The Differentiation of Vertebrate Immune Cells - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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The Differentiation of Vertebrate Immune Cells

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Title: The Differentiation of Vertebrate Immune Cells


1
The Differentiation of Vertebrate Immune Cells
  • In the immune system, two types of cells
    participate directly in defense against
    pathogens.
  • Plasma B cells produce and secrete
    immunoglobulins (antibodies), and killer T cell
    produce membrane-bound proteins that act as
    receptors for various substances.
  • B cell antibodies and T cell receptors bind to
    specific antigens. A cell must make many
    varieties of these proteins because there are
    many potential pathogens.

2
An Antigen-Antibody Complex
3
Structure of an Antibody Molecule
4
Human Antibody Genes
  • Two light chain loci the ? on chromosome 2 and
    ? on chromosome 22
  • One heavy chain locus on chromosome 14.
  • Each locus consists of a long array of gene
    segments.

5
Gene Segments for a Kappa Polypeptide
  1. An L?V? gene segment, encoding a leader peptide,
    which is removed later, and the N-terminal 95
    amino acids of the variable region of the kappa
    light chain. (76 gene segments in humans 40 of
    these are functional)
  2. A J? gene segment, encoding the last 13 amino
    acids of the variable region of the kappa light
    chain. (5 gene segments in humans)
  3. A C? gene segment, encoding the constant region
    of the kappa light chain. (1 gene segment in
    humans)

6
The Kappa Locus
  • During B cell development, the kappa light chain
    gene that will be expressed is assembled from one
    L?V? segment, one J? segment, and the C? segment
    by somatic recombination.
  • Segment joining is mediated by recombination
    signal sequences adjacent to each gene segment by
    a protein complex including RAG1 and RAG2
    (recombination activating gene proteins 1 and 2).

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10
Many Different Antibodies Can Be Produced
  • 40 L?V? segments ? 5 J? segments ? 1 C? segment
    200 kappa light chains.
  • Recombination of gene segments can create 120
    lambda light chains and 6600 different heavy
    chains.
  • Combinatorial assembly of these allows production
    of 2,112,000 different antibodies.
  • Even more antibodies are possible due to
    variation in recombination sites and
    hypermutability of the variable regions.

11
Evidence for DNA Rearrangement During Immune Cell
Differentiation
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