Humoral immunity:B cell activation, affinity maturation and class switching Flashcards

1
Q

What do stem cells undergo?

A

• In the bone marrow, stem cells undergo DNA recombination to become immature B cell

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2
Q

What is there in the process of joining and what contributes to the diversity of the antibody?

A

• in the process of joining there is junctional flexibility and P and N nucleotide addition to contribute to the diversity of the antibody

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3
Q

What happens once the mature B cell encounters a pathogen and what is this for?

A
  • Once the mature B cell encounters a pathogen, it becomes activated and undergoes affinity maturation and class switching in the germinal epithelium
    * This is to code in the heavy chain constant region of the B cell
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4
Q

What is affinity maturation to further and what does it improve?

A

• Affinity maturation is to further hone the variable fragments of the antibody to that particular pathogen
-Improves affinity to the pathogen

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5
Q

What does the first domain of light and heavy makeup and what does the rest make up?

A

First domain of light and heavy makes up antigen binding variable fragment and the rest of the constant regions makes up effector function

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6
Q

What does the antigen binding variable fragment bind to and what does it do?

A

• In the antigen binding variable fragment, it binds to the docking site/host entry site of pathogen
○ Prevent the virus from entering cell
○ Or they bind to active site of toxins to neutralise them

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7
Q

What is opsonisation mainly for and what does it do?

A

• Opsonisation: mostly for bacteria as they are larger
○ Antibody tags its surface to recruit other cells e.g. macrophages that have Fc receptors – these bind to the active site of the antibody and carries out antibody dependent cellular phagocytosis

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8
Q

What region is the active site of the antibody?

A

Active site is in CH2 region of antibody ADCP

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9
Q

What will antibodies do to tumour cells which are large?

A

For tumour cells which are larger, it will opsonise them and will recruit NK cells to carry out ADCC – cellular cytotoxicity

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10
Q

How do antibodies form an immune complex and what does this cause?

A

• More and more antibodies can bind to the surface of the bacteria which forms an immune complex
○ This causes agglutination and precipitation as the complex precipitates out of the bloodstream, rendering the bacteria nonfunctional

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11
Q

What can you form immune complexes with other than antibodies and what does this lead to?

A

• Can also form immune complexes with complement known as complement fixing
○ Can lead to phagocytosis – agglutinates and precipitates and then is cleared

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12
Q

What can complement form in certain pathways and what does it do to tumour cells?

A

In certain pathways, the complement can form MAC (Membrane Attack Complex) which punches holes in the tumour cells, causing them to lyse

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13
Q

How many classes of antibodies are there and what are they determined by?

A

• 5 classes, all determined by 5 classes of heavy chain

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14
Q

How many heavy chain domains does IgG have and what stabilises it between the 2 chains?

A

IgG has 4 heavy chain domains – variable and constant 1, 2 3 – stabilised by two disulphide bonds between the heavy chains

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15
Q

What does IgD have a long region of and what is it stabilised by?

A

IgD has a long hinge region, stabilised by one disulphide bond

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16
Q

How many domains does IgE have?

A

IgE has 5 domains

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17
Q

What is the modification that IgA has but IgG doesn’t and what does this allow?

A

IgA is similar to IgG but the third CH3 domain has a modification so that it allows interaction with the J chain

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18
Q

What Ig is IgM similar to and what can it form and with the help of what chain?

A

• IgM is similar to IgD – 5 domains but it can form a pentamer with the help of the J chain

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19
Q

Abundances of Ig in serum

A

• IgG is the most abundant in serum followed by IgA and IgM

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20
Q

What is the only Ig to cross placenta?

A

• Only IgG crosses the placenta so mum can pass on antibodies to fetus

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21
Q

What Ig’s fix complement?

A

• IgM and IgG fix complement

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22
Q

What does IgG attract?

A

IgG attracts phagocytes

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23
Q

What does IgE attract?

A

IgE attracts mast cells and basophils

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24
Q

What is the first antibody to be produced after class switching?

A

• IgG is the first antibody to be produced after class switching

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25
Q

Life cycle of B cells(Antigen dependent)

A

• After VDJ recombination of B cells, they become mature circulating B cells
• Lymphoid progenitor stem cells give rise to T cells
○ T cells produced migrate to thymus where they undergo similar VDJ recombination to become TCRS
○ T cells receive signals from APCs and become activated and in turn activate B cells when there are pathogens
• B cell migrate to GC for selection
• GC is divided into dark and light zone
○ In dark zone: affinity maturation happens
• Honing of variable fragment to that particular pathogen
§ Involves clonal expansion, somatic hypermutation (enzyme creates mutation in its DNA)
○ In light zone: selection - selecting the BCR that binds to the pathogen the best
§ Undergoes class switching because by this time you know the pathogen being dealt with so need an appropriate class
• Differentiate into plasma and memory cells that will circulate in the blood and spleen

26
Q

How many stages is B cell activation divided into and what are they?

A

• Divided into two stages

  1. T cell independent B cell activation
  2. T cell dependent B cell activation
27
Q

T cell independent B cell activation

A

• When B cell encounters antigens expressed on the surface of the pathogens, it undergoes clonal expansion
○ Some of them will differentiate into IgM secreting plasma cells
○ This is the first line of defence

28
Q

T cell dependent B cell activation

A

• Some of the cells will migrate into the lymph nodes
• Needs to recognize antigens, internalize them and then present it in MHC class II
• Second step: activation by TCR
○ TCR has to recognize the antigens presented on B cells and APCs
• THC produce cytokines to complete the three step verification process that the b cell activation requires

29
Q

What are the 3 signals that the B cell activation requires?

