Title: Activation of T Lymphocytes
1Chapter 9
- Activation of T Lymphocytes
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3- Activation and effector phases of T cell-mediated
adaptive immune responses are triggered by
antigen recognition by T lymphocytes - Naive T lymphocytes home to secondary lymphoid
organs, where they may encounter antigens
presented by mature dendritic cells on class I or
class II MHC molecules and thus become activated - Antigen-stimulated T cells that have received
both "signal one" through the antigen receptor
and "second signals" via co-stimulatory receptors
may be induced to secrete cytokines and to
express cytokine receptors (like IL-2) - T cell responses decline after the antigen is
eliminated by effector cells
4Activation of Naive and Effector T Cells by
Antigen
5Phases of T Cell Responses
6SIGNALS FOR T LYMPHOCYTE ACTIVATION
7- The proliferation of T lymphocytes and their
differentiation into effector and memory cells
require antigen recognition, costimulation, and
cytokines
8Recognition of Antigen
- Antigen is always the necessary first signal for
the activation of lymphocytes, ensuring that the
resultant immune response is specific for the
antigen - Activation of naive T cells requires recognition
of antigen presented by dendritic cells
9Role of Costimulation in T Cell Activation
10Mechanisms of T cell costimulation by CD28
11The major members of the B7 and CD28 families
12Role of CD40 in T cell activation
13The mechanism of therapeutic costimulatory
blockade
14FUNCTIONAL RESPONSES OF T LYMPHOCYTES
15Changes in surface molecules after T cell
activation
16Cytokines in Adaptive Immune Responses
17Regulation of IL-2 receptor expression
18Biologic actions of IL-2
19Development of Memory T Cells
20Clonal expansion of T cells
21Development of memory T cells
22DECLINE OF T CELL RESPONSES
23- Elimination of antigen leads to contraction of
the T cell response, and this decline is
responsible for maintaining homeostasis in the
immune system - Costimulation and growth factors like IL-2
stimulate expression of the anti-apoptotic
proteins Bcl-2 and Bcl-XL in the activated
lymphocytes, and these proteins keep cells viable - The inhibitory receptors CTLA-4 and PD-1,
apoptosis induced by death receptors of the TNF
receptor superfamily (such as TNFRI and Fas), and
regulatory T cells
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