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this is an RC article posted by somebody else in the RC forum before, under the article and practice there was an additional information which states that:
--== Message from the GMAT Club Team ==--
THERE IS LIKELY A BETTER DISCUSSION OF THIS EXACT QUESTION. This discussion does not meet community quality standards. It has been retired.
If you would like to discuss this question please re-post it in the respective forum. Thank you!
The antigen-antibody immunological reaction used to be regarded as typical of immunological responses. Antibodies are proteins synthesized by specialized cells called plasma cells, which are formed by lymphocytes (cells from the lymph system) when an antigen, a substance foreign to the organism(a body, comes in contact with lymphocytes. Two important manifestations of antigen-antibody immunity are lysis, the rapid physical rupture of antigenic cells and the liberation of their contents into the surrounding medium, and phagocytosis, a process in which antigenic particles are engulfed by and very often digested by macrophages and polymorphs. The process of lysis is executed by a complex and unstable blood constituent known as complement, which will not work unless it is activated by a specific antibody; the process of phagocytosis is greatly facilitated when the particles to be engulfed are coated by a specific antibody directed against them.
The reluctance to abandon this hypothesis, however well it explains specific processes, impeded new research, and for many years antigens and antibodies dominated the thoughts of immunologists so completely that those immunologists overlooked certain difficulties. Perhaps the primary difficulty with the antigen-antibody explanation is the informational problem of how an antigen is recognized and how a structure exactly complementary to it is then synthesized. When molecular biologists discovered, moreover, that such information cannot flow from protein to protein, but only from nucleic acid to protein, the theory that an antigen itself provided the mold that directed the synthesis of an antibody had to be seriously qualified. The attempts at qualification and the information provided by research in molecular biology led scientists to realize that a second immunological reaction is mediated through the lymphocytes that are hostile to and bring about the destruction of the antigen. (THIS IS THE KEY SENTENCE FOR OPTION(A), HOWVER, I THINK THIS ISN'T THE MAIN POINT WHICH THE AUTHOR CONCERNED ABOUT)This type of immunological response is called cell-mediated immunity.
Recent research in cell-mediated immunity has been concerned not only with the development of new and better vaccines, but also with the problem of transplanting tissues and organs from one organism to another, for although circulating antibodies play a part in the rejection of transplanted tissues, the primary role is played by cell-mediated reactions. During cell-mediated responses, receptor sites on specific lymphocytes and surface antigens on the foreign tissue cells form a complex that binds the lymphocytes to the tissue. Such lymphocytes do not give rise to antibody-producing plasma cells (SO OPTION(B) IS NOT LIKELY TO BE TRUE, IT DOESN'T INVOLVE ANTIBODY OR ANTIGEN)but themselves bring about the death of the foreign-tissue cells, probably by secreting a variety of substances, some of which are toxic to the tissue cells and some of which stimulate increased phagocytic activity by white blood cells of the macrophage type. Cell-mediated immunity also accounts for the destruction of intracellular parasites.
1. The author is primarily concerned with (A) proving that immunological reactions do not involve antibodies (B) establishing that most immunological reactions involve antigens (C) criticizing scientists who will not change their theories regarding immunology (D) analyzing the importance of cells in fighting disease (E) explaining two different kinds of immunological reactions
IN THE FIRST PARAGRAPH OF THE ARTICLE, THE ARTHOR FOCUS ON The antigen-antibody immunological reaction AND THE SECOND PARAGRAPH(The reluctance to abandon this hypothesis, however well it explains specific ....) IS THE CRITICAL TURNING POINT, WHICH FOLLOW ANOTHER IMMUNITY REACTION ''cell-mediated immunity''
The antigen-antibody immunological reaction VS cell-mediated immunity I THINK THE CORRECT ANSWER IS (E)
Archived Topic
Hi there,
This topic has been closed and archived due to inactivity or violation of community quality standards. No more replies are possible here.