A
  1. Antigen binding to BCRs
  2. Co-stimulation by activated Th cell specific to same antigen 3. Th cell-derived cytokines to verify that there is an active infection going on
30
Q

What does BCR binding cause the activation of?

A

Causes the activation of tyrosine kinase

31
Q

What does tyrosine kinase phosphorylate and activate?

A

• Tyrosine kinase phosphorylates other proteins and activates pathways involved in cell proliferation as B cell needs to make copies of itself

32
Q

What does VDJ recombination in the body produce?

A

• VDJ recombination in the body produce 1 billion B cells with unique BCRs

33
Q

What can BCR do when pathogen invades?

A

• When pathogen invades, the BCR that can bind to it and makes clones of itself

34
Q

Where do clones of BCR migrate to?

A

• Clones migrate to GC for affinity maturation

35
Q

Where does affinity maturation happen and what 2 cells is it helped by?

A

• Affinity maturation happens in the GC and is helped by two types of cells
○ T follicular helper cells (Tfh): subset of T cells that can enter the GC
○ Follicular dendritic cells (FDC): not your normal DCs

36
Q

Where do follicular dendritic cells stay in and present?

A

• FDC stay in GC and present antigens for selection process

37
Q

Steps involved in affinity maturation and class switching in GC

A

• B cells will be activated by Th and migrate to GC while undergoing clonal expansion
• Enzyme causing mutation in variable region
• Migrate to light zone and with the help of FDC and TFH it will undergo selection
○ This will repeat until affinity is high enough
• B cell will undergo class switching to select for the right antibody class before differentiating into plasma cells and memory cells

38
Q

What zones does affinity maturation happen in?

A

• Happens in dark and light zone

39
Q

Detailed steps involved in affinity matuation

A

• Activated T cell makes clones of itself
• Activation induced cytidine enzyme (AID) makes point mutations in the variable regions of the DNA
○ Before this, the B cells are clones
○ After AID, they are all unique B cells with unique mutations
• These migrate to the light zone where the Tfh present antigens on its surface
• B cells with high affinity BCR on surface will try to grab the antigens on its surface and then present to Tfh
○ Tfh will give a survival signal
• The rest also have point mutations in the DNA and these can cause improved affinity, reduced affinity or no improvement in affinity
○ Those with reduced or no improvement will undergo apoptosis because there is no survival signal from Tfh
• Have to repeat this process multiple times until affinity is high enough

40
Q

What happens to B cells once the affinity is high enough?

A

○ Once affinity is high enough, it progresses to the next stage – class switching

41
Q

What does class switching only affect and not affect?

A

• Class switching only affects heavy chain constant regions
○ Doesn’t affect variable regions of the heavy and light chain
○ Constant region of light chain stays the same

42
Q

What are the 2 different types of heavy class switching?

A
  1. Minor:Differential splicing(mRNA level)

2. Major:DNA recombination(Irreversible)

43
Q

What is minor class switching between?

A

○ Between IgM and IgD

44
Q

Reversibility of minor class switching

A

This is reversible

45
Q

What does major class swithich occur between?

A

○ Class switching can only occur from IgM to IgG, IgA, IgE ANDIgG to IgA, IgE

46
Q

Why is major class switching only between the specific Ig?

A

○ This is because of the locations of the constant regions

47
Q

What does class switch recomination(CSR) require?

A

○ Cytokine signal
○ Switch regions – similar to RSS but is in front of heavy chain constant region gene segments
○ AID and DSB (double stranded break) repair proteins

48
Q

What is recombination between in class switch recombination?

A

• Recombination between switch regions

49
Q

How does switching proceed in class switch recombination?

A

• Switching only proceeds downstream
○ IgM to IgG, IgA, IgE
○ IgG to IgA, IgE
○ E..g you cannot switch from IgE to IgA

50
Q

What does AID help in?

A

• AID helps in somatic hyper mutation

51
Q

What is the default after affinity maturation and before class switching?

A

• After affinity maturation and before class switching, B cell still makes IgM and IgD as this is the default

52
Q

What is the final form of Ig?

A

• Secreted form is final form

53
Q

When is Ig membrane bound?

A

• Membrane bound is during antibody development

54
Q

What piece does secreted Ig have?

A

• Secreted has tail piece

55
Q

What is the Ig anchor on the membrane made of?

A

• Membrane has an anchor made of hydrophobic transmembrane region and cytoplasmic tail

56
Q

What is true differential splicing?

A

• True differential splicing is how the B cell knows how to make both of these forms of antibodies

57
Q

What remains unchanged in DIFFERENTIAL SPLICING OF μ CONSTANT REGIONS?

A

• Leader VDJ remains unchanged

58
Q

How does differential splicing of μ constant regions for secreted heavy chains?

A

• For secreted heavy chains, the DNA region is transcribed into MRNA and spliced at first polyA site
§ This generates mRNA coding for the new secreted heavy chain

59
Q

What do you need to splice up first if you want to encode membrane bound new chain?

A

• If you want to encode membrane bound new chain, you need to splice up first polyA site

60
Q

What does differential splicing of μ constant regions?q

A

• Prevents antibody from secreting out of B cell