whats the difference between an attached and free antibody?
VCE Biology Questions Thread
clazah attached antibody = antibody on a B cell; used during clonal selection in humoral response.
Free antibody = singular antibody floating in either the blood or lymph, which can bind to antigens on pathogens and create an antibody-antigen complex. This enhances phagocytosis of the pathogen.
- Edited
clazah attached might be referring to membrane bound antibody receptors (like God said). That would include B cell receptors (not T cell receptor though because they're not a type of antibody). Free antibodies would just be the antibodies produced by plasma B cells to target specific antigens, causing opsonisation, agglutination, neutralisation, etc.
Edit: Haha bioho4! Two minds think alike!
what is the ATP yield of ETC?
do we need to know about DNA hybridisation?
clazah 26 or 28 ATP (it's on the biology FAQ document on the VCAA website, as most textbooks have the numbers wrong).
atarwonders nope. That was from the last study design, so you can ignore those questions!
can somebody please explain this multiple choice question: The insulin produced by recombinant DNA technology is.. the answer was; produced from human insulin mRNA.
whats the difference between universal and degenerate?
clazah
Universal = Same codons code for the same amino acids in different species. This is all about the "universal" nature of the codon to amino acid system.
Degenerate = Multiple codons code for the same amino acid -> Results in a level of redundancy, whereby some mutations won't actually alter the amino acid (silent mutation)
I was doing a multiple choice question from the practice exams Nelson net provided, and one of the questions implied that you knew the difference between degeneracy and redundancy.
Is there a difference at all?
Thanks
if we have too much tryptophan will it become toxic ?
chemistry1111 No, trp is an amino acid and its not because of its toxicity the trp operon exists, but rather its synthesis is very energy costly, so continual expression of the trp genes could deplete the cell of ATP. And that's why these structural genes are regulated in an operon to conserve this ATP when trp is already present
tubes
B is the best answer and here is why.
When DNA is needed to be inserted into the plasmid of a bacteria, it must not contain the introns. This is due to the prokaryotic DNA not containing introns and hence does not undergo RNA processing.
The reason the human insulin is produce by the human insulin mRNA is because the human mRNA does not contain introns. The enzyme invertase is then used to convert the intron free mRNA in to DNA strand, that does not contain introns. Hence DNA is able to be inserted into the bacterial plasmid to produce the correct gene produce, insulin.
I hope this makes sense
Hey i need help with the answer for 9a for the sample exam, my teacher said it was homo erectus but im still confused
Also for 10d im unsure about the marking
vcaa exam 2018 question 4a.
Draw a labelled diagram to illustrate endocytosis of botulinum toxin into nerve cells.
Is this still required to know or not?
Thanks