Summer Immuno Lecture 3 Flashcards


Set Details Share
created 8 days ago by moldyvoldy
updated 5 hours ago by moldyvoldy
show moreless
Page to share:
Embed this setcancel
COPY
code changes based on your size selection
Size:
X
Show:

1

The immunoglobulin heavy-chain gene segments are found on which chromosome?
A. Chromosome 2
B. Chromosome 6
C. Chromosome 14
D. Chromosome 22

C. Chromosome 14

2

Each B-cell receptor is built from which chains?
A. Heavy and light chains
B. Alpha and beta chains
C. Fab and Fc chains
D. CD40 and CD40L

A. Heavy and light chains

3

A developing B cell has two copies of chromosome 14. How many heavy-chain loci are ultimately used?
A. Zero
B. Two
C. Four
D. One

D. One

4

A B-cell heavy-chain locus successfully makes a functional heavy chain. What is this called?
A. Class switching
B. Productive rearrangement
C. Affinity maturation
D. Somatic hypermutation

B. Productive rearrangement

5

One chromosome 14 successfully rearranges first. What happens to the other chromosome 14 locus?
A. It class switches
B. It makes Igβ
C. It is silenced
D. It binds antigen

C. It is silenced

6

A mature B cell has completed receptor development. How many BCR specificities does it produce?
A. Two
B. One
C. Dozens
D. Hundreds

B. One

7

The antigen recognized by a B cell’s receptors is called its what?
A. Cognate antigen
B. Constant region
C. Complement fragment
D. Co-stimulatory signal

A. Cognate antigen

8

A BCR binds one small portion of a bacterial protein. What is that region called?
A. Isotype
B. Haplotype
C. Cognate antigen
D. Epitope

D. Epitope

9

Which accessory proteins transmit BCR signals inward?
A. CD40 and CD40L
B. Igα and Igβ
C. C3b and C5b
D. MHC I and II

B. Igα and Igβ

10

Igα and Igβ are important because they help transmit signals to the what?
A. Lysosome
B. Thymus
C. Nucleus
D. Complement system

C. Nucleus

11

A soluble antigen binds only one BCR weakly. What event is usually needed for strong activation?
A. BCR crosslinking
B. C9 insertion
C. Fas binding
D. MHC loss

A. BCR crosslinking

12

BCR crosslinking helps activation by clustering which molecules?
A. C3a and C5a
B. CD4 and CD8
C. Heavy and light chains
D. Igα and Igβ

D. Igα and Igβ

13

Besides BCRs, B cells also carry receptors for which immune system component?
A. Interferon
B. Complement
C. Perforin
D. Hemoglobin

B. Complement

14

A bacterial antigen is coated with complement fragments. Which B-cell receptor can bind those fragments?
A. Complement receptor
B. T-cell receptor
C. Fas receptor
D. Fc receptor

A. Complement receptor

15

A B cell binds both an epitope and a complement fragment. What is the complement receptor called?
A. Primary receptor
B. Death receptor
C. Antigen receptor
D. Co-receptor

D. Co-receptor

16

A B cell has never encountered its cognate antigen. What is it called?
A. Experienced B cell
B. Plasma B cell
C. Naive B cell
D. Memory B cell

C. Naive B cell

17

Which term also describes a naive B cell?
A. Effector
B. Virgin
C. Experienced
D. Activated

B. Virgin

18

A B cell has already encountered its cognate antigen. What is it called?
A. Virgin B cell
B. Immature B cell
C. Naive B cell
D. Experienced B cell

D. Experienced B cell

19

Most naive B cells require how many signals for activation?
A. Two
B. One
C. Three
D. Four

A. Two

20

In T-cell-dependent activation, what is signal 1?
A. CD40 engagement
B. IL-2 binding
C. BCR crosslinking
D. Complement lysis

C. BCR crosslinking

21

In T-cell-dependent activation, which cell supplies signal 2?
A. NK cell
B. Macrophage
C. Neutrophil
D. Helper T cell

