Dendritic Cell Activation & Licensing
Antigen Presenting Cells deliver 3 signals for Clonal Expansion and Differentiation of naive T-cells:
1. Activation 2. Survival 3. Differentiation
Features of MATURE DC:
1. High MHC & Cytokine secretion 2. High Co-stimulatory 3. Antigen Presenter 4. Low Antigen uptake
What is a Memory T-cell?
A long-lived cell with an enhanced ability to react against antigens
What is the "Immune Synapse"?
APC : T-Cell Interaction: 1. LFA-1 + ICAM-1 2. CD4 + MHC-2 or CD8 + MHC-1 3. If TCR engaged, LFA-1 conforms and bonds STRONGER 4. Activation requires 2 signals: 1. TCR + MHC 2. Co-Stimulatory via CD28 5. CD40L is transiently induced via 2nd signal: Increasing B7 expression & APC survival
How is IL-2 receptor expressed in activated T-cells?
Activated T-cells express a High-Affinity IL-2 receptor (IL-2R alpha, beta, gamma chains) Secreting IL-2
What is an APC?
Antigen Presenting Cell which expresses MHC molecule - displaying microbe antigen and co-stimulators required to activate T-cells
What does CD28 (on T-cell) bind to on APC?
B7 - this is the Co-stimulatory signal 2.
Activated T-cell induces expression of ________ IL-2 receptor and _________
High Affinity & T-cell growth IL-2
What are Langerhans cells?
Immature dendritic cells
Effector T-cells recognize antigens in lymphoid organs and peripheral non-lymphoid tissue
True To perform functions that are responsible for elimination of microbes
What does VLA-4 (on T-cell) bind to?
VCAM-1 on activated endothelium
Death of Target cell by CD8 T-cell only occurs:
upon Antigen-specific Recognition Allowing stable pairing & focused release of Effector molecules
Naive T-cell expresses _______ affinity to IL-2
Moderate Affinity
These are the 3 ways in which the Antigen-Specific T-cell receptor controls delivery of effector signal:
1. Induces Tight Binding of Effector cell to target (narrow space created) 2. Focuses delivery - Re-orients the secretory apparatus 3. Triggers Synthesis and/or Release of cytotoxic granules
Features of IMMATURE DC:
1. Low MHC INSIDE - no on surface = Can't stimulate T-cells 2. Don't express Co-stimulatory molecules 3. Poor secretion of Cytokines 4. Relatively non-motile 5. Good at Antigen Accumulation 6. Efficient Endocytosis 7. Allow Antigens to SIT in the lysosomes - protecting from Degradation
What is CTLA-4?
Binds CD28 more avidly than B7 and INHIBITS signals to activated T-cells Makes the activated progeny of a naive T-cell LESS sensitive to stimulation of APC and limit T-cell Proliferation
What does Co-stimulation w/ CD28 (signal 2) induce in activated T-cells?
CD28-dependent Co-stimulation of activated T-cells - Induces Expression of T-cell growth Interleukin-2 and High-Affinity IL-2 Receptor
What does CXCL8 bind to?
CXCL8 - Receptor
Effector T-cells circulating blood - migrate from blood to infected tissue via:
Chemokines (CXCL8) and Adhesion molecules (VLA-4 on effector T-cells) which bind to VCAM-1 on activated Endothelium
Upon Antigen-Specific Recognition, how does CD8 T-cell focus Effector molecules?
Clustering of the T-cell receptors signal a Reorientation of the Cytoskeleton that polarizes the effector cell This focuses Exocytosis of cytotoxic granules at the site of contact with the target cell
What happens to Effector T-cell?
Continues to migrate through lymphatics until the last piece of lymphatic system ends in the blood system again
How does the DC mature?
From a cell designed to capture protein antigen to an Antigen Presenting Cell (APC)
What is a CTL?
Cytotoxic T-Lymphocyte (CD8+)
These are the strongest activators of naive T-cells
Dendritic Cells
When does DC mature?
During migration to the lymph node
Is there a difference in LFA-1 expression b/w naive T-cells vs effector T-cells?
Effector T-cells express LFA-1, 2 - 4X higher than naive cells
What are the Effector functions of T-cells?
Either CTL (cytotoxic T-lymphocyte) or T-helper cell
Where are dendritic cells found?
In most cell tissues of the body - mainly in tissue which has contact with outside Such as the skin, linings of nose, lungs, stomach, intestines.
Where are immature forms of dendritic cells found?
In the blood
What is the initial interaction b/w APC & T-cell?
Initial interaction is b/w Adhesion molecules LFA-1 and ICAM-1
How long does Activation process take?
It may require T-cell:DC interaction for up to 20 hours
What happens when IL-2 binds to its receptor?
It signals the T-cell to enter the Cell Cycle - Inducing T-cell Proliferation
What happens to naive T-cell once activated?
It stops, proliferates, and differentiates. Then it leaves the lymph as an Effector T-cell via lymphatic system
What is the function of Active Effector T-cells?
Kill Virus-infected target cells
What is different about L-selectin in the Effector T-cell?
L-selectin Adhesion molecules is no longer expressed in the Effecter (activated) T-cell It does not migrate back into lymphatics
What happens if there is Antigen Recognition but no Co-stimulatory signal?
Leads to functional INACTIVATION (Anergy) or Clonal Deletion of peripheral T-cells
What happens if there is only Co-stimulatory signal b/w APC & T-cell?
No effect
How is IL-2 receptor expressed in the resting T-cell?
Resting T-cells express only a Moderate-Affinity IL-2 Receptor (IL-2R beta & gamma chains only)
What happens to T-cell response after antigen is eliminated by effector cells?
T-cell response declines
What is the function of a mature dendritic cell?
TO present antigen to a naive T-cell via MHC molecule
What happens to DC once it captures bacterial antigen in the skin?
The DC migrates to the Dermis - From dermis it migrates to a draining lymphatic vessel.
Once in the lymph node, where does the DC settle?
The DC settles in the T-cell area - the Cortex
What causes T-cell Proliferation & Differentiation?
The binding of IL-2 with IL-2 Receptor
Where in the lymph nodes are dendritic cells found?
Throughout the cortex - in the T-cell area