The Bouncers (First & Second Lines of Defense)
Swell Times (Inflammation & Signaling)
The Antibody Factory (B-Cells & Antibodies)
Training the Troops (T-Cells & Immunity)
The Art of War (Viral Edition)
100

In humans, the first line of defense against infection is __________.

  1. the inflammatory response

  2. the cell-mediated response

  3. the humeral response

  4. the skin and mucous membranes

  5. adaptive immunity

the skin and mucous membranes

100

Local swelling, increased blood flow, and fever are all parts of __________.

  1. an inflammatory response

  2. passive immunity

  3. cell-mediated immunity

  4. active immunity

  5. humoral immunity

an inflammatory response

100

Which is a characteristic of adaptive immunity?

  1. It has the ability to detect very specific pathogens.

  2. It is found only in invertebrates.

  3. It is common to all animals.

  4. Responses are the same whether or not the pathogen has been encountered previously.

  5. Responses are active immediately upon infection.

It has the ability to detect very specific pathogens.

100

Once you have been exposed to an antigen, you develop immunity against the same antigen because __________.

  1. certain lymphocytes enable the rapid formation of the proper antibodies

  2. antibodies against the disease are constantly circulating in your blood

  3. B cells are stimulated to quickly engulf invaders

  4. your innate defenses are strengthened

  5. antigens are altered so that the invaders can no longer attack your tissues

certain lymphocytes enable the rapid formation of the proper antibodies

100

A vaccine may contain __________.

  1. inactivated disease-causing microbes

  2. white blood cells that fight infection

  3. lymphocyte antigens

  4. antibodies that recognize invading microbes

  5. a hormone that boosts immunity

inactivated disease-causing microbes

200

Phagocytosis is best defined as __________.

  1. the cellular ingestion and digestion of foreign substances

  2. the secretion of antimicrobial peptides

  3. the process by which a cell engulfs and takes up a liquid

  4. the fusion of an intracellular vesicle with the plasma membrane of a cell

  5. the process of activating memory T cells

the cellular ingestion and digestion of foreign substances

200

Which is an immediate function of histamine?

  1. releasing interferons

  2. causing local arterioles to constrict

  3. increasing blood pressure

  4. decreasing the permeability of local capillaries

  5. Nearby blood vessels dilate, becoming more permeable and resulting in an increase of the local blood supply. This causes redness and an increase in temperature.

Nearby blood vessels dilate, becoming more permeable and resulting in an increase of the local blood supply. This causes redness and an increase in temperature.

200

An adaptive immune response is initiated by the presence of which molecules?

  1. interferon

  2. histamine

  3. antibody

  4. antigen

  5. complement

antigen

200

Which types of cells initiate a secondary immune response?

  1. natural killer cells

  2. effector cells

  3. memory cells

  4. cytotoxic cells

  5. plasma cells

memory cells

200

The idea behind vaccination is to induce __________ without requiring the vaccinated individual to get sick.

  1. nonspecific defenses

  2. anaphylactic shock

  3. passive immunity

  4. the primary immune response

  5. inflammation

the primary immune response

300


In insects, which is analogous to mammalian epithelial tissue, in that it serves as a first line of defense against infection?

  1. the production of chemicals that kill microbes

  2. hemocytes that engage in phagocytosis

  3. a chitinous exoskeleton

  4. lysozymes

  5. the production of a distinct class of antimicrobial peptides

a chitinous exoskeleton

300

If microorganisms penetrate the innate defenses, an inflammatory response may be initiated by the __________.

  1. release of chemicals such as histamine by mast cells

  2. discharge of cytokines from neutrophils

  3. accumulation of phagocytes in an injured area

  4. release of interferon by infected cells

  5. increased blood flow to an infected or injured area

release of chemicals such as histamine by mast cells

300

Antibodies are in which class of proteins?

  1. structural

  2. enzymatic

  3. transport

  4. receptor

  5. None of the choices is correct.


receptor

300

The body produces antibodies complementary to foreign antigens. The process by which the body comes up with the correct antibodies to a specific invader is most like __________.

  1. selecting a lottery prize winner by means of a random drawing

  2. going to a tailor and having a suit made to fit you

  3. going to a shoe store and trying on shoes until you find a pair that fits

  4. ordering the lunch special at a restaurant without looking at the menu

  5. picking out a video that you have not seen

going to a shoe store and trying on shoes until you find a pair that fits

300


Our immune system does not usually attack our own healthy tissues because such lymphocytes are __________.

  1. destroyed or rendered nonfunctional

  2. never produced

  3. converted into other cells of the immune system

  4. All of the choices are correct.

  5. None of the choices is correct.

destroyed or rendered nonfunctional

400

What do macrophages and neutrophils have in common?

  1. They attack virus-infected body cells.

  2. They are the two types of phagocytic cells in the mammalian body.

  3. They secrete lysozyme.

  4. They punch a hole in the plasma membrane of the pathogen, causing the cell to burst.

  5. They stimulate antibody production.


  6. hemocytes that engage in phagocytosis

They are the two types of phagocytic cells in the mammalian body.

400

What is part of the inflammatory response?

  1. clonal selection of B and T lymphocytes followed by the production of effector cells

  2. production of antibodies

  3. production of memory cells

  4. dilation of the capillaries

  5. constriction of the arterioles

dilation of the capillaries

400

The antigen-binding sites of an antibody molecule are formed from the molecule's variable regions. Why do we say these regions are called variable?

  1. They change their shapes when they bind to an antigen.

  2. They can change their shapes to fit different antigens.

  3. Their sizes vary considerably from one antibody to another.

  4. Their specific shapes are unimportant.

  5. Their shape is specific to a particular antibody molecule.

Their shape is specific to a particular antibody molecule.

400

The proliferation of the B lymphocyte to which a specific antigen binds is referred to as __________.

  1. an autoimmune response

  2. a cascade mechanism

  3. an activation sequence

  4. antigenic determination

  5. clonal selection

clonal selection

400

New flu shots are needed every year to protect against infection because of __________.

  1. latency

  2. direct attack on the immune system

  3. expiration

  4. antigenic variation

  5. None of the choices is correct.


antigenic variation

500

Which statement describes what would most likely happen to microbes in the blood?

  1. They are phagocytosed by natural killer cells.

  2. They are phagocytosed by neutrophils.

  3. They are phagocytosed by dendritic cells.

  4. They are phagocytosed by macrophages in the spleen.

  5. They are phagocytosed by eosinophils.

They are phagocytosed by macrophages in the spleen.

500

Chemicals produced by virus-infected cells that alert neighboring cells to prepare a defense are called __________.

  1. interferons

  2. cytokines

  3. complement proteins

  4. antibodies

  5. antigens

interferons

500

Which cell type carries out humoral immunity?

  1. natural killer cells

  2. T cells

  3. lymphocytes

  4. leukocytes

  5. B cells


B cells

500

In a series of immune system experiments, the thymus glands were removed from baby mice. What would you predict as a likely result?

  1. The mice never developed cancerous tumors.

  2. The mice suffered from autoimmune diseases.

  3. The mice were unable to produce an inflammatory response.

  4. The mice readily accepted tissue transplants.

  5. The mice suffered from numerous allergies.


The mice readily accepted tissue transplants.

500


When searching for a donor for an organ transplant, doctors try to match the __________ of the donor and recipient as closely as possible.

  1. MHC proteins

  2. cytokines

  3. erythrocytes

  4. blood type

  5. antibodies


MHC proteins

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