Name some differences between the architecture of an axillary lymph node, a gut-associated lymph node, and the spleen
What is it meant by the expression "T and B cells are clonally restricted, but macrophages are notâ?
What physical/structural properties of a protein influence the formation of its antigenic epitopes?
Which of the following has the highest total number of mature lymphocytes? Lymph nodes, bone marrow, blood, skin, spleen
If an individual is irradiated and treated with drugs to destroy the whole immune system what manipulation would reconstitute the whole immune system again?
How can antibodies be used to characterize antibodies?
If you inject a rabbit with human IgG you get what is called a "polyclonal antiserum". What does this mean? What components of the IgG (the antigen) are the antibodies in the antiserum reactive with?
What determines the "isotype" of an antibody molecule?
Name some differences between the architecture of an axillary lymph node, a gut-associated lymph node, and the spleen
What is it meant by the expression "T and B cells are clonally restricted, but macrophages are notâ?
What physical/structural properties of a protein influence the formation of its antigenic epitopes?
Which of the following has the highest total number of mature lymphocytes? Lymph nodes, bone marrow, blood, skin, spleen
If an individual is irradiated and treated with drugs to destroy the whole immune system what manipulation would reconstitute the whole immune system again?
How can antibodies be used to characterize antibodies?
If you inject a rabbit with human IgG you get what is called a "polyclonal antiserum". What does this mean? What components of the IgG (the antigen) are the antibodies in the antiserum reactive with?
What determines the "isotype" of an antibody molecule?