ICL 1.1: Introduction to Adaptive Immunity Flashcards

1
Q

what is an antigen?

A

any molecule that stimulates the immune system

  • proteins
  • environmental like dust or pollen
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2
Q

what is an epitope?

A

the specific region of an antigen that binds the immunoreceptor

an antigen can have multiple epitopes

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3
Q

what is the cellular part of the adaptive immune system?

A

cell-mediated immunity by T cells

secreted and/or cell surface molecules

they provide signals for the maturation and/or
differentiation of other leukocytes

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4
Q

what is the humoral part of the adaptive immune system?

A

antibody mediated by B cells

antibodies target cells and molecules for removal

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5
Q

what are APCs?

A

antigen presenting cells

includes macrophage, dendritic, epithelial, and B cells

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6
Q

where are lymphocytes usually found?

A

lymphoid tissues and organs

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7
Q

what are primary/central lymphoid tissues?

A

sites of where lymphocytes develop and mature

T cells = thymus

B cells = BM

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8
Q

what are secondary lymphoid tissues?

A

they’re distributed throughout the body and are sites where naive lymphocytes encounter antigen and become activated

ex. lymph nodes, spleen, adenoids, tonsils, Peyer’s patches in SI, appendix

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9
Q

where do antigens go once they’re inside the body?

A

antigens are carried to the naïve lymphocytes in secondary lymphoid tissue, via the lymphatics

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10
Q

where are lymph nodes located?

A

lymph nodes lie at the junctions of lymphatic vessels, which collect extracellular fluid (lymph) from the tissues

antigens found in the tissues eventually are carried to lymph nodes

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11
Q

what are the functions of the spleen?

A
  1. a site of lymphocyte activation for blood-borne antigens

2. storage of immune memory (memory lymphocytes)

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12
Q

where are the B and T cells located in the spleen?

A

the white pulp!!!

B cells are in the germinal center

T cells are in the PALS

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13
Q

what is GALT?

A

gut associated lymphoid tissues

ex. tonsils, adenoids, appendix, Peyer’s patches

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14
Q

what is BALT?

A

bronchial associated lymphoid tissues

lymphoid tissue that lines the respiratory tract

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15
Q

what type of antibody does the GI tract have alot of?

A

IgA

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16
Q

what does TCR stand for?

A

T-cell receptor

17
Q

how does antibody binding work?

A

Ig/TCR are highly specific for a given antigen

antibodies made during infection with measles virus bind to the virus and prevent reinfection with measles virus

but antibodies made during infection with measles virus do not bind to influenza virus

18
Q

what are TCRs?

A

T cell receptor recognizes peptide associated with MHC molecule

MHC = major histocompatibility complex

19
Q

how is our immune response made specific?

A

the specificity of our immune responses resides in receptors like TCR and B cell receptors

20
Q

what does a B cell receptor do?

A

it’s a surface immunoglobulin that recognizes an antigen

21
Q

what’s the structure of a B cell receptor?

A

the immunoglobulin molecule is composed of two pairs of chains (H-heavy and L-light; mw), each of which can be divided into domains based on sequence similarity:

  • V region (variable)
  • C region (constant)

surface immunoglobulin has a light chain and a heavy chain

there’s also a transmembrane region and an antigen-binding site

22
Q

what’s the difference between the structure of an antibody and B cell receptor?

A

surface immunoglobulin has a transmembrane region that an antibody doesn’t have

23
Q

what’s the structure of a TCR?

A

TCR is made of an α and β chain

there’s an antigen binding site that is both on the α and β chain

there’s also a transmembrane region

24
Q

what are the different regions of the light and heavy chains of immunoglobulin?

A

both the light and heavy chain can be divided into domains = V region and C region

the V-region is variable and where there’s antigen binding

the C-region is constant and is what engages the innate immune system

25
Q

what defines an immunoglobulin’s antigen specificity?

A

hypervariable domains in each V region

you can look at the AA that make up both the heavy chain V region and the light chain V region

depending on which AAs are present in the binding pocket, it will tell you which antigen is most likely to bind

26
Q

where do antigens bind to immunoglobulin?

A

antigens bind in the pockets of the hyper variable regions of each arm of the immunoreceptor

in the V-region

27
Q

what are the steps in clonal selection?

