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MDSC 321 Second Midterm Exam Latest Update

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MDSC 321 Second Midterm Exam Latest Update ...

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  • October 15, 2024
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  • 2024/2025
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MDSC 321 Second Midterm Exam
Latest Update
Types of Antigens - Answer - Infection(bad foreign)

- gut flora(good foreign)

- cancer(bad self)

- autoimmunity(good self)

what's recognizes antigens? - Answer - adaptive immune system

- innate only can recongize PAMPS

what are antigens? - Answer - molecule that can interact(specifically) w
immunoglobulin(Ig) receptor of B cells(or T cell receptor complexed w MHC)

- cells see it

immunogen - Answer - molecule that induces specific immune response

- all immunogens are antigens

- not all antigens are immunogens

- in a western blot detected by antibodies, there are only antigens and no immunogens
because no immune response

- a ligand for B cells in vivo would be antigen and immunogen because response can be
initiated

humoral immunogens - Answer - B cells

- proteins>polysaccahrides> lipids/nucleic acid

cells mediated immunogens - Answer - T cells

- proteins, some lipids, some glycolipids

- slow and picky

- need help

- proteins not recognized directly

- processed peptides from protein seen in association w MHC molecules, lipids w an
MHC-like molecule CD1

,what are the 4 properties of an immunogen? - Answer - foreigness

- molecular size

- chemical heterogeneity

- degradability

foreigness - Answer - to be an immunogen, molecule must be seen as non self

- degree of immunogenicity depends on degree of foreigness

- greater the phylogenetic distance btw species typically greater chance of
immunogenicity

- eg. bovine serum albumin injected into chickens/goats

what are exceptions of the foreigness property of an immunogen? - Answer - highly
conserved molecules like collogen or cytochrome c may not be immunogenic even in
distant species

- some self molecules, normally sequestered from immune system, will raise an immune
response(eg. sperm or lens tissue) in animal they come from

molecular size - Answer - correlation btw size and immunogenicity

- best immunogens in the range of 100,000 Da

- small molecules 5-10, 000 Da generally poor immunogens

- need to be large enough to be processed

chemical heterogeneity - Answer - size alone doesn't make good immunogen

- synthetic homopolymers not immunogenic regardless of size

- large co-polymers can be immunogenic and adding aromatic amino acids increases
the chance

- proteins w higher complexity in primary structure and those showing secondary,
tertiary and quaternary structure increase immunogenicity

degradability - Answer - protein degraded to be presented by MHC molecules to
activate T cells

- factors influencing this process affect immunogenicity

- insoluble>soluble bc more likely to be phago. and processed

- large>small (more processing and more epitopes)

- L amino acids>D amino acids(works w processing enzymes

,how can we make an antigen more immunogenic? - Answer adjuvants

adjuvants - Answer - change envir. for better response

- to help

- substance that when injected w Ag, it enhances immunogenicity of Ag

- resulting in higher antibody titer and longer lasting immune response

- not specific to an antigen but can be used w many diff. antigens

adjuvant mechanism step 1 - Answer - stimulate immune response

- freund's complete adjuvant, containing muramyl dipeptides from cell walls of heat
killed myobacteria stimulate macrophage activity

- increase in IL-1 helps activate helper T cells

- synthetic polyribonucleotides and baterial LPS stimulates non specific lymphocyte
proliferation

- some stimulate local chronic inflammation and granuloma formation(freund's
complete)

adjuvant mechanism step 2 - Answer - prolong exposure to Ag

- alum and freund's adjuvant bind and precipitate Ag to keep in system longer and allow
for slow realease of Ag

- increase time of exposure from few days to few weeks

- precipitation increases size of Ag to facilitate phago.

adjuvant mechanism step 3 - Answer - co stimulatory signal

- helper T cells when stimulated by Ag need second co stimululatory signal

- freud's adjuvant, LPS and other factors up regulate co stimulatory signal systems

epitopes - Answer - lymphocytes dont recognize entire antigens

- they recognize small discrete sites on macromolecules called antigenic determinants
or epitopes

- epitopes seen by b cells and t cells differ in many diff ways

- antibodies see diff spots of epitopes

B cell epitopes - Answer - b cells bind Ag directly via cell surface immunoglobulin(Ig)

- Ag can be almost anything like sugars, lipids, proteins, nucleic acids, heavy metals

, - epitope size defined by binding size of Ab

- complex proteins w many overlapping b cells epitopes

- not all epitopes induce a response(Immunodominance)

Epitopes in solution binding to B cells - Answer - for Ag in solution:

- epitopes must be topographically accessible on native molecular
surface(hydrophillic)(but there are exceptions)

- epitopes have to be flexible and mobile for agglutination(often on bends and loop
structure of proteins)

- epitopes can be sequential or non-sequential(conformational)

how is epitope size defined by binding size of Ab? - Answer - complementary binding
btw Ag-Ab limits epitope size

- 6-7 amino acids or sugars fit into deep pocket structures of linear epitope binding sites

- conformational epitopes of globular proteins cover much more space on flatter surface
binding sites of Ab

- conformational epitopes may consist of 15-22 aa

- whatever shape/size fits into pocket of Ab is what it sees

linear vs. conformational epitopes - Answer - linear is sequential

- conformational is non-sequential

- conformational has distinct pieces of protien

- linear is one singular piece of protein

- if chopped up and digested, linear epitopes still work but conformational don't because
they depend on their 3 dimentional structure for functionality as linear dont

different structures of enzymes - Answer - primary structure: amino acid residues

- secondary: alpha helix

- tertiary: polypeptide chain

- quaternary: assembled subunits

T cell epitopes - Answer - recognize only protein(and some glycolipid) epitopes

- dont recognize soluble native Ag

- recognize only processed Ag whose peptide fragments are presented in association w

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