MCAT Biology : Systems Biology and Tissue Types

Study concepts, example questions & explanations for MCAT Biology

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Example Questions

Example Question #72 : Immune And Lymphatic Systems

In the crusade to create a vaccine for Poliomyelitis, Jonas Salk and Albert Sabin created two separate vaccines that proved to be successful in preventing Polio onset.

The Salk vaccine, which is given by standard injection, contained virus particles inactivated by an organic solvent. This method has the advantage of inactivating each of the three Polio strains with no bias.

Albert Sabin's vaccine, given by oral inoculation via sugar water, contained live virus particles that had been genetically attenuated. With this method, each of the three Polio strains acquired separate mutations that made them unable to infect the human host cells. Strain 2 in particular contained one single nucleotide polymorphism in the internal ribosomal entry site (IRES) that prevented successful viral replication.

What type of immune response does inoculation with either vaccine stimulate? 

Possible Answers:

Humoral immunity 

The innate immune response 

The lymphatic immune response

The adaptive immune response

Correct answer:

The adaptive immune response

Explanation:

The adaptive immune response is responsible for encountering antigens and creating lasting immunity against it. The humoral immune response plays a role in adaptive immunity, but is more active during the secondary exposure to an antigen.

Example Question #15 : Adaptive And Innate Immunity

Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy is an X-linked recessive genetic disorder, resulting in the loss of the dystrophin protein. In healthy muscle, dystrophin localizes to the sarcolemma and helps anchor the muscle fiber to the basal lamina. The loss of this protein results in progressive muscle weakness, and eventually death.

In the muscle fibers, the effects of the disease can be exacerbated by auto-immune interference. Weakness of the sarcolemma leads to damage and tears in the membrane. The body’s immune system recognizes the damage and attempts to repair it. However, since the damage exists as a chronic condition, leukocytes begin to present the damaged protein fragments as antigens, stimulating a targeted attack on the damaged parts of the muscle fiber. The attack causes inflammation, fibrosis, and necrosis, further weakening the muscle.

Studies have shown that despite the severe pathology of the muscle fibers, the innervation of the muscle is unaffected.

What is the best characterization of the immune response described in the passage?

Possible Answers:

Auto-immunity; neither innate nor adaptive immunity describe an autoimmune reaction

Innate immunity

Initially innate immunity, then adaptive immunity

Adaptive immunity

Initially adaptive immunity, then innate immunity

Correct answer:

Initially innate immunity, then adaptive immunity

Explanation:

The initial response is an effort to repair physical damage, while the chronic response involves the recognition of antigens. Innate immunity refers to the body's natural untargeted defenses, such as the cells that would work to repair damage. Adaptive immunity is targeted to specific pathogens via antigen presentation. Thus, the pattern described in the passage is initially innate immunity, then adaptive immunity.

Example Question #55 : Immune System

Inflammation is an important response of the immune system. The vasodilation of blood vessels allows for important cells of the innate immune system to move out of the blood and into the surrounding tissue. Which of the following members of the innate immune system is responsible for causing inflammation at the site of infection?

Possible Answers:

Dendritic cells

Natural Killer Cells

Mast cells

Macrophages

Correct answer:

Mast cells

Explanation:

The correct answer is mast cells. Mast cells as well as granulocytes participate in the innate immune system's inflammatory response. Mast cells release histamine as well as other chemicals that allow for other cells to move from the blood stream into the tissue at the site of infection. 

Example Question #56 : Immune System

The HIV virus infects which of the following cells in order to diminish coordinated immune responses against pathogens?

Possible Answers:

Helper T-cells

Macrophages

Basophils

Neutrophils

Cytotoxic T -cells

Correct answer:

Helper T-cells

Explanation:

The HIV virus readily attacks Helper T-cells because these cells have a signaling-cascade effect on most immune cells. Most importantly, helper T-cells stimulate B-cells to produce antibodies. As the virus destroys the helper T-cells, it effectively negates the adaptive immune system, making the body exceptionally vulnerable to infection.

Example Question #391 : Systems Biology And Tissue Types

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a chronic autoimmune disease characterized by the loss of tolerance to self antigens leading to the presence of high autoantibody titers. Dysregulated peripheral tolerance and hyperactive germinal centers have been proposed to be one of the driving forces behind the accumulation of high autoantibodies.

What immune cell type is the product of germinal centers and most likely the cell mediating the production of autoantibodies?

Possible Answers:

Follicular dendritic cells

Natural killer cells

Follicular helper T cells

Plasma cells

Tingible body macrophages

Correct answer:

Plasma cells

Explanation:

Plasma cells are the main product of germinal centers and are potent antibody factories. Dysregulated peripheral tolerance and germinal centers can lead to the production of plasma cells that are reactive towards self-nuclear antigens.

Example Question #51 : Immune System

Which of the following is an example of a primary lymphoid organ?

Possible Answers:

Tonsils

Thymus

Peyer's patches

Lymph nodes

Spleen

Correct answer:

Thymus

Explanation:

The thymus is a primary lymphoid organ (along with bone marrow). The thymus is where T cells differentiate and mature. All of the other organs listed are secondary lymphoid organs, where lymphocytes reside and respond to antigenic challenges and foreign pathogens.

Example Question #1 : Antibodies And Antigens

Hypersensitivity reactions occur when body tissues are affected by an abnormal immune reaction. The result is damage to normal tissues and clinical illness. A peanut allergy is an example of a hypersensitivity reaction, but there are three additional broad classes.

