01:119:116 Lecture Notes - Lecture 26: B Cell, Phagocytosis, Flowchart
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Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging is a tool that has been very useful in identifying what parts of the brain do what. Scientists can have a person perform some particular activity and then look for active areas in the brain. How does fMRI work?
A. | It takes a picture of the inside of the brain according to electricity levels. The more electrical current in the area, the more active it is. | |
B. | It takes a picture of the inside of the brain according to blood flow. More blood flow indicates more activity in that area. | |
C. | It takes images of thin layers of the brain and the more electrical activity in a layer, the more magnetic it is and this shows up in fMRI. | |
D. | Electrodes attached to the skull can trigger activity in particular brain areas which then trigger a person to perform certain behaviors. | |
E. | It takes a picture of the brain according to oxygen levels. More oxygen in an area indicates more activity in that area. |
The strategy of vaccination to fight diseases uses what type of immunity?
A. | Non-specific immunity | |
B. | Cell-mediated immunity | |
C. | Natural immunity | |
D. | Specific immunity | |
E. | Passive immunity |
If you came into contact with Vibrio, what defense do you have to keep it from even getting to your intestines?
A. | Your skin is an effective barrier against bacteria you come in contact with. | |
B. | Antimicrobial enzymes in saliva | |
C. | Acid in the stomach | |
D. | Mucous membranes in the digestive and respiratory tract | |
E. | All of the above |
What do B cells do when they identify a pathogen?
A. | Engulf and eat it | |
B. | Kill it | |
C. | Produce antigens to bind to the pathogen and memory cells to guard against future infection. | |
D. | Produce antibodies to bind to the pathogen and memory cells to guard against future infection. | |
E. | Engage helper T cells to fight the infection |
There are chemical signals that call on non-infected cells to help fight a virus. Which are they?
A. | Complement proteins | |
B. | Macrophages | |
C. | B cells | |
D. | Interferons | |
E. | Natural killer cells |
When someone gets a bone marrow transplant, they have to be quarantined and carefully protected from pathogens for a period of time afterward. Why?
A. | Bone marrow produces the main cells involved in the specific immune response, so these patients are at special risk of infection until they build up enough marrow to produce sufficient cells. | |
B. | Bone marrow produces blood cells, so they have insufficient circulation for a period of time so their immune system lacks the energy to fight off any infection. | |
C. | Anytime a foreign substance, even someone else's bone marrow, is introduced to a body, there is an extra risk of infection. | |
D. | A common complication of bone marrow transplants is infection, and doctor's don't want the infection to spread to others. | |
E. | It's a traumatic procedure, and any extra stress on their body could kill them. |
When someone gets a bone marrow transplant, they have to be quarantined and carefully protected from pathogens for a period of time afterward. Why?
A. | Bone marrow produces the main cells involved in the specific immune response, so these patients are at special risk of infection until they build up enough marrow to produce sufficient cells. | |
B. | Bone marrow produces blood cells, so they have insufficient circulation for a period of time so their immune system lacks the energy to fight off any infection. | |
C. | Anytime a foreign substance, even someone else's bone marrow, is introduced to a body, there is an extra risk of infection. | |
D. | A common complication of bone marrow transplants is infection, and doctor's don't want the infection to spread to others. | |
E. | It's a traumatic procedure, and any extra stress on their body could kill them. |
There is antibody-mediated and cell-mediated specific immunity. Which type of cells are primarily involved in the antibody-mediated immune response?
A. | Macrophages | |
B. | B cells | |
C. | Complement proteins | |
D. | T cells | |
E. | Antigens |
From the bacteria's perspective, why is it helpful that it produce diarrhea in people?
A. | Because it gets the bacteria out of the person and, likely, into the next one | |
B. | It's not helpful really. That's just what that toxin causes. | |
C. | Because that quickly kills the person | |
D. | Because it makes the patient too unpleasant to be around | |
E. | Because there is no real treatment for that |
Where do prions come from?
A. | There are prion-like particles in the brain normally, and when these become abnormal they can cause disease. | |
B. | Mosquitoes. | |
C. | They are clumps which form from normal prion-like particles in the blood that travel to the brain. | |
D. | They are introduced by infectious protozoa. | |
E. | Contaminated water. |
Which of the following statements about induction or maintenance of T cell tolerance is NOT true?
a. | Peripheral T cell tolerance to an antigen may be induced by persistent and repeated stimulation of lymphocytes by that antigen in tissues. | |
b. | Peripheral T cell tolerance results when T cells recognize antigen in the setting of an innate immune response to the antigen. | |
c. | Peripheral T cell tolerance to some antigens is induced when mature T cells recognize antigen and bind B7-1 or B7-2 via the inhibitory CTLA-4 receptor. | |
d. | Peripheral T cell tolerance results when mature naive T cells recognize antigens without adequate B7-1â or B7-2âmediated costimulation. | |
e. | Central tolerance is induced when immature developing T cells in bone marrow or thymus encounter self-antigens. |