D. Helper T cell

22

The second signal for naive B-cell activation is also called what?
A. Co-stimulatory signal
B. Opsonizing signal
C. Apoptotic signal
D. Neutralizing signal

A. Co-stimulatory signal

23

A naive B cell needs helper T-cell assistance for activation. What is this called?
A. Alternative activation
B. Lectin activation
C. T-cell-dependent activation
D. Complement activation

C. T-cell-dependent activation

24

During T-cell-dependent activation, helper T cells use which surface molecule?
A. CD40
B. CD40L
C. Igα
D. Igβ

B. CD40L

25

CD40L on helper T cells interacts with which B-cell molecule?
A. Igβ
B. ICAM
C. Fas
D. CD40

D. CD40

26

The CD40L-CD40 interaction provides which signal?
A. Signal 1
B. Co-stimulatory signal
C. Complement signal
D. Danger signal only

B. Co-stimulatory signal

27

A polysaccharide antigen has many identical repeated epitopes. What can it strongly cause?
A. CD40 silencing
B. MHC I loss
C. BCR crosslinking
D. Igβ destruction

C. BCR crosslinking

28

Repeated epitopes activate B cells without helper T cells. What is this called?
A. T-cell-independent activation
B. T-cell-dependent activation
C. Productive rearrangement
D. Somatic hypermutation

A. T-cell-independent activation

29

Even in T-cell-independent activation, what additional signal is still required?
A. CD40L signal
B. Thymic signal
C. Antibody signal
D. Danger signal

D. Danger signal

30

Which self molecule has repeated epitopes but should not normally activate B cells?
A. TNF
B. DNA
C. LPS
D. C3b

B. DNA

31

During heavy-chain selection, both chromosome 14 copies initially do what?
A. Rearrange gene segments
B. Secrete antibodies
C. Bind helper T cells
D. Express CD40L

A. Rearrange gene segments

32

The “winner” chromosome 14 is selected because it makes what first?
A. Complement receptor
B. Co-stimulatory signal
C. Functional heavy chain
D. Repeated epitope

C. Functional heavy chain

33

A mature B cell secretes antibodies matching its surface BCR. How many antibody types does it make?
A. Two unrelated types
B. One specific type
C. Many random types
D. Four chain types

B. One specific type

34

The whole molecule recognized by a BCR is the what?
A. Epitope
B. Co-receptor
C. Cognate antigen
D. Igβ chain

C. Cognate antigen

35

The exact site on an antigen bound by a BCR is the what?
A. Epitope
B. Co-receptor
C. Heavy chain
D. CD40L site

A. Epitope

36

BCR crosslinking is essential because one BCR alone usually gives what?
A. Excessive apoptosis
B. Strong complement activation
C. Immediate antibody secretion
D. Weak activation signaling

D. Weak activation signaling

37

A B cell binds complement-coated antigen through its co-receptor. What happens to signaling?
A. It is amplified
B. It is blocked
C. It becomes unrelated
D. It causes silence

A. It is amplified

38

Why is the complement receptor considered a co-receptor?
A. It makes antibodies
B. It replaces BCRs
C. It strengthens signaling
D. It silences CD40

C. It strengthens signaling

39

Which combination gives a stronger B-cell signal?
A. Complement binding alone
B. BCR plus complement receptor
C. CD40 alone
D. Igβ alone

B. BCR plus complement receptor

40

A helper T cell provides CD40L. What B-cell signal does this supply?
A. First signal
B. Second signal
C. Antigen signal
D. Danger signal

B. Second signal

41

A B cell receives BCR crosslinking but no helper T-cell help. In ordinary T-dependent activation, what is missing?
A. Signal 1
B. Signal 2

B. Signal 2

42

Helper T-cell help may be unnecessary because of what?
A. Extensive BCR clustering
B. CD40 destruction
C. MHC I expression
D. Antibody neutralization

A. Extensive BCR clustering

43

Which antigen type is most likely to activate B cells without helper T-cell co-stimulation?
A. Single epitope protein
B. Small soluble peptide
C. Host DNA alone
D. Repetitive polysaccharide

