Biology for Majors- Exam 2

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Reactant

(left side) A substance or molecule that participates in a chemical reaction that results in a product

Product

(right side) A substance that results from a chemical reaction

Identify the form of energy of each: -serving of beans -campfire -hike -stream with waterfall -wood stump to be chopped

-potential energy -Kinteic energy -kinetic energy -kinetic energy -potential energy

How many ATP are produced by fermentation

0

products of photosynthesis

02 and glucose

A single turn of the Kreb Cycle will yield__________

1 ATP, 3 NADH, 1 FADH2

Number of NADH molecules produced in glycolysis

2

Number of pyruvate molecules are produced in glycolysis

2

Used to activate glucose in glycolysis

2 ATP

What is the net gain of ATp produced in glycolysis?

2 ATP

Net yield of ATP per glucose molecule

2 ATP from glycolysis, 2 ATP from Citric Acid Cycle, 32 ATP from ETC

The net result of a single round of glycolysis is the formation of___________?

2 NADH and 2 ATP

The initial reaction of the Krebs Cycle involves the addition of a ____________________

2 carbon molecule to a 4 carbon molecule

Chemical formula for photosynthesis

6CO2 + 6H2O +light energy -----> 6O2 + C6H12O6 (Carbon dioxide +water +sunlight) ---> Oxygen + glucose)

What is a metabolic pathway?

A metabolic pathway begins with a particular reactant, proceeds through several intermediates, and terminates with a particular end product.

If Enzyme 1 (E1) is inactive, which of the following compounds will accumulate? A-(E1)---->B- (E2)---->C

A only - substrate A gets converted to product B (by E1) and that product serves as the substrate for E2, which becomes product C. If E1 is inactive,product B will never be made. No matter how much substrate A is pushed into the system product B will never be made. Substrate A would accumulate.

An anaerobic process

A process without oxygen

Why is the formation of ATP by ATP synthase known as oxidative phosphorylation?

A proton gradient created by the redox reactions of the electron transport chain is used to drive the synthesis of ATP.

substrate level phosphorylation (ADP phosphorylation)

ADP +P ----> ATP (adding a phosphate to take from diphosphate to triphosphate)

What is a high energy compound that is used to drive metabolic reactions?

ATP

What is the enzyme used to synthesize ATP?

ATP Synthase

If the inner mitochondrial membrane was freely permeable to protons H+, what would be the most devastating result to the cell?

ATP would not be produced by oxidative phosphorylation

The products of light dependent reactions

ATP, NADPH, O2

Before entering the Krebs Cycle, pyruvate is converted to _______________?

AcetylCoA

What is an ATP molecule composed of?

Adenine, Ribose, and three phosphates

If E1 is inactive, which compound will become deficient ? A-(E1)---->B- (E2)---->C

B and C (If A is not converted to B, B will be deficient. If B is deficient, it cannot be converted to C, which will also become deficient)

Why is chlorophyll green?

Because it absorbs much of the reds and blues of white light from the spectrum and reflects the green.

How many turns will the Calvin cycle make to form sugars?

Because of the amounts of reactants, the cycle will make 6 turns

How do C4 plants solve the problem of photorespiration?

By fixing Carbon Dioxide to a C3 molecule

The formula for cellular respiration

C6H12O6 + 6O2 ---> 6CO2 + 6H2O + ATP (Glucose + Oxygen ---> Carbon dioxide + water + ATP)

Which plants fix carbon by different day and night cycles?

CAM plants- during the day stomata close for water conservation, and NADPH and ATP are available with c4 plants releasing CO2 to the Calvin cycle. At night, car on dioxide is fixed and stored in Vacuoles as C4 molecules.

The product when an organic molecule is oxidized

CO2

light independent

Calvin cycle

Products of light independent reactions

Carbohydrate

What happens in plants when light production is stopped?

Chlorophyll absorbs light energy and when production is stopped, leaves will shed.

Highest to lowest energy

Cytochrome C, Cytochrome C oxidase, Oxygen

When forests are destroyed, they do not easily regrow. What is one issue that could result from the destruction of these forests?

Decreased production of oxygen worldwide

Describe the Calvin cycle?

During the Calvin cycle (dark) reactions CO2 attaches attaches to an RuBP molecule to form a six carbon molecule. This six carbon molecule then splits into 3PG. 3PG then reduces to BPG which reduces to G3P.

