AP Biology Chapter 35
Which statement best describes the difference in responses of effector B cells (plasma cells) and cytotoxic T cells?
B cells secrete antibodies against a pathogen; cytotoxic T cells kill pathogen-infected host cells.
The ability of one person to produce over a million different antibody molecules does not require over a million different genes; rather, this wide range of antibody production is due to
DNA rearrangements.
Arrange these components of the mammalian immune system as it first responds to a pathogen in the correct sequence.
III → IV → II → I → V
Septic shock, a systemic response including high fever and low blood pressure, is a response to
certain bacterial infections.
The cell-mediated immunity that destroys virally infected cells involves
cytotoxic T cells.
Adaptive immunity depends on
pathogen-specific recognition.
A systemic inflammatory response that is often life threatening is
septic shock.
An epitope is
that part of an antigen that actually binds to an antigen receptor.
Immunological memory accounts for
the ancient observation that someone who had recovered from the plague could safely care for those newly diseased.
An epitope associates with which part of an antigen receptor or antibody?
variable regions of a heavy chain and light chain combined
Which of the following statements is not true?
A lymphocyte has receptors for multiple different antigens.
An immune response to a tissue graft will differ from an immune response to a bacterium because
MHC molecules of the donor may stimulate rejection of the graft tissue, but bacteria lack MHC molecules.
A patient who can produce antibodies against some bacterial pathogens, but not against viral infections, probably has a disorder in his
T cells.
Bacterial infection in a previously uninfected house cat would most quickly activate its
Toll-like receptors that bind to lipopolysaccharides.
The complement system is
a group of antimicrobial proteins that act together in a cascade fashion.
Bacteria entering the body through a small cut in the skin
activate a group of proteins called complement.
Which of these is not part of insect immunity?
activation of natural killer cells
In some insects, such as Drosophila, fungal cell wall elements can activate the protein Toll, which
acts as a receptor that, when activated, signals synthesis of antimicrobial peptides.
Clonal selection is an explanation for how
an antigen can provoke production of high levels of specific antibodies.
In the human disease known as lupus, there is an immune reaction against a patient's own DNA from broken or dying cells, which categorizes lupus as
an autoimmune disease.
A patient who undergoes a high level of mast cell degranulation, dilation of blood vessels, and an acute drop in blood pressure is likely suffering from
anaphylactic shock immediately following exposure to an allergen.
Among the last line of defenses against prolonged exposure to an extracellular pathogen is
antibody production by plasma cells.
Clonal selection implies that
antigens increase mitosis in specific lymphocytes.
The receptors on T cells and B cells bind to
antigens.
A patient complaining of watery, itchy eyes and sneezing after being given a flower bouquet as a birthday gift should first be treated with
antihistamines.
A newborn who is accidentally given a drug that destroys the thymus would most likely
be unable to differentiate and mature T cells.
B cells have antigen receptors that bind to antigens that are either freely dissolved or present on the surface of invading/foreign cells. T cells have antigen receptors that
bind to antigen fragments presented on major histocompatability complexes by host cells.
Preventing the appearance of the symptoms of an allergy attack would be the likely result of
blocking the attachment of the IgE antibodies to the mast cells.
Antihistamine treatment reduces
blood vessel dilation.
Select the pathway that would lead to the activation of cytotoxic T cells.
body cell becomes infected with a virus → new viral proteins appear → class I MHC molecule-antigen complex displayed on cell surface
An otherwise healthy student in your class is infected with EBV, the virus that causes infectious mononucleosis. The same student had already been infected when she was a child, at which time she had merely experienced a mild sore throat and swollen lymph nodes in her neck. This time, although infected, she does not get sick. The EBV antigen fragments will be presented by the virus-infected cells along with
class I MHC molecules.
Which of the following cells are involved in cell-mediated immunity and also respond to class I MHC molecule-antigen complexes?
cytotoxic T cells
An otherwise healthy student in your class is infected with EBV, the virus that causes infectious mononucleosis. The same student had already been infected when she was a child, at which time she had merely experienced a mild sore throat and swollen lymph nodes in her neck. This time, although infected, she does not get sick. Her immune system's recognition of the second infection involves the
cytotoxic T cells.
T cells of the immune system include
cytotoxic and helper cells.
The MHC is important in a T cell's ability to
distinguish self from nonself.
Normal immune responses can be described as polyclonal because
diverse antibodies are produced for different epitopes of a specific antigen.
Mammals have Toll-like receptors (TLRs) that can recognize a kind of macromolecule that is absent from vertebrates but present in/on certain groups of pathogens, including viral
double-stranded RNA.
The number of MHC protein combinations possible in a given population is enormous. However, an individual in that diverse population has a far more limited array of MHC molecules because
each of the MHC genes has a large number of alleles, but each individual only inherits two for each gene.
