Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT141 S3 P1 Q7 Explanation

Prions

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Passage

An organism is considered to have an infection when a disease-causing agent, called a pathogen, establishes a viable presence in the organism. This can occur only if the pathogenic agent is able to reproduce itself in the host organism. The only agents believed until recently to be responsible for infections—viruses, bacteria, fungi, thus widely assumed that all pathogens contain such genetic material in their cellular structure.

This assumption has been challenged, however, by scientists seeking to identify the pathogen that causes Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), a degenerative form of dementia in humans. CJD causes the brain to become riddled with tiny holes, like a sponge (evidence of extensive nerve cell death). Its symptoms include impaired muscle control, loss of not exclusively, of protein. Researchers coined the term “prion” for this new type of protein pathogen.

Upon further study, scientists discovered that prions normally exist as harmless cellular proteins in many of the body’s tissues, including white blood cells and nerve cells in the brain; however, they possess the capability of converting their structures into a dangerous abnormal shape. Prions exhibiting this abnormal conformation were found to have though there are wide variations in pre-symptomatic incubation times and in how aggressively the disease progresses.

Although the discovery of the link between prions and CJD was initially received with great skepticism in the scientific community, subsequent research has supported the conclusion that prions are an entirely new class of infectious pathogens. Furthermore, it is now believed that a similar process of protein malformation may be involved in which prions reproduce themselves and cause cellular destruction have yet to be completely understood.

What this question is testing

Weaken

Topic

The author is telling the story of a discovery that broke a long-held rule about what infections look like — and explaining how it works and what it might mean.

Framework

Highlight Noteworthy. The author isn't arguing against an opponent; they're showcasing a discovery and tracing its consequences.

Main Point

Here's the simpler version: scientists used to think every infectious agent had to carry genetic material — DNA or RNA — because that's how all the known ones reproduce. Then researchers studying CJD found something that breaks that rule: a pathogen made just of protein. They called it a "prion." Prions reproduce by changing the shape of other prions on contact, which is why they cause damage and why the body can't fight them. The discovery opened a whole new category of pathogen and might help explain other brain diseases too.

P1: The old rule

To count as a pathogen, an agent has to reproduce inside the host. Every known pathogen reproduced using DNA or RNA, so people assumed all pathogens contain genetic material.

P2: The exception

While hunting for the cause of CJD — a degenerative brain disease — scientists isolated something with no nucleic acid, just protein. They called it a prion.

P3: How prions cause harm

Prions are normally harmless proteins. But once one folds into the bad shape, it converts the next prion it touches into the same shape, which converts the next, and so on. That chain reaction creates plaques in the brain that kill nerve cells. Two important consequences: the body doesn't see prions as foreign (they're your own protein), and there's no therapy that stops the cascade — so CJD is always fatal.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
7.

Which one of the following, if true, would most undermine the claim that

Answer choices

  1. Too Weak18% picked this

    Several symptoms closely resembling those of CJD have been experienced by patients known to have

    Having common symptoms is too weak to establish that CJD has a common cause as viral infections.

  2. Out of Scope3% picked this

    None of the therapies currently available for treating neurological diseases is designed to block the chain reaction by which abnormal

    A lack of available treatment does not suggest the cause of the disease. We only recently discovered prions, so it would be unsurprising if there aren't drugs or therapies developed and disseminated for it yet.

  3. Strengthen27% picked this

    Research undertaken subsequent to the studies on CJD has linked prions to degenerative conditions not affecting the brain

    This makes it more likely that prions could be the cause of the degenerative disease CJD. We might be thinking, "but this says prions are linked to conditions not affecting the brain / CNS, whereas CJD does affect the brain." True, but this answer isn't saying that prions are only linked to these types of degenerative conditions.

  4. Strengthen2% picked this

    Epidemiological studies carried out on a large population have failed to show any hereditary

    Suggesting that CJD does not have a hereditary cause makes it a little more likely that it is caused by prions, because it rules out an alternate explanation for where CJD comes from.

  5. Correct50% picked this

    A newly developed antibacterial drug currently undergoing clinical trials is proving to be effective in reversing

    Why this is right

    If an anti-bacterial medicine helps to reverse the onset of CJD, this would suggest that the cause of CJD was bacterial, not prions. Prions are a 5th type of pathogen, whereas bacteria were one of the four previously known kinds.

    Skill tested: Weaken · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

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