Lecture 8 Flashcards

1
Q

Where do B-1 B cells and B-2 B cells come from?

A

1: self-renewing and usually found in the peritoneal/pleural cavities
2: from bone marrow
- follicular and marginal zone

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2
Q

Where are B-1 B cells antigen-activated? What are the differences of B-1 B cells from B-2 B cells

A

microbiota in the gut
- limited V segment, less junctional diversity, no TdT

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3
Q

Where are MZ B cells found? What differentiates them from FO B cells?

A
  • spleen and lymph nodes
  • respond rapidly to blood-borne microbes and differentiate into short-lived IgM secreting plasma cells
  • express IgM in the absence of IgD, express high levels of CD21
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4
Q

What differentiates FO B cells from MZ B cells?

A
  • express both IgM and D
  • migrate between secondary lymph organs and reside in the follicles
  • make Th dependent Ab responses to protein antigens
  • make high-affinity Abs and memory B cells
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5
Q

What kinds of self-Ag can a b cell come in contact with in the bone marrow?

A
  • soluble and membrane bound
  • monovalent or multivalent
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6
Q

What happens if the immature B cell binds to self Ag?

A

receptor editing (continues somatic recomb where it left off)

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7
Q

What happens if a BCR gets tested with a monovalent self-antigen?

A

no cross-linking, no signalling– can leave the bone marrow but becomes anergic

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8
Q

what is central tolerance?

A

screening process for self-reactivity and eliminating self-reactive cells in the bone marrow

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9
Q

What would happen if bacterial pathogen infected the bone marrow?

A

B cells that recognized the antigen would undergo apoptosis

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10
Q

What is the structure of the spleen?

A

red pulp, white pulp separated by the marginal zone

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11
Q

What is the periarteriolar lymphoid sheath? PALS

A

zone for the T cells

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12
Q

How does an immature B cell become mature?

A

In the spleen: the immature B cell goes through transitional stage– differentiate between FO B and MZ B
- peripheral tolerance: B cell gets exposed to other self Ag in the PALS
- if it still survives: CXCL13 expression and enter follicle (mature FO B cell)

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13
Q

What is BAFF?

A

B cell activator factor– required for the B cell to stay alive

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14
Q

What do FDCs produce?

A

BAFF, CXCL13

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