Dendritic cells and migration, host innate immune receptors Flashcards

1
Q

What do FcY receptors bind and what are it’s effects?

A

bind immune complexed consisting of IgG and antigens and induce internalization of the immune complexes. Can have activating or inhibitory effects. Leads to a signalling cascade.

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2
Q

What do C-type lectins bind and what are it’s effects?

A

Have lectin domains which recognise carbohydrates, which can be pathogenic or self. Can have activating or inhibitory effect. Are good for recognition and phagocytosis but also antigen presentation.

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3
Q

What do Toll like receptors (TLRs) bind?

A

Recognize PAMPs. Are on the plasma membrane where they bind dsRNA and on the endosome bind ssRNA (viruses).

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4
Q

Which signals cause DC maturations?

A

Danger signals (DAMPs) cause DC maturation, (which increases MHC expression, co-stimulatory molecules, migration, production of inflammatory cytokines and makes antigen processing/presentation possible.)

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5
Q

Which receptors recognise pathogens indirectly and to what does it lead?

A

Complement receptors and FC-receptors, this leads to opsonized microbes.

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6
Q

Which receptors recognise pathogens directly?

A

scavenger receptors (SRs) and pattern recognition receptors (PRRs).

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7
Q

What are examples of PAMPs and by what receptor are they recognised?

A

PAMPs are molecular signatures of invading pathogens, which can be cell wall components or DNA/RNA. They are recognized by PRRs.

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8
Q

Which receptors are intercellular?

A

NOD-like receptors and RIG-I-like receptors are intercellular (in the cytoplasma).

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9
Q

Which cytokine do all receptors stimulate?

A

All receptors stimulate NF-kB and this always leads to stimulating pro-inflammatory cytokines in the end.

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10
Q

Which proteins are important in the TLR signalling pathway?

A

MyD88 (ssRNA/TLR7/8/9) and TRIF (dsRNA/TLR3).

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11
Q

What do RIG-I-like receptors (RLRs) bind?

A

It recognizes viral RNA in the cytoplasm. It is TLR-independent.

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12
Q

What do NOD-like receptors (NLRs) bind?

A

Recognize PAMPs and endogenous molecules in cytosol. Can be Intracellular bacterial peptidoglycans and other components of the cell wall.

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13
Q

What protein is important in the NLR signalling pathway and to what does it lead?

A

the NALP protein oligomerizes and activates the inflammasome.

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14
Q

What is the function of IL-1B?

A

IL-1B is central in all the immune responses. It is stimulating adhesion, triggers other cytokine production, affect chemokines for migration, affects neutrophils and NK cells but most importantly stimulates co-stimulation of T-cells and is essential in T17 development.

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15
Q

What are examples of classical ways of vaccination?

A

Classical ways of vaccination are a whole-inactivated virus, a live-attenuated (weakened) virus, a protein subunit of a virus-like particle.

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16
Q

What are examples of Next Generation vaccination?

A

Next-generation vaccination use viral signatures like a viral vector, DNA or RNA. Or use antigen-presenting cells (with adjuvant) with epitopes for the virus.

17
Q

What does the adjuvant in vaccination do?

A

It activates the PRR.

18
Q

What is important for cancer vaccination?

A

For cancer vaccination we need activation of CD8+ T cells which requires presentation in MHCI, so the antigen needs to be cytosolic or cross-presented. Therefore you need a high amount of antigen and maturation of DCs. The subset of DC is also important.