Types of immunity – humoral and cellular MCQs With Answer

Understanding the types of immunity—humoral and cellular—is essential for B.Pharm students studying immunology, pharmacology and vaccine development. Humoral immunity, mediated by B cells, plasma cells and antibodies (IgG, IgM, IgA, IgE, IgD), neutralizes extracellular pathogens and toxins. Cellular immunity, driven by T cells (CD4+, CD8+), antigen-presenting cells (APCs), macrophages and cytokines, eliminates infected or transformed cells. Core concepts include antigen presentation, MHC I/II pathways, clonal selection, class-switch recombination, memory cell formation, opsonization, and cytotoxic mechanisms. This knowledge underpins rational use of vaccines, monoclonal antibodies and immunosuppressants in clinical practice. Now let’s test your knowledge with 30 MCQs on this topic.

Q1. Which cells are the primary effectors that secrete antibodies in humoral immunity?

  • B cells
  • Plasma cells
  • T helper cells
  • Natural killer cells

Correct Answer: Plasma cells

Q2. Which immunoglobulin class readily crosses the placenta to provide passive immunity to the fetus?

  • IgM
  • IgA
  • IgG
  • IgE

Correct Answer: IgG

Q3. MHC class I molecules present peptides primarily to which lymphocyte subset?

  • CD4+ T helper cells
  • CD8+ cytotoxic T cells
  • B cells
  • NK cells

Correct Answer: CD8+ cytotoxic T cells

Q4. Exogenous antigens processed in endosomes and presented on MHC class II activate which cells?

  • CD8+ T cells
  • CD4+ T helper cells
  • Plasma cells
  • Neutrophils

Correct Answer: CD4+ T helper cells

Q5. Which cytokine is a key signature product of Th1 responses and activates macrophages?

  • IL-4
  • IL-10
  • IFN-gamma
  • IL-17

Correct Answer: IFN-gamma

Q6. A Th2-dominated response promotes class switching to which antibody associated with allergic responses?

  • IgG
  • IgA
  • IgM
  • IgE

Correct Answer: IgE

Q7. Which complement pathway is triggered by antigen–antibody complexes?

  • Alternative pathway
  • Lectin pathway
  • Classical pathway
  • Properdin pathway

Correct Answer: Classical pathway

Q8. Which complement fragment is most important for opsonization and enhancing phagocytosis?

  • C3a
  • C3b
  • C5a
  • C9

Correct Answer: C3b

Q9. Which cells mediate target cell killing by releasing perforin and granzymes?

  • CD4+ T helper cells
  • Plasma cells
  • CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes
  • B cells

Correct Answer: CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes

Q10. Which professional antigen-presenting cell is most efficient at priming naïve T cells?

  • Neutrophil
  • Erythrocyte
  • Dendritic cell
  • Fibroblast

Correct Answer: Dendritic cell

Q11. Affinity maturation of antibodies occurs primarily in which anatomical site?

  • Bone marrow medulla
  • Thymic cortex
  • Germinal centers of lymph nodes
  • Spleen red pulp

Correct Answer: Germinal centers of lymph nodes

Q12. Memory B cells and long-lived plasma cells are generated mainly through which process?

  • Clonal anergy
  • Germinal center reaction
  • Complement fixation
  • Immediate hypersensitivity

Correct Answer: Germinal center reaction

Q13. Which is an example of passive immunity?

  • Receiving killed vaccine
  • Administration of immunoglobulin (IVIG)
  • Activation of naïve B cells
  • Natural infection leading to immunity

Correct Answer: Administration of immunoglobulin (IVIG)

Q14. Which scenario best describes active immunity?

  • Maternal IgG transferred to infant
  • Injection of antitoxin antibodies
  • Immune response after vaccination
  • Administration of monoclonal antibodies

Correct Answer: Immune response after vaccination

Q15. Which type of vaccine most strongly stimulates both humoral and cellular immunity, including CD8+ T cell responses?

  • Inactivated (killed) vaccines
  • Subunit vaccines
  • Live attenuated vaccines
  • Toxoid vaccines

Correct Answer: Live attenuated vaccines

Q16. Class-switch recombination in B cells changes which property of antibodies?