One class involves the abnormal production or deposition of antibodies. Antibodies are B-cell derived molecules that normally adhere to pathogens, rendering them unable to continue an infection. When antibodies are produced against normal tissues, however, disease can result. Figure 1 depicts a schematic structure of an antibody.

Antibodies can be divided into two peptide chains: heavy and light. Heavy chains form the backbone of the antibody, and are attached to light chains via covalent bonding. Each heavy and light chain is then further divided into constant and variable regions. Variable regions exhibit molecular variety, generating a unique chemical identity for each antibody. These unique patterns help guarantee that the body can produce antibodies to recognize many possible molecular patterns on invading pathogens.

 

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Unlike B-cells, T-cells do not make antibodies. T-cells are important in the execution of cytotoxic immunity, such as neutralizing virus-infected cells. A scientist is studying the T-cell response in a mammal, and finds that his CD8+ T-cells are interacting with a surface protein found on many different types of cells in his model organism. This protein is most likely __________.

Possible Answers:

CCR5

a major histocompatibility complex

interleukin-2

CD28 ligand

a T-cell receptor

Correct answer:

a major histocompatibility complex

Explanation:

Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I is found on all nucleated cell types, while MHC class II is limited to antigen-presenting cells, such as dendritic cells. MHC class I presents foreign antigens from intracellular parasites to CD8+ T-cells in an effort to demonstrate infection and initiate cell killing.

C-C chemokine receptor type 5 (CCR5) is a specific chemokine receptor on the surface of T-cells, and is involved in cell recruitment to initiate the immune response. CD28 ligand is expressed by antigen-presenting cells and binds to T-cell receptors to activate T-cells. Interleukin-2 (IL-2) is a cytokine secreted into the blood to help activate the T-cell immune response.

Example Question #1 : Antibodies And Antigens

Which of the following combinations might yield the necessity of blood transfusion for a new born baby?

Possible Answers:

Rh-positive mother and Rh-negative fetus

Rh-negative mother and Rh-positive fetus

Rh-negative mother and Rh-negative fetus

Rh-positive mother and Rh-positive fetus

Correct answer:

Rh-negative mother and Rh-positive fetus

Explanation:

Rh factors are surface proteins found on red blood cells. An Rh-negative mother can be exposed to Rh-positive blood from the fetus in her first pregnancy. Without administration of Rh(o) D immunoglobulin during the delivery of her first baby, the mother can develop antibodies to Rh so that during her second pregnancy, the maternal antibodies will cross the placenta and attack the red blood cells of the fetus if it is Rh-positive. The attack on fetal red blood cells will require blood transfusions for the fetus.

Example Question #1 : Antibodies And Antigens

Sexually transmitted diseases are a common problem among young people in the United States. One of the more common diseases is caused by the bacterium Neisseria gonorrhoeae, which leads to inflammation and purulent discharge in the male and female reproductive tracts.

The bacterium has a number of systems to evade host defenses. Upon infection, it uses pili to adhere to host epithelium. The bacterium also uses an enzyme, gonococcal sialyltransferase, to transfer a sialyic acid residue to a gonococcal surface lipooligosaccharide (LOS). A depiction of this can be seen in Figure 1. The sialyic acid residue mimics the protective capsule found on other bacterial species.

Once infection is established, Neisseria preferentially infects columnar epithelial cells in the female reproductive tract, and leads to a loss of cilia on these cells. Damage to the reproductive tract can result in pelvic inflammatory disease, which can complicate pregnancies later in the life of the woman.

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In an immune response to an organism like Neisseria, humans will often make use of antbodies. What is true of antibodies?

Possible Answers:

They are produced by B-cells

They are produced by dendritic cells

They are produced by T-cells

They are lipid molecules

They function mainly by opening holes in the bacterial cell membranes

Correct answer:

They are produced by B-cells

Explanation:

The main function of bone marrow derived B-cells is to produce antibodies. T-cells are involved in helping the B-cell response, as well as participating in cell-mediated cytotoxicity.

Example Question #4 : Antibodies And Antigens

One component of the immune system is the neutrophil, a professional phagocyte that consumes invading cells. The neutrophil is ferried to the site of infection via the blood as pre-neutrophils, or monocytes, ready to differentiate as needed to defend their host.

In order to leave the blood and migrate to the tissues, where infection is active, the monocyte undergoes a process called diapedesis. Diapedesis is a process of extravasation, where the monocyte leaves the circulation by moving in between endothelial cells, enters the tissue, and matures into a neutrophil.

Diapedesis is mediated by a class of proteins called selectins, present on the monocyte membrane and the endothelium. These selectins interact, attract the monocyte to the endothelium, and allow the monocytes to roll along the endothelium until they are able to complete diapedesis by leaving the vasculature and entering the tissues.

The image below shows monocytes moving in the blood vessel, "rolling" along the vessel wall, and eventually leaving the vessel to migrate to the site of infection.

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Neutrophils are able to respond to the constant region of antibodies that coat foreign invaders. The neutrophil recognizes these antibodies, and ingests the pathogen they coated. Which of the following is true of antibodies?

Possible Answers:

They are a key component of innate immunity

They are produced by T-cells

They are of a single isotype

They are produced by B-cells

They are principally carbohydrate

Correct answer:

They are produced by B-cells

Explanation:

Antibodies are a key component of adaptive immunity and occur in five main isotypes: IgA, IgD, IgE, IgG, and IgM. They are mainly composed of protein. Antibodies are produced by B-cells in response to a known antigen.

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