D. Repetitive polysaccharide

44

T-cell-independent activation still needs a danger signal to prevent what?
A. Class switching
B. Random self-attack
C. Heavy-chain failure
D. Complement production

B. Random self-attack

45

Why does DNA not normally trigger strong B-cell activation despite repeated epitopes?
A. Danger signal is absent
B. CD40L is excessive
C. BCRs cannot bind DNA
D. Igβ is missing

A. Danger signal is absent

46

A B cell binds a repeated bacterial epitope and inflammatory markers are present. What activation is possible?
A. T-cell-independent activation
B. Heavy-chain silencing
C. T-cell receptor activation
D. NK-cell inhibition

A. T-cell-independent activation

47

Helper T cells recognize antigen mainly through which molecule?
A. Class I MHC
B. B-cell receptor
C. Complement receptor
D. Class II MHC

D. Class II MHC

48

If B cells always required helper T cells, adaptive immunity would struggle against which antigens?
A. Carbohydrates and fats
B. Viral peptides only
C. Protein toxins only
D. MHC-bound peptides

A. Carbohydrates and fats

49

T-cell-independent activation helps adaptive immunity respond to bacterial antigens that are not what?
A. Repetitive
B. Extracellular
C. Proteins
D. Complement-coated

C. Proteins

50

A parasite produces a molecule that activates many unrelated B cells. What is this molecule called?
A. Opsonin
B. Mitogen
C. Cytokine
D. Anaphylatoxin

B. Mitogen

51

A mitogen activates B cells by binding molecules other than what?
A. BCRs
B. CD40
C. Complement
D. IgM

A. BCRs

52

A parasite causes many nonspecific B cells to activate at once. What is this called?
A. Class switching
B. Affinity maturation
C. Complement fixation
D. Polyclonal activation

D. Polyclonal activation

53

In polyclonal activation, BCRs become crosslinked by what mechanism?
A. Direct antigen binding
B. CD40L signaling
C. Crosslinking by proxy
D. Class II MHC

C. Crosslinking by proxy

54

Polyclonal activation is best described as what?
A. Immune system gone wrong
B. Normal vaccine memory
C. T-cell education
D. Complement regulation

A. Immune system gone wrong

55

Some parasites use polyclonal activation mainly to do what?
A. Mature B cells
B. Fix complement
C. Cross placenta
D. Distract immune response

D. Distract immune response

56

After activation and proliferation, B cells enter maturation with roughly how many possible steps?
A. One
B. Two
C. Three
D. Four

C. Three

57

Which maturation step lets B cells change antibody class?
A. Somatic hypermutation
B. Class switching
C. Polyclonal activation
D. Complement fixation

B. Class switching

58

Which maturation step can increase BCR affinity?
A. Class switching
B. ADCC
C. Complement fixation
D. Somatic hypermutation

D. Somatic hypermutation

59

Somatic hypermutation changes BCRs to improve binding to what?
A. Cognate antigen
B. Class II MHC
C. C1 inhibitor
D. Fc receptor

A. Cognate antigen

60

During the “career decision,” a B cell may become which antibody factory?
A. Memory B cell
B. Virgin B cell
C. Plasma B cell
D. Naive B cell

C. Plasma B cell

61

During maturation, a B cell may also become which long-lived cell?
A. Mitogen cell
B. Memory B cell
C. C1 complex
D. Helper T cell

B. Memory B cell

62

The three maturation events must occur in what order?
A. Class switch first
B. Hypermutation first
C. No required order
D. Plasma decision first

C. No required order

63

Which statement about B-cell maturation steps is correct?
A. Not all must occur
B. All always occur
C. They need TLR4
D. IgM blocks them

A. Not all must occur

64

When a virgin B cell is first activated, it mainly produces which antibody?
A. IgA
B. IgE
C. IgG
D. IgM

D. IgM

65

First-activated virgin B cells can also produce tiny amounts of which antibody?
A. IgG
B. IgD
C. IgE
D. IgA

