c. Antibody dependent cellular phagocytosis
Similarly, antibody-dependent phagocytosis a virally infected cell is recognized by
an antibody and the phagocyte recognizes the antibody (not the cell) and phago-
cytoses the cell.
3.3.2
CELL-MEDIATED RESPONSE
3.3.2.1
T-Cell Recognition
Each T-cell has a T-cell receptor, and each T-cell receptor recognizes a different
epitope of an antigen. T-cell receptors, similar to antibodies, recognize an antigen
with very high specificity. As shown in Figure 3.11, the T-cell receptor is made up
of two 43 kDa chains, α and β, held together by a disulfide bond. Each chain spans
the plasma membrane and has a short cytoplasmic tail. Much like the heavy and
light chains making up antibodies, α and β chains also possess variable and constant
regions and the antigen-binding region is made up by the variable region.
3.3.2.2
Helper T-Cells
The next phase of immune activation takes place in the lymph node, which is re-
presented diagrammatically in Figure 3.6. As discussed earlier, B-cells become
activated upon antigen-binding. This triggers a number of events starting with their
FIGURE 3.10 Antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity. Cells expressing antigens on their
cell surface that are recognized by antibodies are the targets of antibody-dependent cellular
cytotoxicity, when the Fc portion of the antibody is bound by specific receptors on NK cells.
This triggers the release of perforin that generates pores in the membrane of the target cell,
allowing the entry of granzyme, an apoptosis-causing molecule.
46
Bioprocessing of Viral Vaccines