Understanding Immunological Processes - GRE Subject Test: Biology

Card 0 of 3

Question

If a person has an A blood type, which of the following statements is true?

Answer

The type of blood a person has not only tells us which antibodies they create, but also which blood type can be given in the event of a transfusion. A person with type A blood has A antigens on his red blood cells. As a result, the person does not make A antibodies; these would bind to the A antigens and initiate an autoimmune response.

Because the person does not make the B antigen, there are B antibodies in the body. This means that the person cannot be given type B blood. B type blood cells would be targeted by the antibodies present in the body, causing an autoimmune reaction against the foreign blood. Since type O blood does not have any surface antigens, this blood type can be given to anybody. No antibodies will react with type O blood.

Compare your answer with the correct one above

Question

Which is not a function of B cells?

Answer

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.

Compare your answer with the correct one above

Question

Which of the following statements is true?

Answer

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.

Compare your answer with the correct one above

Tap the card to reveal the answer