A

during development, progenitor cells give rise to large numbers of lymphocytes, each with a different specificity

after an pathogen binds to a lymphocyte, there’s proliferation and differentiation of pathogen-activated lymphocytes to form a clone of the effector cell specific to that pathogen

effector cells eliminate pathogens!

clinical selection leads to the expansion of antigen-specific and pathogen-specific lymphocytes

28
Q

what is clonal selection?

A

each lymphocyte bears a single type of receptor of a unique specificity

interaction between a foreign molecule and a lymphocyte receptor leads to lymphocyte activation

activated lymphocytes will bear receptors of identical specificity to those of parental cell

lymphocytes bearing receptors for self molecules are deleted at an early stage in lymphoid cell development

29
Q

what do T cell antigen receptors recognize?

A

B cell produce Ab that can recognize native or denatured molecules

however, T cell antigen receptor CANNOT recognize intact protein antigens, but responds to peptide fragments bound to the surface of another cell (antigen presenting cell)

T cells respond to a peptide bound to a MHC molecule displayed on the surface of another cell, called an antigen presenting cell (APC)

30
Q

what does MHC stand for?

A

major histocompatibility complex

31
Q

what are class I MHC molecules?

A

class I MHC molecules are expressed on the surface of ALL nucleated cells

they’re recognized by TCR of cytotoxic T cells (CD8)

**CD8 binds to class I MHC-peptide complex

source of peptide is in the cytoplasm

32
Q

what are class II MHC molecules?

A

class II MHC molecules are expressed on the surface of some nucleated cells, mainly APCs

they’re recognized by TCR of helper T cells (CD4)

**CD4 binds to class II MHC-peptide complex

source of peptide is in the phagosomes

33
Q

what’s the function of MHC molecules?

A

they’re used to activate T cells

MHC I binds peptides from proteins found in the cytoplasm

MHC II binds peptides from proteins found in the phagosomes

34
Q

how do class I MHC molecules work?

A

MHC I binds peptides from proteins found in the cytoplasm

  1. virus infects cell
  2. viral proteins synthesized in cytoplasm
  3. peptide fragments of viral proteins are bound by MHC class I in ER
  4. bound peptides are transported by MHC class I to the cell surface of CD8 cells
  5. cytotoxic T cells recognize the complex of viral peptide with MHC class i and kills the infected cell
35
Q

how do class II MHC molecules work in a macrophage?

A

MHC II binds peptides from proteins found in the phagosomes

  1. macrophage engulfs and degrades bacterium, producing peptides
  2. bacterial peptides bound by MHC class II inside vesicles of macrophage
  3. bacterial peptides transported by MHC class II to the cell surface of macrophages
  4. TH1 cell recognizes the complex of peptide antigen with MHC class II and activates macrophage
36
Q

how do class II MHC molecules work in a B cell?

A

MHC II binds peptides from proteins found in the phagosomes

  1. cell-surface immunoglobulin of B cell binds and engulfs and degrades bacterium, producing peptides
  2. bacterial peptides bound by MHC class II inside vesicles of macrophage
  3. bacterial peptides transported by MHC class II to the cell surface of macrophages
  4. TH2 cell recognizes the complex of peptide antigen with MHC class II and activates B cell
37
Q

what’s the purpose of vaccines?

A

vaccination with pathogen-specific antigens or pathogens allows us to mimic the infection and induce protective immunity without inciting the primary disease

38
Q

how do allergies work?

A

allergies are unwanted inflammatory response that are mediated by the adaptive immune response

inhalation of pollen particles produces the symptoms of a respiratory infection through IgE-mediated degranulation of mast cells

mast cells release cytokines, histamine and other active substances

39
Q

what happens after a pathogen is recognized by the innate immune system?

A

after recognition of pathogen by innate system, APC’s present antigen to adaptive system to mount a clonal response

  1. microbes enter through and break in skin and are phagocytksed by dendritic cells
  2. dendritic cell matures and carries microbial antigens to local lymph node to become an antigen-presenting cell
  3. APCs activates T cells to respond to microbial antigens
  4. activated T cells migrate to site of infection to help eliminate residual microbes