How does H+ get across the thylakoid membrane?

Electrons in the thylakoid space yield energy from oxidation of water to pump H+ across the thylakoid membrane

What re proteins that function as catalysts?

Enzymes

How do plants respond to hot weather?

In plants, during hot weather stomata will close to avoid wilting

Where do the light independent (Calvin cycle) reactions occur?

In the stroma (fluid surrounding the Grana)

Where does light reaction occur? (light dependent)

In the thylakoid of the chloroplast

What is the model called that demonstrates how the active site changes as the enzyme and substrate complex come together?

Induced Fit Model

As the enzyme and substrate complex come together, what happens to the active site?

It changes shape in order to hold the substrate in the right position for the reaction to occur

When sucrase binds to sucrose, wat happens?

It goes through a conformational change (sucrase is the enzyme for sucrose. When they bind, sucrase changes shape to fit the sucrose)

What is the change in free energy of the cleavage of sucrose into glucose and fructose?

It is negative (it is spontaneous-does not need ATP) and the reaction is exergonic (has a negative change in free energy)

What is the sum of all cellular chemical reactions in a cell?

Metabolism

What does fermentation provide for glycolysis?

NAD+

Electrons are brought to the Electron Transport System by the oxidation of

NADH and FADH2

The final electron acceptor in the ETC

O2 (reduced to form H2O)

What happens in plants when the stomata closes?

O2 gas increases and CO2 gas decreases causing oxygen to combine with RuBP instead of CO2, which is called photorespiration.

Where is sucrase found in the human body?

On the microvilli of the small intestine

The cyclic pathway involves the _______

PS1

H20 (split to form H+ and O2 ions) replaces lost electrons in the __________________

PS11 (photosystem 2)

The Noncyclic pathway involves these two photosystems

PSII, PSI (photosystem 1 and photosystem 2)

What does photosynthesis capture and what does it do with it?

Photosynthesis captures solar energy and stores it as carbohydrate

contains chlorophyll a pigment

Photosystem 2

What collects solar energy in the photosystems ?

Pigment complex

What would be the immediate consequence of all the glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate made during the carbon fixation and reduction phases of the Calvin cycle were used to make glucose?

Plant cells would not be able to regenerate RuBP.

Describe potential vs Kinetic energy

Potential energy is stored ; kinetic energy is energy in motion

What is the role of a proton pump in energy conversion?

Proton pump converts the energy from a redox reaction into an electrochemical gradient

endergonic reaction

Reactions that absorb/use energy (Reactants have less free energy, products have more)

Exergonic Reactions

Reactions that give off energy (Reactants have more energy, products have less)

In photosynthesis, the Carbon in CO2 is initially fixed to what molecule?

RuBP

What molecule would be most directly affected of two CO2 molecules could be fixed at the same time?

RuBP RuBP is the starting molecule that accepts CO2 from the atmosphere.

What is the first law of thermodynamics?(aka law of conservation of energy) ?

States that energy cannot be created or destroyed

What is the second law of thermodynamics (aka law of entropy) ?

States that there is a loss of usable energy when energy is changed from one form to another

If a mutation occurs in the gene that encodes the enzyme sucrase, resulting in a single amino acid substitution in the active site of the enzyme and a polar amino acid changed to a nonpolar amino acid, what is probably the result of this mutation?

Sucrose would not be able to bind to sucrase in the active site. (The shape of the active site is highly specific. The substitution of a polar amino acid to nonpolar disrupts the active site and sucrose would not be able to bind to the different shape.)

Three factors that affect enzyme activity

Temperature, pH, substrate concentration

How is the ATP Synthase complex used to produce ATP?

The ATP synthase complex channels H+ through to drive ADP to combine with a phosphate to produce ATP

If a plant lacked all pigments, how would this affect the Calvin cycle?

The Calvin cycle would not run in the absence of pigments (ATP and NADPH generated by light reactions are directly used in the Calvin cycle. If there are no pigments the plant cannot absorb light energy and thus cannot generate ATP and NADPH needed by the Calvin cycle)

Not all plants are green in color. a Japanese Maple uses dark red leaves for photosynthesis. What can you infer about the light color used by a Japanese Maple for photosynthesis

The Japanese Maple transmits or reflects red light

If B is also the substrate of another reaction that is Catalyzed by E3 to form product D, how does the cell regulate production of C and D? A-(E1)---->B- (E2)---->C

The cell uses activators and inhibitors to regulate the activity of E2 and E3. (to move a molecule down one branch of a pathway you can inhibit the enzyme in the other branch)

Several processes that occur along the mitochondrial ETC are required to generate a proton gradient. Which process directly involves a proton pump?