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this is an RC article posted by somebody else in the RC forum before, under the article and practice there was an additional information which states that:
--== Message from the GMAT Club Team ==--
THERE IS LIKELY A BETTER DISCUSSION OF THIS EXACT QUESTION. This discussion does not meet community quality standards. It has been retired.
If you would like to discuss this question please re-post it in the respective forum. Thank you!
The antigen-antibody immunological reaction used to be regarded as typical of immunological responses. Antibodies are proteins synthesized by specialized cells called plasma cells, which are formed by lymphocytes (cells from the lymph system) when an antigen, a substance foreign to the organism(a body, comes in contact with lymphocytes. Two important manifestations of antigen-antibody immunity are lysis, the rapid physical rupture of antigenic cells and the liberation of their contents into the surrounding medium, and phagocytosis, a process in which antigenic particles are engulfed by and very often digested by macrophages and polymorphs. The process of lysis is executed by a complex and unstable blood constituent known as complement, which will not work unless it is activated by a specific antibody; the process of phagocytosis is greatly facilitated when the particles to be engulfed are coated by a specific antibody directed against them.
The reluctance to abandon this hypothesis, however well it explains specific processes, impeded new research, and for many years antigens and antibodies dominated the thoughts of immunologists so completely that those immunologists overlooked certain difficulties. Perhaps the primary difficulty with the antigen-antibody explanation is the informational problem of how an antigen is recognized and how a structure exactly complementary to it is then synthesized. When molecular biologists discovered, moreover, that such information cannot flow from protein to protein, but only from nucleic acid to protein, the theory that an antigen itself provided the mold that directed the synthesis of an antibody had to be seriously qualified. The attempts at qualification and the information provided by research in molecular biology led scientists to realize that a second immunological reaction is mediated through the lymphocytes that are hostile to and bring about the destruction of the antigen. (THIS IS THE KEY SENTENCE FOR OPTION(A), HOWVER, I THINK THIS ISN'T THE MAIN POINT WHICH THE AUTHOR CONCERNED ABOUT)This type of immunological response is called cell-mediated immunity.
Recent research in cell-mediated immunity has been concerned not only with the development of new and better vaccines, but also with the problem of transplanting tissues and organs from one organism to another, for although circulating antibodies play a part in the rejection of transplanted tissues, the primary role is played by cell-mediated reactions. During cell-mediated responses, receptor sites on specific lymphocytes and surface antigens on the foreign tissue cells form a complex that binds the lymphocytes to the tissue. Such lymphocytes do not give rise to antibody-producing plasma cells (SO OPTION(B) IS NOT LIKELY TO BE TRUE, IT DOESN'T INVOLVE ANTIBODY OR ANTIGEN)but themselves bring about the death of the foreign-tissue cells, probably by secreting a variety of substances, some of which are toxic to the tissue cells and some of which stimulate increased phagocytic activity by white blood cells of the macrophage type. Cell-mediated immunity also accounts for the destruction of intracellular parasites.
1. The author is primarily concerned with (A) proving that immunological reactions do not involve antibodies (B) establishing that most immunological reactions involve antigens (C) criticizing scientists who will not change their theories regarding immunology (D) analyzing the importance of cells in fighting disease (E) explaining two different kinds of immunological reactions
IN THE FIRST PARAGRAPH OF THE ARTICLE, THE ARTHOR FOCUS ON The antigen-antibody immunological reaction AND THE SECOND PARAGRAPH(The reluctance to abandon this hypothesis, however well it explains specific ....) IS THE CRITICAL TURNING POINT, WHICH FOLLOW ANOTHER IMMUNITY REACTION ''cell-mediated immunity''
The antigen-antibody immunological reaction VS cell-mediated immunity I THINK THE CORRECT ANSWER IS (E)
Still interested in this question? Check out the "Best Topics" block above for a better discussion on this exact question, as well as several more related questions.