Unti 2 - Lecture 10 Adaptive Immunity Flashcards

1
Q

What are some comparisons of the innate and adaptive immunity?

A
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2
Q

What are some characteristics of Adaptive (specfic) Immunity?

A
  • Includes B and T lymphocytes

—B lymphocytes are born and mature in the bone marrow.

—-T lymphocytes are born in the bone marrow and mature in the thymus gland.

  • Lymphatic system supplies lymphocytes to the bloodstream.
  • Lymphocytes congregate in the lymph nodes and exit through the outgoing lymph vessels.

—–Interaction with innate immune cells (dendritic cells)

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3
Q

What is the Lymphatic System?

A

Lymphatic System

  • Part of the circulatory system
  • Network of conduits called lymphatic vessels
  • Carries a clear fluid called lymph which contains white blood cells
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4
Q

What is the Primary Lymphoid Organs?

A
  • Sites of lymphocyte maturation
  • Bone marrow and thymus
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5
Q

What are Secondary Lymphoid Organs?

A
  • Sites of lymphocyte activation
  • Lymph nodes, tonsils, spleen and Perer’s patches
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6
Q

What are lymph nodes?

A
  • Organized lymphoid tissue distributed widely throughout the body
  • 500-600 in humans
  • Act as “filters” or “traps” for foreign particles
  • Dendritic cells take up antigens and activate lymphocytes
  • Become inflamed or enlarged during infection
  • Outer cortex: B cells and T cells
  • Inner medulla: macrophages, B cells, and plasma cells
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7
Q

What is involved in the spleen?

A
  • Located in the left abdominal cavity
  • Specializes in filtering blood and trapping blood-borne antigens/pathogens
  • Dendritic cells take up antigens and activate lymphocytes
  • Become inflamed or enlarged during infection
  • Red pulp: Destruction/removal of old or defective red blood cells.
  • White pulp: populated by T and cells
  • Germinal centers: site where mature B cells rapidly divide, differentiate, and undergo somatic hypermutation
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8
Q

A cell of the adaptive immune system such as

B cell.

What is a B cell?

A

A “B” cell is an antigen binding receptor (antibody)

  • Primary function is to make antibodies (also called immunoglobulin)
  • Surface B cell receptor is identical to the antibody secreted
  • Recognize antigens in their native form (soluble antigens)
  • Activation and function “helped” by CD4+ T cells
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9
Q

With antibody production what is the Humoral Response?

A
  • Humoral= “arising from the body”
  • Serum= unclotted portion of blood

—-Complement and antibodies
•Antibody half-life 7-23 days
•Also found in mucosal secretions (IgA)

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10
Q

What are antibodies?

A
  • Recognize a unique part of a foreign invading microbe called an antigen
  • Y-shaped protein
  • 2 identical heavy chains (VH)
  • 2 identical light chains (VL)
  • Linked via disulfide bridges
  • Two antigen binding sites (Fab regions)
  • Fc region mediates antibody function
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11
Q

What is the Antibody Structure?

What is the affinity?

A

Affinity: Strength which an antibody binds to a antigen

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12
Q

What are Antibody Isotypes?

A
  • Five major classes of antibody:
  1. IgM
  2. IgG
  3. IgA
  4. IgD
  5. IgE
  • Differ in heavy chain Fc region structure
  • Different structural and functional properties
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13
Q

What is Immunnoblobulin (IgG)?

A
  • Makes up ~80% of serum antibodies
  • Monomer with 2 antigen-binding sites
  • Fc portion:

Activates classical complement pathway
Enhances phagocytosis
Bind to NK cells to mediate cytotoxicity
Only class able to cross the placenta and enter fetal circulation

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14
Q

What is Immunoglobulin M (IgM)?

A
  • Makes up ~13% of serum antibodies
  • Half-life of about 5 days
  • Low affinity
  • Pentamer with 10 antigen-binding sites

Joining (J) chain needed for pentameric form

  • First class produced in primary response to an antigen/pathogen
  • Monomeric form expressed on surface of B cells (BCR)
  • Fc portion:

Most efficient class for activating the classical complement pathway

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15
Q

What is Immunoglobulin A (IgA)?

A
  • Found mainly in body secretions

Saliva, tears, milk

  • Dimer with 4 antigen-binding sites
  • Secretory component critical for transport into secretions and protection from digestive enzymes
  • Protects mucosal surfaces by blocking viral attachment
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16
Q

What is a humoral Response?

A
  • Mature B cells patrol the lymphatic system
  • Binding of antigen/microbe to BCR triggers activation, and cell division, differentiation
  • Plasma cells

Antibody producers
Long-lived producers reside in bone marrow

  • Memory cells

Long-lived cells
Generate secondary responses

17
Q

What are T-independent Antigens?

A
  • Antigen able to fully activate B cells without T cell help
  • Usually “repeated” structures

Polysaccharides
Envelope glycoproteins

18
Q

What are T-dependent Antigens?

A
  • Antigens that do not directly stimulate antibody production
  • Requires the T cell help
  • Protein molecules
19
Q

Descibe T-Cell Mediated Immunity

A
  • T cells recognize “cells” that contain foreign antigens (e.g., virally infected cells).
  • B-cells and T-cells recognize fundamentally different viral structures.

B-cells recognize whole protein antigens.
T-cells recognize processed short viral peptides
.

  • At least two defined populations of T cells

Cytotoxic T cells (TC)
T helper cells (TH)

  • Express a unique T cell receptor (almost unlimited specificities)
  • Recognize antigens displayed on the surface of antigen-presenting cells
  • Primary functions are cytokine secretion (CD4) and cytotoxicity (CD8)
20
Q

What is Antigen Presentation?

A

Microbial antigens broken down into short peptide sequences

External antigens

  • MHC class II
  • CD4 T cells

Internal antigens

  • MHC class I
  • CD8 T cells
21
Q

B cells work in Concert with TH2 cells

What are the cytokines involved?

A

Cytokines play a major role in activating or communicating between B and T cells

22
Q

Summary of the lecture

A

Adaptive immune system takes longer to develop, is highly specific, and results in the generation of immunological memory
T cells are generated in the thymus and B cells are generated in the bone marrow
Lymphocyte activation occurs in secondary lymphoid organs such as the spleen and lymph nodes
B cells secrete different isotypes of specific antibody, each with a different functionality
T cells come in two types, CD4+ and CD8+
CD4+: “helper” cells; activated by external antigens via MHC class II
CD8+: “killer” cells; activated by internal antigens via MHC class I
Innate and adaptive immune systems are “linked” to coordinate effective clearance of pathogens and resolution of disease