A&P II Ch. 20.4 Adaptive immunity
T cell receptor (TCR)
A receptor on a T cell, that bind to a specific antigen
be coupled with a peptide to function fully as an antigen
Antigens consist of carbohydrates, lipids, and metals but must what?
Immunogens (antigens)
Antigens that can generate a response from the immune ssytem
the antigens bound to Class I MHC molecules are not recognized as foreign, but allohafts and enogafts do contain antigens that lead to reaction.
Autografts and isografts result in no response from Tc cell because
Helper T cells (Th cells, CD4 Cells) and the cytotoxic T cells (Tc or CD8 Cells)
Cell mediated immunity involves the different classes of T cells, including ?
endogenous, exogenous antigens
Class I MHC molecules present _____ antigens and class II present ?
Cross presentation
Dendritic cells can undergo ______ in which they are able to display some of the ingest viral and bacterial antigens on Class I MHC molecules, in this way they can interacted with and activate Naive Tc cells.
Clone
Each population of T cells that can respond to a specific antigen is known as a ______
Class II MHC molecules
Found on the surface of antigen presenting cells, including dendritic cells, macrophages, and B cells
Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC)
Glycoproteins found on the surface of cells that bind and display antigen fragments
phagocytic or cytotoxic abilities
Helper T cells have no ____ or ____
Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA)
Molecules found on all nucleated cells in the body that help the immune system to recognize whether or not a cell is foreign to the body. These antigens are inherited from one's parents. Human leukocyte antigens are used to determine the compatibility of kidneys and pancreases for transplantation from one individual to another. The major groups of HLA antigens are HLA-A, HLA-B, and HLA-DR.
Class I and Class II MHC molecules
Naive cytotoxic T cells generally interact only with ______ where Naive helper T cells interact with?
kill other cells, specifically those with foreign antigens bound to class I MHC molecules
Primary function of Cytotoxic T cells (Tc) ?
others are not
Some T cell clones are capable of recognizing and responding to pathogens, where?
The cell synthesizes either a self antigen or a foreign antigen (things such as intracellular bacteria are not synthesized by the cell)
Step 1 by which Class I MHC molecules process and display an endogenous antigen
The cell ingest a pahtogen by phagocytosis
Step 1 by which Class II MHC molecules process and display an exogenous antigen
The antigen are broken down by enzymes in the cytosol
Step 2 by which Class I MHC molecules process and display an endogenous antigen
the phagocytic vesicle fuses with a lysosome; the pahtogen is degraded and its antigens are fragmented
Step 2 by which Class II MHC molecules process and display an exogenous antigen
An antigen fragment containing the antigenic determinant is transported into the rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) and is coupled with a class I MHC molecule in the RER membrane
Step 3 by which Class I MHC molecules process and display an endogenous antigen
the lysosome fuses with a vesicle from the RER that contains Class II MHC molecules, and an antigen fragment binds to the MHC molecule
Step 3 by which Class II MHC molecules process and display an exogenous antigen
The MHC antigen complex leaves the RER by a vesicle and is inserted into the cells plasma membrane
Step 4 by which Class I MHC molecules process and display an endogenous antigen
The MHC antigen complex is inserted into the cell's plasma membrane
Step 4 by which Class II MHC molecules process and display an exogenous antigen
bone marrow, thymus
T cell are formed in the ____ but mature in the ______
interact only with pieces of antigen bound to glycoproteins
T cells cannot directly interact with an antigen, they instead?
Naive T cells
T cells that do survive the screening and are released into circulation are known as ______ because they have yet encountered their specific antigen and they must bind to specific antigens before they become activated
detect abnormalities in any cell type with a nucleus, critical for detection of cancer cells, foreign cells, and cells infected with intracellular pathogens such as viruses and bacteria
Tc cells ability to interact with Class I MHC molecules means they can ? which is critical for?
sameway, require IL-2 from Th cells to activate fully (preventing abnormal Tc activation)
Tc cells are activated in the _____ way as Th cells, with the addition that they require?
cytokines that then activate and enhance various components of the immune system
Th Cells primarily exert their effects through the secretion of ________ that the_____
cell mediated
The first ae of adaptive immune system is ______ immunity
clonal selection
The phenomenon whereby cells of adaptive immunity respond more quickly and efficiently to subsequent exposures to an antigen
Immunological memory
The phenomenon whereby cells of adaptive immunity respond more quickly and efficiently to subsequent exposures to an antigen)
the type of MHC molecule involved
The process of naive T cell activation is very similar for Th and Tc cells, the main difference being ?
