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CMB 2004 IMMUNITY EXAM QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

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CMB 2004 IMMUNITY EXAM QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS...

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  • August 19, 2024
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  • CMB 2004 IMMUNITY
  • CMB 2004 IMMUNITY
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CMB 2004 IMMUNITY EXAM QUESTIONS AND
ANSWERS


What must an effective immune response do? (4 things) - ANSWER Be able to
recognise and respond to invading pathogen

Not over-react to to benign or self

Be able to direct different effector mechanisms against different pathogens

Links innate and adaptive responses

What is adaptive immunity? (3 details) - ANSWER It is induced by exposure to a
PARTICULAR infection, it has a high degree of specificity.

It exhibits memory

What is the clonal selection theory? Why? - ANSWER It states that each
lymphocyte has membrane-bound immunoglobulin receptors specific for a
particular antigen and after the receptor is engaged, proliferation of the cell occurs
such that a clone of antibody-producing cells is produced.

This is because there's a low frequency of cells specific for any antigen, more
receptors than cells.

Describe the level of antibody production in the primary and secondary immune
response? - ANSWER When first exposed to antigen, low antibody production
(innate response, non specific)

Adaptive starts to with increased Ig production.

Decrease in Ig means the immune response has been successful.

With a secondary infection the lag phase would be quicker, so more antibodies are
produced quickly.

Where's the BCR expressed? - ANSWER by B lymphocytes (The membrane form

,of Ig), secreted when the B cell is activated)`

What does the BCR bind? - ANSWER Free antigen

Where's the TCR expressed? - ANSWER On T lymphocytes, membrane form only

What does the TCR bind? - ANSWER Recognizes peptide fragments (processed
antigen)

bound to MHC

What's the immunoglobulin superfamily? - ANSWER a large group of cell surface
and soluble proteins that are involved in the recognition, binding, or adhesion
processes of cells. Including Antibodies T cell receptors, MHC molecules

What are the two main functions of antibodies? - ANSWER To activate
complement- for oposonisation, classical pathway activation and MAC

Activation of effector cells- Cells that express FcR (the receptor that binds to the
FC region of the antibody)

Describe the structure of an antibody - ANSWER Formed via 4 polypeptides

C terminus at the constant region, N terminus at the variable regions.

Has different domains, Hc identical as are Lc

held by both covalent and non covalent bonds

What region of an antibody is the antigen binding site made up of? - ANSWER The
variable regions of one heavy and one light chain

What is the constant region of an antibody? - ANSWER The region which is the
same in any antibody. Responsible with interacting with molecules such as FcR and
cells of the innate system for antibody effector functions

What's the structure of a light chain of the antibody? - ANSWER It has a lamda or
kappa regions

What are Fc regions? - ANSWER They are Ch regions which interact with effector
cells via FcR and complement

What are the 5 classes of antibodies? - ANSWER IgM---- largest antibody, first to

,appear, pentamer (10 binding sites)

IgA---- mucosal immunity, including tears and saliva

IgD--- coexpression with IgM, Secreted in blood serum

IgG---Most common, crosses placenta so protects the fetus, causes opsonisation

IgE--- immunity to helminths, least abundant, allergies

What are domains in an antibody? - ANSWER The domains are highly conserved
between bits of the immune system,

The heavy chain has 4 or 5 whilst the light has 2

Composed of 2 beta sheets held via disulphide bridges

each 110 aa in length

What is the MHC? - ANSWER Major histocompatibility complex

A set of genes which encode cell surface molecules, bind peptide fragments and
display then on the surface for recognition.

How do antibodies and antigen interact? - ANSWER Via the binding site, variable
regions are specific to a given antibody..

possess hypervariable regions, variable regions within variable regions ( 3 in Hv
and 3 in Lv) HV1-3

6 hv loops make up the binding site

What are complementary determining regions? - ANSWER CDRs are the same as
hypervariable regions (CDR1-3)

Antigen binds to amino acids in CDRs (affected by the size and shape)

What are the two types of antigen recognition? - ANSWER Linear (continuous)
epitope: 3 single amino acids/ 3 regions of antigen , sequential

Non linear/discontinuous epitope: conformational

What is an epitope? - ANSWER The region of an antigen that the antibody
recognises

, Describe the structure of the TCR? - ANSWER Recognises short peptide
fragments, bound to MHC

It's a heterodimer of alpha and beta

each chain possesses a V and C region

4 domains are Ig like

V domains interact with antigen

each chain contributes 3 CDRs to antigen binding

What's the difference in structure between MHC class I & II? - ANSWER Class I:
1 TM domain (expressed on ALL nucleated cells)

Class II: 2 TM domains (on only APC)

What's the MHC in humans? - ANSWER Human Leukacytes Antigen (HLAs):

What are class I HLAs? - ANSWER HLA-A, HLA-B and HLA-C

They are heterodimers

the alpha chain changes but the beta 2 chain remains the same (microglobulin,
12kD)

Alpha 1 & 2= peptide binding site

Alpha 3 and beta 2 are Ig like

What are class II HLAs? - ANSWER HLA-DP, HLA-DQ and HLA-DR

they are heterodimers where the alpha and beta chains are similar in size as they are
both transmembrane

encoded by seperate genes

alpha 2 and beta 2= Ig like

alpha 1 and beta 1= form peptide binding site

What type of peptides do different MHC bind? - ANSWER Class I: Short peptides,
snaps around

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