  • Antigen specificity
  • Variable region DNA sequence
  • Isotype (constant region) such as IgM to IgG
  • Antigen binding affinity only

Correct Answer: Isotype (constant region) such as IgM to IgG

Q17. Fcγ receptors mainly bind which part of an antibody to mediate opsonization and ADCC?

  • Fab region
  • Hinge region
  • Fc region of IgG
  • Carbohydrate side chains only

Correct Answer: Fc region of IgG

Q18. Exogenous antigen processing for MHC II presentation involves which intracellular compartment?

  • Proteasome in cytosol
  • Endoplasmic reticulum lumen exclusively
  • Endosomal/lysosomal compartments
  • Mitochondrial matrix

Correct Answer: Endosomal/lysosomal compartments

Q19. Which innate lymphocyte detects cells with reduced MHC class I expression (‘missing self’)?

  • CD4+ T cells
  • Natural killer cells
  • B cells
  • Neutrophils

Correct Answer: Natural killer cells

Q20. Which immunosuppressive drug inhibits calcineurin and T-cell activation by blocking NFAT signaling?

  • Azathioprine
  • Cyclophosphamide
  • Cyclosporine
  • Mycophenolate mofetil

Correct Answer: Cyclosporine

Q21. During a primary humoral immune response, which antibody is produced first by naïve B cells?

  • IgG
  • IgA
  • IgM
  • IgE

Correct Answer: IgM

Q22. Which characteristic best describes a secondary (anamnestic) immune response?

  • Slower onset and lower affinity antibodies
  • Faster onset with higher affinity IgG due to memory cells
  • Exclusive production of IgM without class switching
  • Absence of memory B cells

Correct Answer: Faster onset with higher affinity IgG due to memory cells

Q23. Antibody-mediated cell destruction and complement activation against cell-surface antigens is classified as which hypersensitivity type?

  • Type I hypersensitivity
  • Type II hypersensitivity
  • Type III hypersensitivity
  • Type IV hypersensitivity

Correct Answer: Type II hypersensitivity

Q24. Which laboratory assay is commonly used to quantify specific antibodies in serum, assessing humoral immunity?

  • Western blot for cytokines
  • ELISA for specific antibodies
  • Flow cytometry for MHC expression only
  • Polymerase chain reaction for T cell receptors

Correct Answer: ELISA for specific antibodies

Q25. Intracellular (endogenous) antigens are typically processed and presented on which MHC class?

  • MHC class II
  • MHC class I
  • Helper MHC complex
  • MHC class III

Correct Answer: MHC class I

Q26. Effective thymus-dependent B cell activation requires help from which specialized CD4+ T cell subset?

  • Th17 cells
  • Regulatory T cells (Treg)
  • T follicular helper (Tfh) cells
  • CD8+ cytotoxic T cells

Correct Answer: T follicular helper (Tfh) cells

Q27. Which cytokine is the principal effector secreted by Th17 cells?

  • IL-4
  • IL-10
  • IL-17
  • IFN-alpha

Correct Answer: IL-17

Q28. The process that eliminates self-reactive T cells during thymic development is called what?

  • Positive selection
  • Somatic hypermutation
  • Negative selection
  • Class-switch recombination

Correct Answer: Negative selection

Q29. Rituximab, used in certain autoimmune diseases and lymphomas, targets which B-cell surface antigen?

  • CD3
  • CD19
  • CD20
  • CD28

Correct Answer: CD20

Q30. Which clinical test is an example of delayed-type hypersensitivity and assesses cell-mediated immunity to mycobacterial antigens?

  • ELISA for anti-mycobacterial IgG
  • Complement fixation test
  • Tuberculin skin test (Mantoux)
  • Rapid antigen detection test

Correct Answer: Tuberculin skin test (Mantoux)

Author

  • G S Sachin
    : Author

    G S Sachin is a Registered Pharmacist under the Pharmacy Act, 1948, and the founder of PharmacyFreak.com. He holds a Bachelor of Pharmacy degree from Rungta College of Pharmaceutical Science and Research and creates clear, accurate educational content on pharmacology, drug mechanisms of action, pharmacist learning, and GPAT exam preparation.

    Mail- Sachin@pharmacyfreak.com

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