The movement of H+ through cytochrome oxidase

If a drug existed that could make the thylakoid membrane permeable to protons, how would this affect the plants ability to make sugar?

This drug would decrease the ability of the plant to make sugar (It would disrupt th proton gradient. no gradient, no chemiosmosis. No chemiosmosis, no ATP. No ATP, no sugar production during the Calvin cycle. )

What happens if you consume more Vitamin B than is needed?

Vitamin B will increase in the urine

L-Arabinose is a non-competitive inhibitor of sucrase. If L-Arabinose is consumed, what will happen to the Vmax of the reaction and Km of the substrate?

Vmax will decrease but Km will not change. Non competitive just means it can't go as fast anymore (Vmax) but still needs the same amount (Km) to get there. (In competitive inhibition the enzyme will still get to its maximum velocity eventually, meaning Vmax will remain unchanged. In non-competitive inhibition, no matter how much of the substrate you add to the sucrase enzyme, it will never be able to achieve it's full velocity and Vmax will decrease. But the amount of substrate required to meet half of maximum velocity wont change)

What does sucrase use to cleave sucrose into two monosaccharides?

Water (water breaks the molecules apart)

What is produced by a proton pump?

a concentration gradient

The final electron acceptor in fermentation

an organic molecule

Catabolic reactions___________?

break down compounds

Anabolic reaction ________?

builds compounds

How do enzymes catalyze reactions?

by lowering the activation energy

How do electrons enter the Electron transport chain?

by the oxidation of NADH

How do tropical rainforests help decrease global warming?

by up taking CO2

PS11 (photosystem 2)

captures light and causes ATP production

PS1 (photosystem 1)

captures light energy and causes NADPH production

Method of producing ATP

chemiosmosis

Synthesis of ATP via a proton gradient is called _______________

chemiosmosis

What molecule/complex is NOT found in the stroma?

chlorophyll (the stroma contains DNA and ribosomes to make photosynthetic proteins and enzymes for the Calvin cycle. Chlorophyll molecules are found in the thylakoid membrane)

The Mesophyll plant tissue carries cells that contain _______________ that carry out photsynthesis

chloroplasts

Overall: C3 plants are adapted to:

cold temperatures and high rainfall

Describe the ETC

electrons are received from NADH and FADH2. 32 ATP are produced, H+ from NADH and FADH2 deliver energy to make ATP

What replaces the electrons excites by sunlight in photosystem 1?

electrons from photosystem 2.

What happens to the energy when food is consumed?

energy is converted to other forms of chemical and kinetic energy and some of the energy is lost as heat.

Free Energy

energy that is available to do work (energy to give)

Type of fermentation that occurs in yeast cells

ethyl alcohol (ethanol) formed from pyruvate when there is no oxygen available

Overall: CAM plants are adapted to:

extreme environments

Heterotrophs

get their energy by consuming other organisms

spontaneous chemical reactions

give off energy because the free energy level of the reactants is more than the free energy of the product. Thus the change is negative and excess energy is given off

occurs in the cytoplasm of the cell and does not require energy

glycolysis

nonspontaneous reactions

have a positive change in free energy and wont readily run without some help (adding energy and coupling)

Overall:C4 plants are adapted to:

high temperature and limited rainfall

Why are 2 ATP required in the first phase of glycolysis?

in order to create a high energy molecule that will spontaneously split into two 3-carbon molecules

Where is the electron transport chain located in bacteria?

in the cell membrane

The movement of protons through ATP synths occurs from the

intermembrane space to the matrix

Type of fermentation that occurs in animal cells

lactate (lactic acid) formed by pyruvate when there is no oxygen available

Under anaerobic conditions, the end product of glycolysis is converted to ___________?

lactic acid

How often can a sucrase molecule be used to hydrolyze sucrose?

many times (enzymes are never used up)

Cofactors

molecules required to activate an enzyme (non protein portion of enzyme)

two pathways of light reactions

noncyclic, cyclic

Consider the biochemical pathway below where A, B, and C are substrates and products and E1 and E2 are the enzymes that catalyze the reactions. Enzyme 1 (E1) can use ______________? A-(E1)---->B-(E2)----> C

only A as a substrate

In an oxidation-reduction reaction, the molecule that loses an electron is_____?

