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Example Questions
Example Question #111 : Immune And Lymphatic Systems
Which types of leukocytes are granular?
Lymphocytes, basophils, eosinophils
Neutrophils, basophils, lymphocytes
Monocytes, neutrophils, eosinophils
Basophils, eosinophils, neutrophils
Basophils, lymphocytes, monocytes
Basophils, eosinophils, neutrophils
The five types of leukocytes are: neutrophils, lymphocytes, monocytes, eosinophils, and basophils. Three of these (neutrophils, eosinophils, and basophils) contain granules, tiny sacs containing enzymes which can lyse microorganisms. The other two leukocytes (lymphocytes and monocytes) do not contain these granules.
Example Question #91 : Immune System
Which of the following is not a true statement regarding germinal centers?
Germinal centers are sites where peripheral tolerance occurs.
Germinal centers normally form in secondary lymph nodes but can form ectopic ones in other organs including the kidneys and liver.
They are transient microenvironments that ultimately produce long-lived plasma cells and memory B cells against a specific antigen.
T cells are not critical for the formation and maintenance of the germinal center reaction.
B cells that have undergone a germinal center reaction should produce antibody against a specific antigen that is higher affinity than naive B cells.
T cells are not critical for the formation and maintenance of the germinal center reaction.
T cells, especially CD4+ follicular helper T cells, are absolutely critical and necessary for the induction and maintenance of germinal centers.
Example Question #92 : Immune System
Which of the following class of immunoglobulins is normally responsible for the promotion of the allergy response?
IgA
IgG
IgD
IgM
IgE
IgE
IgE plays a critical role in induction and promotion of type I hypersensitivity (allergy, asthma, etc.) normally through engagement of Fc receptors on the surface of basophils and mast cells, which primes them to produce large quantities of granules and chemical mediators (including histamines and cytokines).
Example Question #12 : Animal Biology
Which is not a function of B cells?
Antibody production
Presentation of antigen to T cells
Cytokine and chemokine production
Ability to form memory cells
Secretion of extracellular traps
Secretion of extracellular traps
B cells play numerous integral roles in the immune response against foreign pathogens (viruses, bacteria, and fungi), including forming transient microenvironments called germinal centers, where they produce long-lived plasma cells that are high affinity for specific antigen and memory B cells. They also serve as antigen-presenting cells and producers of cytokines and chemokines; However, B cells are not able to produce extracellular traps, which primarily are composed of DNA and work to trap pathogens. Neutrophils produce extracellular traps.
Example Question #4 : Other Immunity Principles
Which cytokine is typically associated with the T helper 1 (Th1) response?
IL-4
TGF-beta
IL-17
IFN-gamma
IL-9
IFN-gamma
The following helper T cells are paired with the following cytokines:
Th1 - IFN-gamma
Th2 - IL-4
Th9 - IL-9
Th17 - IL-17
Tfh - IL-21
Example Question #93 : Immune System
What is the group of diseases called when a person's immune system loses its ability to recognize its own MHC proteins?
X-linked autosomal recessive diseases
X-linked lymphoproliferative disease
Autoimmune
Hypersensitivity
Allergies
Autoimmune
Autoimmunity arises when one's immune system is unable to recognize its own MHC proteins, which could potentially lead to aberrant activation of the immune response. Furthermore, autoreactive immune cells that are normally induced to undergo apoptosis may be able to escape these tolerance mechanisms and induce tissue damage.
Example Question #94 : Immune System
Which of the following cell types is considered to be part of the innate immune response?
NK cells
Memory cells
B cells
T cells
Myocytes
NK cells
Natural killer (NK) cells are prominent members of the initial innate immune response against foreign pathogens. They play numerous integral roles in the innate response including cytotoxic killing, cytokine production, and antibody-mediated cell cytotoxicity.
Example Question #7 : Other Immunity Principles
Which of the following group of cells are of the myeloid lineage?
Some dendritic cells
NK cells
B cells
All of the above
T cells
Some dendritic cells
Cells of myeloid lineage include dendritic cells, monocytes, macrophages, neutrophils, basophils, and eosinophils, while cells of lymphoid lineage include NK cells, B cells and T cells.
Example Question #13 : Animal Biology
Which of the following statements is true?
In the prevention of autoimmunity, T cell tolerance is more critical than B cell tolerance against self-nuclear antigens.
Healthy individuals do not have any B cells that are reactive against self-antigen.
The elimination of autoreactive lymphocytes during central tolerance is more important in the prevention of autoimmunity than peripheral tolerance.
Naive B cells need more than one signal to become activated towards a specific antigen.
Female sex hormones do not play an important role in the pathogenesis of autoimmune disease.
Naive B cells need more than one signal to become activated towards a specific antigen.
Naive B cells (and most other immune cell subtypes) need more than one signal to become activated. They normally need B cell receptor signaling (signal 1), costimulation by other receptors (signal 2), and cytokines/chemokines (signal 3). This system is necessary in order to prevent aberrant activation of lymphocytes (safeguard against autoimmunity).
In regards to the other statements, there are numerous autoreactive B cells at any given time due to the stochastic nature of VDJ recombination and germinal center reactions. Therefore, tolerance mechanisms and checkpoints are incredibly important to keep these cells in check; central and peripheral tolerance are equally important. Self-nuclear reactive B cells and T cells are both necessary and critical in autoimmune pathogenesis. Female sex hormones are definitely believed to contribute greatly to autoimmune disease pathogenesis (e.g. estrogen). Over 75% of autoimmune patients are women.
Example Question #91 : Immune System
Somatic hypermutation of B cell receptor (BCR) genes in immature, developing B lymphocytes generates numerous specificities that are useful against a specific foreign antigen, however the process generates many more specificities that are either low affinity or reactive against self-antigens. Tolerance mechanisms, which include apoptosis or anergy, are in place in the bone marrow to prevent these "non-useful" or "harmful" B cells from exiting. However, these checkpoints are not 100% accurate and numerous B cells with autoreactive BCR's leave and travel to secondary lymphoid tissues.
Tolerance checkpoints exist in secondary lymphoid tissues to purge the repertoire of low-affinity or autoreactive B cells. What is the tolerance checkpoint mechanism in the secondary lymphoid tissues referred to as?
Peripheral tolerance
Clonal expansion
Affinity maturation
Central tolerance
Clonal deletion
Peripheral tolerance
Peripheral tolerance is the correct term for the tolerance checkpoint mechanisms that are instituted in the secondary lymphoid organs such as spleen and lymph nodes. B cells with BCR specificities that are low affinity or reactive against self-nuclear antigen will be purged from the repertoire.
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