Question detail

Which of the following substances can monoclonal antibodies deliver to cancer cells?

Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.

At a glance

MCQ

Type

practice

Style

Topic

Monoclonal antibodies (biology only) (HT only)

Question

  1. A. Only radioactive substances
  2. B. Only toxic drugs
  3. C. Only growth-inhibiting chemicals
  4. D. Radioactive substances, toxic drugs, or growth-inhibiting chemicals

Answer

The correct option is Radioactive substances, toxic drugs, or growth-inhibiting chemicals because it matches the approved biology in Uses of monoclonal antibodies within Monoclonal antibodies (biology only) (HT only).

Explanation

The correct option is Radioactive substances, toxic drugs, or growth-inhibiting chemicals because it stays accurate for Uses of monoclonal antibodies in Monoclonal antibodies (biology only) (HT only). It matches the approved learning objective about explain how a monoclonal antibody can deliver a radioactive substance, toxic drug or growth-inhibiting chemical to cancer cells and avoids the oversimplified distractors.

Common mistake

Misunderstanding Delivery Mechanism

Students often confuse how monoclonal antibodies deliver substances to cancer cells, thinking they directly kill the cells rather than targeting them for treatment.

Clarify that monoclonal antibodies bind specifically to cancer cell antigens, allowing for the delivery of a radioactive substance, toxic drug, or growth-inhibiting chemical directly to the cancer cells, which then disrupts their function.

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Explain How A Monoclonal Antibody Can Deliver A Radioactive Substance Toxic Drug Or Growth Inhibiting Chemical To Cancer Cells Mcq 3 | AQA GCSE Biology Question detail | ExamCompanion