oxidized

During aerobic respiration, the last carrier protein transfers a pair of electrons to ___________

oxygen

contains chlorophyll b pigment

photosystem 1

Creation of a proton gradient by the electron transport chain represents

potential energy

Three factors that affect metabolic reactions

presence/absence of enzyme, concentration of enzyme, activation/deactivation of enzyme

Autotrophs

produce their own energy using the sun

Not associated with a redox reaction in the Kreb cycle

production of acetyl-CoA

Coenymes

protein portion of enzyme

What type of molecule are enzymes?

proteins

In glycolysis, what is glucose converted to?

pyruvate

In an oxidation-reduction reaction the molecule that gains an electron is______?

reduced

Why must the electron transport chain proteins and molecules be embedded in a membrane?

so that protons can be compartmentalized and form a concentraction gradient

What is the ultimate source of energy in the biosphere?

solar energy from the sun

Where does the Calvin cycle take place?

stroma

The component that binds most tightly to the active site of an enzyme

substrate

The product from a reaction serves as what for the next reaction?

substrate

competitive inhibition

substrate and the inhibitor are both able to bind to the active site

Reactants of an enzymatically accelerated reaction are _____________?

substrates

FAD is a coenzyme associated with succinate dehydrogenase enzyme complex in the respiratory citric acid cycle and electron transport chain. Succinate dehydrogenase becomes reduced due to the oxidation of succinate. what would occur if the FAD coenzyme were not associated with succinate dehydrogenase?

succinate dehydrogenase would not oxidize succinate. (If the cofactor (FAD) is missing, the enzyme will not function)

If sunlight is the source of energy for most organisms on earth, how are humans and other animals able to utilize this energy if they cannot photosynthesize? Trace the flow of energy in order from source to destination.

sun-plant-animal-human

Describe the Krebs Cycle

the beginning molecule is Acetyl group which joins with enzyme CoA to form Acetyl CoA to form citrate (6NADH, 2FADH2, 2 ATP)

Describe Prep Stage

the beginning molecule pyruvate is converted to coenzyme A to form Acetyl CoA, CO2 is released into the cytoplasm (CO2 is produced by carbons being released from organic compounds)

If the gene encoding a specific enzyme in the plastoquinone biosynthetic pathway were mutated in a particular cell such that it became completely nonfunctional, what immediate effect would that have on a cell?

the cell would be unable to use light energy to make ATP (plastoquinone is the primary electron acceptor for photosystem 2. If the pathway that generate plastoquinone is nonfunctional, it would no longer be made. Since it Is involved in actively pumping protons across the thylakoid membrane, if it is nonfunctional that means there wouldnt be a proton gradient and no ATP could be produced.)

NADPH is made as a result of______________

the electron transport chain that follows photosystem 1.

Feedback inhibition

the end product of a pathway inhibits the pathway's first enzyme and shots down the pathway

non competitive inhibition

the inhibitor binds not at the active site, but at the allosteric site

chemiosmosis

the movement of ions across a semipermeable membrane, down their electrochemical gradient. (generation of ATP by movement of H+ across the membrane during cellular respiration or photosynthesis)

NAD+ and FAD+

the oxidation-reduction enzymes in cellular respiration

Which stages occur in the mitochondria and require Oxygen?

the prep stage (Acetyl CoA), Krebs Cycle,and ETC

Dehydration

the process in which a substrate is broken apart into two product molecules

Synthesis

the process in which substrates are joined together and released as a single product molecule

What reacts with the active site of the enzyme substrate complex?

the substrate

The most critical stage in the enzymatic reaction

the transition state (after they bind, when substrate molecules can form products)

Why are plants green in color?

they contain a pigment that transmits and reflects green light

What function do many B vitamins serve in the production of energy?

they function as co-enzymes

Where does Carbon dioxide enter a plant leaf?

through the stomata

An enzyme can couple a no spontaneous reaction with a spontaneous reaction so that anabolic processes will occur....true or false

true

Cytochrome complexes

used by the ETC to carry electrons between PS1 ans PS2, and pump H+ from the stroma to the thylakoid

What is the function of the enzyme ATP Synthase?

utilize the energy of the proton motive force to convert ADP to ATP


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