B. IgD

66

The immune function of IgD is best described as what?
A. Unclear
B. Complement fixing
C. Placental transfer
D. NK-cell bridging

A. Unclear

67

Class switching changes antibody production from IgM to which possible class?
A. IgM only
B. IgD only
C. IgG, IgE, or IgA
D. C1, C3, or C5

C. IgG, IgE, or IgA

68

In class switching, which antibody region remains unchanged?
A. Fc region
B. Fab region
C. C1 region
D. Heavy constant only

B. Fab region

69

In class switching, which antibody region changes?
A. Fab region
B. Epitope region
C. Antigen-binding region
D. Constant Fc region

D. Constant Fc region

70

After class switching, antigen specificity does what?
A. Stays the same
B. Becomes random
C. Recognizes MHC
D. Recognizes complement

A. Stays the same

71

After class switching, antibody function changes because the antibody gets what?
A. New Fab region
B. New Fc region
C. New epitope
D. New antigen

B. New Fc region

72

Which antibody is especially good at activating complement?
A. IgA
B. IgD
C. IgE
D. IgM

D. IgM

73

Activating complement by antibody is also called what?
A. Neutralizing complement
B. Opsonizing complement
C. Fixing complement
D. Silencing complement

C. Fixing complement

74

In blood, about 30 complement proteins form which complex?
A. C3
B. C1
C. C5
D. C9

B. C1

75

C1 complexes are normally bound by what?
A. Inhibitors
B. Antibodies
C. Fc receptors
D. Mitogens

A. Inhibitors

76

What happens when two C1 complexes come close together?
A. They bind DNA
B. They become IgM
C. They cross placenta
D. Inhibitors fall off

D. Inhibitors fall off

77

C1 inhibitor release allows which process to begin?
A. Somatic hypermutation
B. Polyclonal activation
C. Complement cascade
D. T-cell maturation

C. Complement cascade

78

IgM must first bind what before efficiently activating C1?
A. Antigen
B. CD40L
C. Class II MHC
D. Fas ligand

A. Antigen

79

Antigen-bound IgM can bind multiple C1 complexes using what region?
A. Fab region
B. Epitope region
C. Fc regions
D. Variable loops

C. Fc regions

80

Antigen-bound IgM brings C1 complexes together, triggering what?
A. Somatic hypermutation
B. Complement cascade
C. Class II display
D. IgD production

B. Complement cascade

81

Antibody-dependent complement activation is called which pathway?
A. Alternative pathway
B. Lectin pathway
C. Terminal pathway
D. Classical pathway

D. Classical pathway

82

IgG can fix complement, but which antibody does it more efficiently?
A. IgM
B. IgA
C. IgE
D. IgD

A. IgM

83

Why is IgM especially efficient at fixing complement?
A. It crosses placenta
B. It has five Fc regions
C. It binds NK cells
D. It lacks Fab regions

B. It has five Fc regions

84

Among IgG subclasses, which fixes the most complement?
A. IgG1
B. IgG2
C. IgG4
D. IgG3

D. IgG3

85

Which IgG subclass is best at opsonizing invaders?
A. IgG1
B. IgG2
C. IgG3
D. IgG4

A. IgG1

86

Besides complement fixation, IgG3 can help perform which process?
A. Somatic hypermutation
B. T-independent activation
C. Mitogen activation
D. Antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity

D. ADCC

87

In antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity, IgG3 forms a bridge between target cells and which immune cell?
A. Helper T cell
B. NK cell
C. Plasma cell
D. Neutrophil

B. NK cell

88

Which antibody class can transfer from mother to fetus?
A. IgA
B. IgM
C. IgE
D. IgG

D. IgG

89

Maternal IgG reaches the fetus from the mother’s what?
A. Mucosal secretions
B. Blood
C. Lymph nodes
D. Bone marrow

B. Blood

90

Maternal IgG protects the infant until what happens?
A. Infant makes its own
B. IgM crosses placenta
C. C1 becomes active
D. IgD matures

A. Infant makes its own

91

IgG supplied from the mother protects infants for roughly how long?
A. Hours after birth
B. One day after birth
C. Several months after birth
D. Until adolescence

