released

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9
Q

Somatic recombination advantages

A

Huge diversity – we can recognise whatever is in our environment
A large numbers of receptors can be made from a smaller area of DNA
Everybody has a unique repertoire – resilient in different environments/ against emergent pathogens
Still inherit the gene segments, so get some benefit from evolutionary experience

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10
Q

Somatic recombination disadvantages

A

• The receptors are generated at random - many combinations will not work out:
○ Some can’t fit together biochemically
○ Some will bind to our own proteins (self antigens)
• B cells with dysfunctional receptors mostly destroyed (deleted) – process is therefore energy intensive
Deletion of B cells that can recognise self-antigens is not complete – potential for autoimmune disease

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11
Q

Clonal selection .

A

We all start with a unique set of B cells, each producing a single antibody; small number of each B cell

Best one chosen

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12
Q

Affinity maturation

A
  1. Class switch: IgM in the ‘primary response’ switches to IgG. The variable region of the antibody remains the same
  2. Somatic hypermutation: Random mutations are introduced into the variable region of the antibody, so the daughter cells produce a slightly different antibody. Further rounds of clonal selection pick out the best receptors
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