Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Growing nerve cells need special chemicals to survive and connect to the right places. Rita Levi-Montalcini discovered the first of these chemicals, called nerve growth factor (NGF). She found that embryos make many more nerve cells than they will keep, and NGF—produced by nearby muscles, organs, or even some tumors—helps guide nerve fibers to the correct targets and later keeps those nerve cells alive. If NGF is missing or blocked, certain developing nerve cells (mainly those outside the brain and spinal cord) die.
Logic Breakdown
Locate the explicit statements that embryos produce more nerve cells than needed and that NGF directs nerve processes to specific target cells; infer that the excess cells therefore fail to connect to targets.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage18.Information in the passage most strongly supports which one of the following?
Correct Answer
E
The passage explicitly states that 'when embryos are in the process of forming their nervous systems, they produce many more nerve cells than are finally required, the number that survives eventually adjusting itself to the volume of tissue to be supplied with nerves.' It also says that 'NGF seems to play two roles, serving initially to direct the developing nerve processes toward the correct, specific "target" cells with which they must connect, and later being necessary for the continued survival of those nerve cells.' Taken together, these sentences support the inference that some embryonic nerve cells do not connect with any particular target cells (and thus do not survive).
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