B-cell Activation Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 signals that B-cells require for activation?

A
  1. The binding of a B-cell to its antigen
  2. The binding of the B-cell coreceptor to the complement factor C3d
  3. Linked antigen recognition by a follicular helper T-cell (CD40) which induces B-cell proliferation
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2
Q

What is the process and reason behind the conjugate pair of a B-cell and follicular helper T-cell?

A

The T-fh cell recognizes a peptide a peptide linked to the B-cell, CD40 and cytokines drive B-cell proliferation (delivered through a synapse)

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3
Q

What is the boundary region?

A

The area in lymphatic tissue where the B-cell and T-cells can intermingle and have some contact

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4
Q

In what ways do B-cells differentiate into plasma cells?

A

1st: The B-cell, T-cell conjugate pair moves to the medullary cord, these sometimes differentiate into low affinity IgM secretion plasma cells
2nd: Some B-cells will return to the follicles to form a germinal center, which results in somatic hypermutation and class switching.

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5
Q

What is the dark zone in germinal centers?

A

Contains centroblasts, which are rapidly proliferating B-cells undergoing hypermutation (currently low-affinity)

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6
Q

What does the light zone in germinal centers contain?

A

Centrocytes, which display the mutated B-cell receptors, testing them out, there are also a high concentration of FDC’s and T-fh cells here in the light zone

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7
Q

What determines how B-cells class swich?

A

Cytokines as well as the interactions between the CD40 (B-cell) and CD40L (T-cell)

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8
Q

What are Thymus Independent immune responses?

A

Some antigens do not require thymus-produced B-cells, which do not require T-cell help (common with bacterial antigens)

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9
Q

What type of B-cell does TI-1 antigen activate in high concentration?

A

Polyclonal B-cells

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10
Q

What are TI-2 antigens?

A

These antigens have highly repetitive structures like capsular polysaccharides, these activate the innate-like B1 cells

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11
Q

What are the characteristics of IgM antibodies?

A

Low affinity (produced before hypermutation), form pentamers to increase the overall binding strength, activates the complement system

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12
Q

What are the subclasses and general function of IgG antibodies?

A

IgG is the most abundant antibody in the blood, and operates in monomers.
IgG is a great all-around antibody
All four subclasses of IgG differ in the hinge region of the antibody structure
IgG1, IgG2, IgG3, IgG4

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13
Q

Which antibodies circulate in the blood?

A

monomeric IgA, IgG, and IgM

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14
Q

Which antibody primarily protects mucosal surfaces?

A

Dimeric IgA- there is a lot of SA, so there is a lot of dimeric IgA present in the body

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15
Q

How is dimeric IgA primarily obtained?

A

Through breastmilk

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16
Q

What do high affinity neutralizing antibodies do?

A

Prevent organisms and toxins from binding to host cells- preventative measure (IgG and IgA)

17
Q

Which antibodies activate the classical complement pathway?

A

IgM, IgG1, and IgG3 will recruit C1, activating the classical complement pathway

18
Q

What function do IgE antibodies serve?

A

These bind to mast cells, eosinophils, and basophils to serve as protection against parasites and type 1 hypersensitivity reactions

19
Q

What drives the promotion of antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity?

A

The binding of IgG to to Fc gamma receptors on natural killer cells, this promotes phagocytosis

20
Q

What are the symptoms and pathology of XLA?

A

There is defective B-cell receptor signaling, and thus no functional B-cells as a result
symptoms: susceptible to bacterial and fungal infections

21
Q

What are the symptoms and pathology of hyper IgM deficiencies?

A

Individual only produces low affinity IgM antibodies
CD40L deficiency
symptoms: susceptible to bacterial and fungal infections