screens, recognize antigens
The thymus _____ these cells and mediates the destruction of those clones that cannot _______
CLass I and class II MHC molecules
Two types of MHC molecules
Memory T cells
____ cells respond more efficiently to exposure upon antigen. One reason for this is because ______ have no need of a Co stimulator
self-reactive T cells, Self tolerance
________ recognize self antigens as foreign and would attack your cells if released into circulation, however, these are also destroyed ensuring ______
endogenous antigen
a foreign antigen present on a pathogen that lives inside you cell such as an intracellular bacterium OR a foreign or self antigen encoded by your DNA (things such a cancer due to mutated DNA or a viral antigen)
immunocompetent
ability o mount a normal response to foreign antigens
exogenous or endogenous
antigens can be classified as ______ or _______
no
are MHC molecules found on erythrocytes?
Class I MHC molecules
found on the surface of the plasma membrane of nearly all nucleated cells
autografts, isografts, allografts, xenografts
four basic types of organ transplants
Innate immunity: stimulation of macrophages (Th Cells secrete interleukin-3 which stimulates macrophages and also causes macrophages to produce interleukin 12 which stimulates Th cells to generate more Interleukin 3 cells creating a positive feedback loop)
function 1 of Th Cells
adaptive cell mediated immunity: Activation of Tc cells (Th secrete interleukin 12 which activate Tc cells
function 2 of Th Cells
adaptive antibody mediated immunity:stimulation of B cells (Th Cells directly bind to B cells and stimulate their proliferate and differentiation. Th cells get their name derived from this because they help initiate B cell response)
function 3 of Th Cells
isografts
involve organs and tissue transplant between two genetically identical individuals
autografts
involves tissue transplanted from one site to another in the SAME individual. Such as skin grafts
allografts
most common, involve organs and tissue transplanted between two non identical individuals of the same species
exogenous antigen
one that originates outside the cell and must be taken into the cell by phagocytosis
Xenografts
rare and involve organs and tissues transplanted between two individuals of different species
haptens (urushiol) , a protein carrier
self antigens (antigens on your own cells) are not immunogens but very small antigens called ______ are immunogenic only if they are attached to ?
Dendritic cells display the antigen fragments on their MHC molecules, and the MHC antigen complex binds to the receptor of a specific naive Th or Tc cell clone (multiple changes occur inside the T cell when its receptor recognizes and binds this complex, and then activation beings this is known as clonal selection because the antigen selects a particular T cell clone)
step 1 of T cell activation, clonal selection, and differentiation
the actiavted T cell binds to its target cell
step 1 of function of TC cells
Cells of the lymphoid line divide in the bone marrow
step 1 of tell cell maturation
The Th or Tc cell binds a co stimulator and becomes activated ( Full T cell activation requires the interaction of the naive T cell with other molecules on the cells called Co stimualtors, this is because T cells have a low affinity for the MHC antigen complex to prevent unnecessary naive T cell activation)
step 2 of T cell activation, clonal selection, and differentiation
the Tc cells releases perforin, which from pres in the target cells plasma membrane
step 2 of function of TC cells
immaute T cells exit the beone marrow and migrate to the thymus
step 2 of tell cell maturation
The activated Th or Tc cell clone proliferates and differentiates into effector cells (cells that causes immediate effect) and memory T cells (Th or Tc increased in number when activated)
step 3 of T cell activation, clonal selection, and differentiation
The Tc cell then releases enzymes that can now enter the target cell and fragment its DNA
step 3 of function of TC cells
the thymus stimulates T cell maturation and destruction of self reactive T cells
step 3 of tell cell maturation
when the target cell begins to degrade, the Tc cell detaches and searches for a new target cell
step 4 of function of TC cells
Mature naive T cells migrated to lymphoid organs
step 4 of tell cell maturation
antigen determinant
the unique portion of the antigen to which the receptor binds to is known as its ________
necrosis
tissue death
Finding a good HLA match and suppressing the immune system
two ways of preventing graft rejection.
cells infected with intracellular pathogens (viruses and bacteria), cancer cells, and foreign cells such as a transplanted organ
what do cell mediated cells respond to
cluster of differentiation which referred to specific molecules within the plasma membrane that differentiate one cell type from another
what does CD stand for