Functions of IgG – identify the exception: Which of the following is NOT a characteristic function or property of human IgG antibodies in systemic immunity?

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: First antibody produced during the primary response to a new antigen

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:
IgG is the dominant serum antibody in adults and mediates multiple effector functions. However, it is not typically the very first isotype produced upon initial exposure to a new antigen. This question asks you to identify the exception among otherwise true IgG statements.


Given Data / Assumptions:

  • Primary immune responses begin with IgM production, followed by class switching to IgG (and others).
  • IgG is the most abundant serum antibody, crosses the placenta, fixes complement, and opsonizes pathogens.
  • Statements refer to standard human systemic immunity.


Concept / Approach:
Naive B cells initially secrete IgM due to default heavy chain constant region usage. After T cell help and cytokine signals, class-switch recombination generates IgG subclasses with enhanced effector functions and longevity. Therefore, the statement that IgG is the first antibody made in primary responses is incorrect; that role belongs to IgM.


Step-by-Step Solution:
List established IgG functions: serum dominance, placental transfer, complement activation, opsonization. Contrast with primary response kinetics where IgM appears first. Identify the incorrect statement as the “first produced” claim. Choose option describing early primary response incorrectly.


Verification / Alternative check:
Serological time-course: IgM peaks early and declines; IgG rises later and persists, forming the basis of acute vs convalescent titer interpretation.


Why Other Options Are Wrong:
All other options are correct roles of IgG in humans.


Common Pitfalls:
Confusing rapid secondary response (memory) where IgG dominates early, with the initial primary encounter where IgM comes first.


Final Answer:
First antibody produced during the primary response to a new antigen.

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