BIO 211G Exam 4

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S mutation in Glc-Nac-1-PTS causes

I-cell disease

Which of the following best describes the proton motive force?

the gradient of protons across the inner mitochondria membrane

Which of the following proteins has an ER signal peptide?

the insulin receptor and insulin

How is the next amino acid added to a growing protein?

the protein is transferred from the P site tRNA to the amino acid on the A site tRNA

What is the targeting sequence for a cytoplasmic protein?

there is no targeting sequence for cytoplasmic proteins

what binds to the promotor?

transciption factors

The sequence of a portion of a template strand f DNA is shown. What is the amino acid sequence encoded by this DNA sequence? TAC TTC AAA

Met Lys Phe

During glycolysis, which molecule accepts electrons?

NAD+

During the citric acid cycle, which molecule(s) accept(s) electrons?

NAD+and FAD

At the end of the citric acid cycle, which of the following molecules is holding electrons from glucose?

NADH

What molecule donates electrons to the electron transport chain during cellular respiration?

NADH

What accepts electrons at the bottom of the electron transport chain during cellular respiration?

O2

What is the final electron acceptor in cellular respiration?

O2

The product of transcription is a_____ molecule

RNA

Which of the following gene fragments encodes a peroxisomal targeting sequence? (the DNA sequence of the template strand corresponding to the three codons encoding the three C-terminus amino acids is shown)

TCG TTC GAA AGG TTT GAT AGA TTC AAT

which of the following is a mRNA codon that is specifically recognized by release factor?

UAA

which of the following is added to RNA after transcription has occurred (as part of RNA processing)?

a 5' cap

Which of the following is out likely to cause Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy?

a nonsense mutation in exon 45 (out of 79 exons)

What does release factor recognize?

a stop codon in the A site

What signal sequences are part of insulin?

an Er signal peptide

How can O2 be characterized in terms of cellular respiration?

an acceptor

How can glucose be described?

as a reduced molecule; as an electron donor

Why are peroxisomal proteins found in the cytoplasm in Zellweger syndrome?

because PEX1 is mutated

What protein is mutated in people with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD)

dystrophin

Which of the following terms apply to ATP synthesis?

endergonic

During translation, how do "empty" tRNAs leave the ribosome?

from the E site

Which of the following is the correct order of molecules from most reduced to most oxidized?

glucose--> pyruvate--> acetyl Coa--> Co2

a peroxisomal protein has an intact peroxisomal targeting sequence, but there is a mutation in PEX1 that destroys PEX1 function. Where will the peroxisomal protein be found?

in the cytoplasm

Where does the "key" phosphorylation event that generates the lysosomal targeting sequence occur?

in the golgi

which sequence(s) is/are removed from pre-nmRNA as it is processed to mature mRNA?

introns

What happens to glucose during glycolysis?

it becomes partially oxidized to pyruvate

What happens when NAD+ accepts electrons?

it becomes reduced to NADH

How does a nonsense mutation impact transcription?

it does not impact transciption

In order for a promoter mutation to be the cause of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD), what would the mutation have to do to the promoter?

make the promoter "weaker" than normal

What type of mutation results in a change of one amino act to another amino acid in the encoded protein?

missense

Does RNA polymerase have an Er signal peptide

no

a wild type protein is 156 amino acids in length, and has a valine as its 78th amino acid. A mutant version of the protein is much shorter-only 77 amino acids in length. The mutant version is otherwise identical to the wild type. What type of mutation occurred at codon 78?

nonsense

Which type(s) of mutation change(s) the DNA sequence?

nonsense, silent, and missense.

A mutation cause the dystrophin protein to be shorter than normal. What type of mutation, and where, could cause this?

nonsense; exon

A particular dystrophin gene has a mutation in the promoter, a mutation in an exon and mutation in an intron. Which of these will be present in the mature mRNA?

only the exon mutation

a protein has an ER signal peptide as its only targeting sequence. Where will this protein be found?

outside the cell (because it will be secreted)

Which of the following is NOT a part of the endomembrane system?

peroxisomes

How is the proton olive force (PMF) generated?

proton pumping by the ETC from the mitochondrial matrix to the IMS

What is dystrophin important for?

supporting muscle structure and function

Which type of RNA brings the brings the next amino acid to the ribosome?

tRNA

Where does a tRNA enter the ribosome?

the A site

What is the immediate (direct) source of energy for ATP synthesis by ATP synthase?

the PMF

A portion of a gene has the sequence 5' ATTCAG 3'. What is the complementary RNA sequence?

3' UAAGUC 5'

What is the release factor?

A specialized protein

Which stage(s) of cellular respiration occur(s)in the mitochondria?

ETC and citric acid cycle


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