- Edited
do naive t cells or cytotoxic t cells undergo clonal expansion?
do naive t cells or cytotoxic t cells undergo clonal expansion?
atarwonders they consist of one big polypeptide (heavy chain) and one small polypeptide (light chain). They also have specific variable regions, which are complementary to the antigen. (the same as a normal antibody)
atarwonders you only need to talk about whether the Indigenous populations were able to develop immunity as well as the British (hint: British developed immunity at a younger age and thus already had antibodies, and Indigenous Australians were exposed to it for the first time)
atarwonders Hi there! For this question the main point is about prior immunity so for 3 marks Iβd say :β
chemistry1111 Naive T cells undergo clonal expansion and selection to form cytotoxic T cells or memory T cells
What is the underlying difference between a rule based approach and consequences based approach?
Example would really be nice
spicynuggets
Consequences-based approach = Aims to maximise the positive outcomes while minimising the negative outcomes.
Duty/rule-based approach = Promotes the responsibility of the agent above all else, and places importance on the duty of each individual.
Is rational drug design in the new study design?
Could someone please explain the function of the PAM sequence?
biology nope. That was from the last study design, so you can ignore these questions!
biology ok. So, the PAM sequence is a sequence of nucleotides called the protospacer adjacent motif (usually NNG, with N being any nucleotide). Viral DNA has many PAM sequences. When the protospacer is cut out of the viral DNA that has been injected into the bacteria, this is done a little after the PAM site by Cas1 and Cas2 (just other restriction endonucleases). The purpose of the PAM site is for the Cas9 cutting part of the CRISPR-Cas9 process. When the Cas9 enzymes identifies viral DNA and a PAM region on it, it opens up the DNA and sees whether or not the gRNA is complementary to the sequence of bases upstream from the PAM sequence but on the opposite strand. If the gRNA is complementary to the viral DNA section after the PAM sequence, it will cut the DNA on both strands just upstream from the PAM. However, if the gRNA does not match the viral sequence, Cas9 closes the viral DNA and continues to search for another PAM site (it can take multiple goes to find the right one since there are lots of PAM sites). So in summary, the PAM site is like a recognition tool or tag for Cas9 to search for and identify, allowing it to check the viral DNA with the gRNA before making a cut. Hope that makes sense!
what is the difference between social implication and biological implication? and also do we need to include that in sympatric speciation gene flow doesnt occur
_sophiestudies_ Thankyou so much!
for photosynthesis do you say the light dependent stage is the grana or thylakoid?
what is the role of rubisco?
clazah a granum is a stack of thylakoids, so u can say either i think
does anyone have access education biology exam
Is it okay to write exam in pencil
Hey guys, I got two questions:
Christ
I don't do VCE, or biology, but I believe it is best you refrain from using pencil in your exam. If it doesn't scan through, the answers get marked nil. Best to stick to blue or black pen, but I believe you can use a 2B pencil for the multiple choice.
p.s: as a rule of thumb, NEVER use frixion pens or an rub-out pen, our exams are stored in hot temperatures and your exam will be blank.
-jinx_58