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IM M UNO LO G Y Bios 328 a textbook-based study ofim munology Spring 2003 http://w w w.lehigh.edu/~sk08/C ourses/Bios328/m ainpage.htm

TCR’s… T-cell receptors… Some fundamentals… T-cells have T-cell receptors. Nota bene: The previous statement is ambiguous. One T-cell has one type of

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Page 1: TCR’s… T-cell receptors… Some fundamentals… T-cells have T-cell receptors. Nota bene: The previous statement is ambiguous. One T-cell has one type of

IMMUNOLOGY

Bios 328a textbook-based study of immunologySpring 2003

http://www.lehigh.edu/~sk08/Courses/Bios328/mainpage.htm

Page 2: TCR’s… T-cell receptors… Some fundamentals… T-cells have T-cell receptors. Nota bene: The previous statement is ambiguous. One T-cell has one type of

TCR’s… T-cell receptors…Some fundamentals…

T-cells have T-cell receptors.

Nota bene: The previous statement is ambiguous.

One T-cell has one type of TCR.

One T-cell has one TCR with a wholly unique specificity.

One T-cell has as many as 100,000 identical TCR’s.

Page 3: TCR’s… T-cell receptors… Some fundamentals… T-cells have T-cell receptors. Nota bene: The previous statement is ambiguous. One T-cell has one type of

A T-cell receptor is a heterodimer.

A heterodimer is made from two different protomers.

T-cell heterodimers are either: (alpha•beta) (gamma•delta)

There are two types of T-cells: TH & TC. Can they have the same TCR? (Yes.)

So, TH & TC must be distinguished some other way. (More about that later.)

Page 4: TCR’s… T-cell receptors… Some fundamentals… T-cells have T-cell receptors. Nota bene: The previous statement is ambiguous. One T-cell has one type of

A T-cell receptor is a heterodimer.

A heterodimer is made from two different protomers.

T-cell heterodimers are either: (alpha•beta) (gamma•delta)

Either is an important word in that previous statement.There must be a genetic mechanism for having oneheterodimer and excluding the other. (More about thatlater, too!)

Page 5: TCR’s… T-cell receptors… Some fundamentals… T-cells have T-cell receptors. Nota bene: The previous statement is ambiguous. One T-cell has one type of

What do T-cell receptors do?

Two things:Respond to MHCRespond to Ag

More exactly, they see one histotope and many, many types of processed antigens.

Implication: There is some constancy (careful here) and huge amounts of variety, too. A genetic mechanism is needed.

Page 6: TCR’s… T-cell receptors… Some fundamentals… T-cells have T-cell receptors. Nota bene: The previous statement is ambiguous. One T-cell has one type of

OK. Enough premises! Let’s look at some pictures!

Hmmm…

Not very prettybut very infor-mative.

What’s being said?

Consider allthe symbolicnotations.

Page 7: TCR’s… T-cell receptors… Some fundamentals… T-cells have T-cell receptors. Nota bene: The previous statement is ambiguous. One T-cell has one type of

What do the “symbolic notations” convey?Ig is bivalent.

TCR is mono-valent.

Lots of immuno-globulin folds(domains) present. variable component

constant component

Tm component.

Short “CT’s”

Page 8: TCR’s… T-cell receptors… Some fundamentals… T-cells have T-cell receptors. Nota bene: The previous statement is ambiguous. One T-cell has one type of

So, we have these complicated proteins…i.e., these complicated gene products…

What is the genetic organization of the loci for these products?

Page 9: TCR’s… T-cell receptors… Some fundamentals… T-cells have T-cell receptors. Nota bene: The previous statement is ambiguous. One T-cell has one type of

So, let’s look at the protein again…

Two views will be informative…

and, this….

First, this already seen…

Page 10: TCR’s… T-cell receptors… Some fundamentals… T-cells have T-cell receptors. Nota bene: The previous statement is ambiguous. One T-cell has one type of

The previous slide implies rearrangements…

Let’s take a look:

Page 11: TCR’s… T-cell receptors… Some fundamentals… T-cells have T-cell receptors. Nota bene: The previous statement is ambiguous. One T-cell has one type of

There’s something odd in this slide.

Did you see it?

Page 12: TCR’s… T-cell receptors… Some fundamentals… T-cells have T-cell receptors. Nota bene: The previous statement is ambiguous. One T-cell has one type of

Let’s look at this image and put on our thinking caps…

Page 13: TCR’s… T-cell receptors… Some fundamentals… T-cells have T-cell receptors. Nota bene: The previous statement is ambiguous. One T-cell has one type of

There are two genetic problems to solve:

How is it that only or are expressed?

How does exclusion of one occur?

After a “V” cassette has been selected,– Downstream cassettes are “deleted”– But what about upstream cassettes?– They’re still there.– Why are they not expressed?

Page 14: TCR’s… T-cell receptors… Some fundamentals… T-cells have T-cell receptors. Nota bene: The previous statement is ambiguous. One T-cell has one type of

How are the questions in the previous slide answered?

Page 15: TCR’s… T-cell receptors… Some fundamentals… T-cells have T-cell receptors. Nota bene: The previous statement is ambiguous. One T-cell has one type of

There are two genetic problems to solve:Determinants for delta chain are – in mouse – tucked

within the segments for the alpha chain.

If an alpha V segment is fused with an alpha J segment, the delta cassettes are deleted (assuring that delta is not expressed if alpha is expressed.)

If a delta V segment is fused with a delta J segment,

the alpha cassettes are not expressed because they remain too far from the ENHANCER.

Thus, the “embedded” organization of delta within alpha assures that only alpha-beta or gamma-delta heterodimers are produced.

Page 16: TCR’s… T-cell receptors… Some fundamentals… T-cells have T-cell receptors. Nota bene: The previous statement is ambiguous. One T-cell has one type of

TCR DNA templates (and primary transcripts) for the alpha, beta, gamma, and delta chains have nucleotide sequences specifying variable components (V, [D], and J) and constant components (constant domain, connecting sequence, transmembrane region, and cytoplasmic tail.)

Sounds familiar…Let’s take a look:

Page 17: TCR’s… T-cell receptors… Some fundamentals… T-cells have T-cell receptors. Nota bene: The previous statement is ambiguous. One T-cell has one type of

Diversity (and constancy…)

TCR’s have CDR1, CDR2, and CDR3. The variability in CDR3 comes from

combinations of V-J and V-D-J joining, variable numbers of D segments joining together, junctional flexibility, N-region nucleotide addition, P-nucleotide addition, and combinatorial association of chains.

(There is no somatic hypermutation.) So, there is a huge variety in CDR3; CDR1 and

CDR2 obtain their variety from the selection of V segments.