C. Several months after birth

92

Another term for IgG antibodies is what?
A. Gamma globulins
B. Alpha globulins
C. Beta globulins
D. C1 globulins

A. Gamma globulins

93

After hepatitis A exposure, some patients receive what injection?
A. IgM vaccine
B. Complement inhibitor
C. Mitogen blocker
D. Gamma globulin

D. Gamma globulin

94

Gamma globulin injections contain antibodies from how many people?
A. Many donors
B. One donor
C. Fetal donors only
D. Parasite-infected donors

A. Many donors

95

Why can pooled gamma globulin help after hepatitis A exposure?
A. It supplies mitogens
B. It kills B cells
C. Some donors have anti-HAV antibodies
D. It blocks class II MHC

C. Some donors have anti-HAV antibodies

96

The goal of gamma globulin after exposure is to help do what?
A. Neutralize the virus
B. Trigger polyclonal activation
C. Fix all complement
D. Block NK cells

A. Neutralize the virus

97

Gamma globulin protection is meant to last until what occurs?
A. C1 disappears
B. IgD function clarifies
C. Own immune response develops
D. Mitogens leave blood

C. Own immune response develops

98

Polyclonal activation is dangerous because it activates B cells how?
A. Antigen-specific
B. Nonspecifically
C. Via its memory cells
D. Via its IgG cells

B. Nonspecifically

99

A patient receives pooled IgG after HAV exposure. What type of immunity is this?
A. Active adaptive
B. Innate cellular
C. Passive antibody-mediated
D. T-cell dependent

C. Passive antibody-mediated

100

Which feature remains constant after class switching?
A. Antigen bound
B. Fc-mediated function
C. Antibody class
D. Complement ability

A. Antigen bound

101

Which feature changes after class switching?
A. Cognate antigen
B. Epitope recognized
C. Fab specificity
D. Effector function

D. Effector function

102

Which antibody is most abundant overall in the body?
A. IgM
B. IgE
C. IgA
D. IgD

C. IgA

103

Which antibody is most abundant in blood?
A. IgG
B. IgA
C. IgE
D. IgM

A. IgG

104

A patient has recurrent infections at mucosal surfaces. Which antibody class is most important there?
A. IgG
B. IgM
C. IgE
D. IgA

D. IgA

105

The “clip” structure of IgA helps transport IgA across which barrier?
A. Placental barrier
B. Intestinal wall
C. Blood-brain barrier
D. Splenic sinusoid

B. Intestinal wall

106

The IgA “clip” structure helps resist which threat?
A. Digestive acids and enzymes
B. Complement-mediated lysis
C. Mast-cell degranulation
D. T-cell apoptosis

A. Digestive acids and enzymes

107

A breastfeeding infant receives antibody protection coating the gut mucosa. Which antibody is provided?
A. IgM
B. IgE
C. IgD
D. IgA

D. IgA

108

Which antibody crosses the placenta into the fetus?
A. IgA
B. IgG
C. IgE
D. IgM

B. IgG

109

Maternal IgA protects infants mainly by coating which surface?
A. Skin epidermis
B. Fetal blood vessels
C. Intestinal mucosa
D. Bone marrow sinusoids

C. Intestinal mucosa

110

Why is IgA poor at fixing complement?
A. IgA lacks Fab regions
B. C1 cannot bind IgA Fc
C. IgA destroys complement proteins
D. IgA blocks all cytokines

B. C1 cannot bind IgA Fc

111

Anaphylactic shock is caused by degranulation of which cells?
A. Plasma cells
B. Neutrophils
C. Mast cells
D. Macrophages

C. Mast cells

112

Mast-cell degranulation releases which major active chemical?
A. Histamine
B. Perforin
C. C3b
D. IFN-gamma

A. Histamine

113

IgE is produced in response to what?
A. Self DNA
B. Allergens
C. C1 complexes
D. MHC I loss

B. Allergens

114

Which cells carry IgE receptors involved in allergy?
A. Neutrophils
B. Plasma cells
C. Mast cells
D. Erythrocytes

