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In USMLE Rx, a vignette gave an obvious description of a woman with cholera. Then it asked for the mechanism of action of cholera toxin. Easy enough, right?
I knocked it down to two answers:
A) An A-B heat-labile toxin that permanently activates adenylyl cyclase to increase cAMP
and
C) An A-B toxin that activates adenylyl cyclase by ADP-ribosylation to increase cAMP
Now, when I saw this, I'm like, "seriously, both are correct." I chose A. The answer was C. 18% got it right. 60% chose A. Of course I could also count on USMLE Rx to not give a thorough explanation as to why A was wrong.
Cholera toxin is most certainly analogous to the ETEC heat-labile toxin, and it does act permanently.
Does anyone have any thoughts here?
I'd appreciate it,
I knocked it down to two answers:
A) An A-B heat-labile toxin that permanently activates adenylyl cyclase to increase cAMP
and
C) An A-B toxin that activates adenylyl cyclase by ADP-ribosylation to increase cAMP
Now, when I saw this, I'm like, "seriously, both are correct." I chose A. The answer was C. 18% got it right. 60% chose A. Of course I could also count on USMLE Rx to not give a thorough explanation as to why A was wrong.
Cholera toxin is most certainly analogous to the ETEC heat-labile toxin, and it does act permanently.
Does anyone have any thoughts here?
I'd appreciate it,