Biology 12

(vip2019) #1
SKILL FOCUS

Initiating and planning

Predicting

Performing and recording

Analyzing and interpreting

Investigation 4 • B


130 MHR • Unit 2 Homeostasis


Pre-lab Questions
How widespread are food allergies in your class?
Which are the most common food allergies among
students in your class?

Problem
What will the data you collect and analyze indicate
about the importance of food allergies?

Prediction
Predict how many people in your class have food
allergies.

Procedure
1.Design a questionnaire to collect data. Your
questionnaire should include questions that
determine whether or not a person is aware of any
food allergy he or she has, which foods the person
is allergic to, and what symptoms they experience.
2.Distribute your questionnaire to the students in your
class. Keep in mind that the smaller your sample
size, the less dependable your results are. Clearly
state that this survey is completely voluntary.
Students should feel free to participate or not
participate: respect for privacy is essential. Those
who do participate should be urged to answer
questions as completely and accurately as possible.
They need not put their names on the questionnaire.

Food Allergy Survey
Most people who have food allergies are aware of the foods or food products they
should avoid. In this investigation you will gather data on how widespread food
allergies are in your class and determine which are most common.

Biology At Work


Immunologist


Dr. John Jacob Lyanga

Back to the Roots
“Early in life,” Dr. John Jacob Lyanga remembers, “I started
on the road of one day becoming a healer.” Dr. Lyanga
grew up in Tanzania. “In our culture, dogs were very
important because they were used for hunting and were
responsible for the surveillance of cattle and premises. If

the dogs became ill, it was my job as the oldest in the
family to make them well. I had to learn the medicinal
properties of local plant roots and leaves.”

Natural Killer Cells
Throughout his life, Dr. Lyanga wondered why some
forms of treatment work and others do not, depending
largely on the patient. After studying medicine in Tanzania
and then England, Dr. Lyanga obtained an internship at
Queen’s University in Kingston in 1973. This marked the
beginning of his study of immunology. Here he
encountered patients receiving kidney transplants and
was puzzled as to why some people accepted while
others rejected a transplanted kidney. Dr. Lyanga learned
that “kidney rejection is a harmful immune reaction; the
body is attacking the donor kidney in order to kill it or get
rid of it. Certain cells can kill other cells if they appear
foreign or threatening to the host. They are called natural
killer cells (or NK cells).” The study of immunology seeks
to understand why some cells accept, while others react
against, foreign cells.

The Allergy Capital of Canada
Today, Dr. Lyanga works as a doctor in allergy and clinical
immunology in Windsor, Ontario, sometimes referred to
Free download pdf