C. Mast cells

115

IgE-bound mast cells dump granules into tissues. What is this process called?
A. Degranulation
B. Opsonization
C. Neutralization
D. Affinity maturation

A. Degranulation

116

Antibody class switching is controlled mainly by what B cells encounter?
A. Antigen size
B. Complement fragments
C. Chromosome number
D. Cytokines

D. Cytokines

117

A B cell is in an IL-4 and IL-5-rich environment. Which class is favored?
A. IgA
B. IgG
C. IgE
D. IgM

C. IgE

118

IL-4 and IL-5 are abundant in allergic reactions and which infections?
A. Viral infections
B. Gram-negative sepsis
C. Fungal bloodstream infections
D. Parasitic infections

D. Parasitic infections

119

Very high mutation rates occur in selected B-cell gene regions. What is this called?
A. Somatic hypermutation
B. Class switching
C. Polyclonal activation
D. Complement fixation

A. Somatic hypermutation

120

Somatic hypermutation especially affects regions containing which segments?
A. C only
B. V, D, J
C. Fc and C2
D. C1 and V

B. V, D, J

121

Somatic hypermutation occurs after which event?
A. Mast-cell priming
B. VDJ selection
C. IgA secretion
D. Complement fixation

B. VDJ selection

122

Somatic hypermutation occurs after which rearrangement is selected?
A. Productive rearrangement
B. Polyclonal rearrangement
C. Fc rearrangement
D. Complement rearrangement

A. Productive rearrangement

123

Somatic hypermutation changes the gene region encoding what?
A. Fc constant region
B. C1 binding site
C. IgA clip structure
D. Antigen-binding Fab region

D. Antigen-binding Fab region

124

Somatic hypermutation can affect BCR affinity in which way?
A. Increase only
B. Decrease only
C. Increase, decrease, or unchanged
D. Always unchanged

C. Increase, decrease, or unchanged

125

B cells with higher-affinity BCRs compete better for what?
A. T-cell help
B. C1 inhibitor
C. Mast-cell granules
D. Intestinal transport

A. T-cell help

126

During affinity selection, T-cell help is best described as what?
A. Unlimited
B. Irrelevant
C. Limited
D. Toxic

C. Limited

127

The end result of somatic hypermutation is BCRs that bind antigen how?
A. Weakly
B. Tightly
C. Randomly
D. Nonspecifically

B. Tightly

128

Fine-tuning BCRs toward higher average affinity is called what?
A. Class switching
B. Polyclonal activation
C. Complement fixation
D. Affinity maturation

D. Affinity maturation

129

T-cell-independent B-cell activation usually lacks which processes?
A. IgM secretion only
B. Plasma-cell formation
C. Antigen binding
D. Class switching and SHM

D. Class switching and SHM

130

T cells are very important, but not absolutely necessary, for which processes?
A. Class switching and SHM
B. IgM production only
C. Mast-cell degranulation
D. IgA intestinal transport

A. Class switching and SHM

131

B cells activated independently of T cells do not produce which cells?
A. Plasma cells
B. Mast cells
C. Memory B cells
D. Naive B cells

C. Memory B cells

132

In T-cell-independent activation, activated B cells become what?
A. Memory B cells
B. Plasma B cells
C. Helper T cells
D. Mast cells

B. Plasma B cells

133

Allergic rhinitis is associated with which antibody class?
A. IgA
B. IgG
C. IgE
D. IgM

C. IgE

134

Which factor best determines antibody class switching?
A. Antigen color
B. Cytokine environment
C. MHC I density
D. Mast-cell number

B. Cytokine environment

135

Which BCRs survive best during competitive selection?
A. Higher-affinity BCRs
B. Lower-affinity BCRs
C. IgA-only BCRs
D. Random BCRs

A. Higher-affinity BCRs

136

Maternal milk IgA mainly protects against pathogens entering through what route?
A. Respiratory inhalation
B. Placental circulation
C. Skin abrasions
D. Ingestion

D. Ingestion