PreviousBiology - Immunity: Score: 0 / 0Next

Biology - Immunity - MCAT Practice Questions

Innate immunity represents defenses that are always active and are best described as:
Non-specific






Adaptive immunity are defenses that are:
Specific to the invader






Which of the following acts as a physical barrier and secretes antimicrobial enzymes like defensins?
Skin






The sticky substance made in your nose, throat, and lungs that traps bacteria, viruses, and dust is called:
Mucous






What is the antimicrobial enzyme found in tears and saliva that forms part of the innate immune system?
Lysozyme






The complement system's function includes:
Attacking the pathogen's cell membrane and promoting inflammation.






A type of protein given off by virally infected cells that interferes with viral replication and dispersion is a/an:
Interferon






Which innate immune cells ingest pathogens and present them on MHC-II?
Macrophages






MHC I glycoproteins are present in:
All nucleated cells.






Which Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) molecule displays exogenous antigen to helper CD4+ T-Cells?
MHC-II






The main function of dendritic cells is to:
Process antigen material and present it to T cells.






Natural killer cells are a type of lymphocyte that specifically recognizes and kills:
The body's own cells that are cancerous or virally infected.






Humoral immunity is the component of the adaptive immune system provided by:
Antibodies






B cells are directly responsible for generating:
Antibodies to specific antigens.






The term used to describe the mutation of the antigen-binding site (variable region) on an antibody is:
Hypermutation






The immune process where pathogens are targeted for destruction by a phagocyte because they have been marked by antibodies is known as:
Opsonization






When antibodies cause pathogens to clump together into insoluble complexes, this is called:
Agglutination






Memory B cells are crucial in secondary infections because they:
Generate an accelerated and more robust antibody-mediated response.