Question III. If Koba Kilminster had a severe genetic defect in the VpreB gene,
ID: 175291 • Letter: Q
Question
Question III. If Koba Kilminster had a severe genetic defect in the VpreB gene, causing its non- expression (but the rest of Koba’s genes would be expressed normally), then [complete the sentence and assess the following statements (70-81) as either factually correct (true) or incorrect (false) in the given context]:
70. Koba’s antigen-stimulated T cells would be still able to produce interleukin-2 (IL-2).
71. Koba’s pre-B cells would be still able to produce functional chains.
72. Koba’s Ig light chain expression would be different from that in healthy persons due to enhanced allelic exclusion.
73. Koba’s b TCR chain expression would be different from that in healthy persons due to impaired allelic exclusion.
74. Koba’s pre-B cells would be unable to produce a pre-B-cell receptor.
75. Koba’s early pro-B cells would display an increased (in comparison with healthy controls) phosphorylation of the RAG-2 protein.
76. Koba would suffer from B-cell immunodeficiency.
77. Koba would not suffer from T-cell immunodeficiency.
78. Koba would suffer from bacterial infections.
79. Koba would require prophylactic injections of antibodies from healthy donors in order to remain healthy.
80. Koba would require strong immunosuppressive therapy in order to prevent autoimmunity
81. Koba would require no therapy at all while maintaining full health.
Explanation / Answer
Koba antigen stimulate T celss would be still able to produce IL-2
71= incorrect.
72=incorrect.
73=correct
74=incorrect.
75=correct.
Related Questions
drjack9650@gmail.com
Navigate
Integrity-first tutoring: explanations and feedback only — we do not complete graded work. Learn more.