A bone marrow transplant may not be appropriate from a given donor (Jane) to a given recipient (Jane's cousin Bob), even though Jane has previously given blood for one of Bob's needed transfusions, because
even though Jane's blood type is a match to Bob's, her MHC proteins may not be a match.
Antigens are
foreign molecules that trigger the generation of antibodies.
A cell type that interacts with both the humoral and cell-mediated immune pathways is a
helper T cell.
B cells interacting with helper T cells are stimulated to differentiate when
helper T cells release cytokines.
The ability of some viruses to remain inactive (latent) for a period of time is exemplified by
herpes simplex viruses (oral or genital) whose reproduction is triggered by physiological or emotional stress in the host.
An inflammation-causing signal released by mast cells at the site of an infection is
histamine.
Antibodies of the different classes IgM, IgG, IgA, IgD, and IgE differ from each other
in their heavy-chain structure.
Inflammatory responses typically include
increased activity of phagocytes in an inflamed area.
Which of the following would not help a virus avoid triggering an adaptive immune response?
infecting cells that produce very few MHC molecules
An individual who has been bitten by a poisonous snake that has a fast-acting toxin would likely benefit from
injection of antibodies to the toxin.
Acidity in human sweat is an example of
innate immunity.
A nonfunctional CD4 protein on a helper T cell would result in the helper T cell being unable to
interact with a class II MHC-antigen complex.
Innate immunity
is activated immediately upon infection.
A fruit fly, internally infected by a potentially pathogenic fungus, is protected by
its antimicrobial peptides.
Vaccination increases the number of
lymphocytes with receptors that can bind to the pathogen.
An invertebrate, such as an insect, has innate immunity activity in its intestine that likely includes
lysozyme.
The function of antibodies is to
mark pathogenic cells for destruction.
Secondary immune responses upon a second exposure to a pathogen are due to the activation of
memory cells.
Engulfing-phagocytic cells of innate immunity include all of the following except
natural killer cells.
An immunoglobulin (Ig) molecule, of whatever class, with regions symbolized as C or V, H or L, has a light chain made up of
one C region and one V region.
This type of immunity is present only when a newborn infant is being fed by actively nursing its mother and ends when nursing ends.
passive immunity
Naturally acquired passive immunity results from the
placental transfer of antibodies.
Yearly vaccination of humans for influenza viruses is necessary because
rapid mutation in flu viruses alters the surface proteins in infected host cells.
Within a differentiated B cell, the rearrangement of DNA sequences between variable regions and joining regions is accomplished by
recombinase.
Histamines trigger dilation of nearby blood vessels as well as an increase in their permeability, producing
redness, heat, and swelling.
Clonal selection of B cells activated by antigen exposure leads to production of
short-lived plasma cells that secrete antibodies for the antigen.
Infection by a bacterium that has elements on its surface that enhance its resistance to lysozyme will likely result in
successful reproduction of the bacterium and continued progression of the disease.
Cave art by early humans recognized the existence of the major signs of inflammation. The most inclusive set of symptoms of inflammation that might appear in such early human art is
swelling, heat, redness, and pain.
Phagocytosis of microbes by macrophages is enhanced by
the binding of antibodies to the surface of microbes and antibody-mediated agglutination of microbes only.
An example of a pathogen that undergoes rapid changes resulting in antigenic variation is
the influenza virus, which expresses alternative envelope proteins.
The cells and signaling molecules that initiate inflammatory responses are
the mast cells and the histamines.
Salmonella bacterial poisoning can be initiated when
the microbe survives the acidic environment of the stomach and resists lysosomal degradation in macrophages.
When antibodies bind antigens, the clumping of antigens results from
the multivalence of the antibody having at least two binding regions.
A key part of the humoral immune response is
the production of antibodies by plasma cells.
The switch of one B cell from producing one class of antibody to another antibody class that is responsive to the same antigen is due to
the rearrangement of immunoglobulin heavy-chain C-region DNA.
In active immunity, but not passive immunity, there is
the requirement for direct exposure to a living or simulated pathogen.
The eyes and the respiratory tract are both protected against infections by
the secretion of lysozyme onto their surfaces.
Which of the following should be the same in identical twins?
the set of MHC molecules produced
For the successful development of a vaccine to be used against a pathogen, it is necessary that
the surface antigens of the pathogen do not change.
Jenner's successful use of cowpox virus as a vaccine against the smallpox virus is due to the fact that
there are some antigenic determinants common to both pox viruses.
The primary function of humoral immunity is
to protect the body against extracellular pathogens.
The activation of helper T cells is likely
when an antigen is displayed by a dendritic cell.