mastering bio chapter 6 quiz
Cellular respiration completely breaks down a glucose molecule through glycolysis and the citric acid cycle. However, these two processes yield only a few ATPs. The majority of the energy the cell derives from glucose is _____. -found in NADH and FADH2 -passed to the oxygen used in the electron transport chain -stored in FAD and NAD+ -lost as heat
found in NADH and FADH2
Each turn of the citric acid cycle generates one ATP and ___ additional energy-rich molecules: __________. -four; 2 NADH and 2 FADH2 -three; 2 NADH and 1 FADH2 -four; 3 NADH and 1 FADH2 -two; 1 NADH and 1 FADH2
four; 3 NADH and 1 FADH2
In the equation shown below, during cellular respiration __________ is oxidized and __________ is reduced. -glucose ... oxygen -oxygen ... ATP -ATP ... oxygen -carbon dioxide ... water
glucose ... oxygen
What is the name of the process in which glucose is converted to pyruvate? -fermentation -glycolysis -oxidative phosphorylation -chemiosmosis
glycolysis
Where does glycolysis occur in a eukaryotic cell? -in the mitochondria -within the intermembrane space of the mitochondrion -in the cytoplasmic fluid -on the inner mitochondrial membrane
in the cytoplasmic fluid
During glycolysis, a molecule of glucose is partially oxidized. What is the net gain of ATP and NADH for each glucose molecule during this chemical pathway? -32 ATP and 10 NADH -6 ATP and 10 NADH -4 ATP and 10 NADH -2 ATP and 2 NADH
2 ATP and 2 NADH
Substrate-level phosphorylation directly generates ATP during a chemical reaction. As a single molecule of glucose is completely oxidized in the presence of oxygen, what is the net yield of molecules of ATP made by substrate-level phosphorylation? -2 ATP -4 ATP -6 ATP -38 ATP
4 ATP
A molecule is oxidized when it __________. -loses a hydrogen ion (H+) -gains an electron -gains a hydrogen ion (H+) -loses an electron
loses an electron
Primarily, cellular respiration serves to _____. -break down toxic molecules -produce cell structures from chemical building blocks -make food -make ATP to power the cell's activities
make ATP to power cell's activities
Lungs are to breathing as _____ are to cellular respiration. -chloroplasts -mitochondria -bronchi -alveoli
mitochondria
Where do the reactions of the citric acid cycle occur in eukaryotic cells? -the folds of the inner mitochondrial membrane -the cytoplasmic fluid -the intermembrane space of the mitochondrion -the mitochondrion
the mitochondrion
The enzyme ATP synthase catalyzes the phosphorylation of ADP to form ATP. In eukaryotic cells, the energy needed for this endergonic reaction is directly derived from __________. -the reduction of NAD+ to form NADH -the movement of hydrogen ions across the mitochondrial membrane -the fermentation of pyruvate to form lactic acid -the movement of FADH2 from the cytoplasm to the mitochondria
the movement of hydrogen ions across the mitochondrial membrane
The burning of food via cellular respiration must provide the average adult approximately _________ kilocalories per day. -250 -1,000 -1,300 to 1800 -2,200
2,200
In preparing pyruvate to enter the citric acid cycle, which of the following steps occurs? -Carbon dioxide must be present for pyruvate to enter the citric acid cycle. -A compound called coenzyme A binds to a two-carbon fragment. -Pyruvate is reduced by oxidizing an NAD+ to an NADH. -Oxygen atoms are formed into oxygen gas.
a compound called coenzyme A binds to a two-carbon fragment
In oxidative phosphorylation, electrons are passed from one electron carrier to another. The energy released is used to __________. -form ATP during glycolysis -pump protons (H+) across the mitochondrial membrane -generate large amounts of NADH and FADH2 -synthesize carbon dioxide
pump protons (H+) across the mitochondrial membrane
A muscle cell deprived of molecular oxygen will convert glucose to lactic acid to __________. -gain energy through chemiosmosis -gain 2 ATP through glycolysis -transition into the citric acid cycle -recycle NADH through fermentation
recycle NADH through fermentation
Glycolysis is the only stage of cellular respiration that __________. -does not release carbon dioxide as a by-product -requires oxygen to function -requires ATP to make ATP -does not require ATP to make ATP
requires ATP to make ATP
Most NADH molecules generated during cellular respiration are produced during __________. -the electron transport chain -glycolysis -the reduction of oxygen -the citric acid cycle
the citric acid cycle
During fermentation, __________ that was produced during glycolysis is converted back to __________. -NAD+; NADH -NADH; NAD+ -pyruvate; CO2 -ATP; ADP
NADH; NAD+
Consider the figure below. __________ is to a mitochondrion as __________ is to a chloroplast. -Sunlight .... chemical energy -Glucose ... O2 -O2 ... CO2 -ATP ... CO2
O2 ... CO2
We inhale O2 and we exhale CO2. Carbon dioxide is produced __________. -when oxygen acquires electrons and protons at the end of the electron transport chain -during the electron transfer steps of oxidative phosphorylation -during the formation of pyruvate -in the reaction that creates acetyl CoA (coenzyme A) from pyruvate
in the reaction that creates acetyl CoA (coenzyme A) from pryuvate
When a car engine burns gasoline, the results of the reaction are similar to when cells burn glucose. Both reactions release carbon dioxide and water. In cells, the chemical energy in food is converted to ATP and heat. In a moving car, the chemical energy in gasoline is converted to __________. -ATP and heat -kinetic energy and heat -thermal energy and heat -potential energy and heat
kinetic energy and heat
In cellular respiration, glucose _____ electrons, whereas _____ electrons. -loses ... oxygen gains -gains ... oxygen loses -gains ... water loses -loses ... water gains
loses ... oxygen gains
What is the ultimate fate of the electrons that are stripped from glucose during cellular respiration? -They are used to form ATP by chemiosmosis. -They result in the formation of heat. -They are donated to NADH. -They are used to form water.
they are used to form water
Through respiration, humans breathe in O2 and breathe out CO2. However, what would happen if we did not breathe in O2? -We would not make enough ATP to meet our energy requirements -We would not be able to synthesize organic molecules from inorganic molecules. -We would not have enough enzymes to catalyze reactions. -We would not be able to perform lactic acid fermentation.
we would not make enough ATP to meet our energy requirements