Human Anatomy and Physiology Chapters 2,3, and 4
Hydrogen has an atomic weight of 1amu and oxygen has an atomic weight of 16amu. What is the molecular weight of water (H2O)?
18amu
What do voltage-gated ion channels opens in response to?
A change in membrane potential
What does hydrophobic mean?
A substance is insoluble in water
What is an example of a nucleotide?
ATP
A base is a compound that acts as a proton ___________
Acceptor
The energy molecule that is produced by cellular respiration and used in metabolic reactions is ____________.
Adenosine Triphosphate
What are the three groups part of the basic structure of every amino acid?
Amino group, Radical (R Group), Carboxyl Group
What is an ion?
An atom that has gained or lost electrons
NaOH is a compound that releases hydroxide ions in water. Therefore, it is a(n) ________
Base
Monosaccharides, disaccharides, and polysaccharides are all examples of which type of macromolecules?
Carbohydrates
The element that is the foundation of biological molecules is _______. The element has four valence electrons and can form a wide variety of bonds.
Carbon
Facilitated diffusion, primary, and secondary active transport are all mechanisms of which of the following?
Carrier-mediated transport
In nature, sodium atoms lose electrons; therefore, they become ___________
Cations
What are proteins of the cell membrane that allow water and hydrophilic solutes to pass through called?
Channels
Molecules composed of two or more elements are called ___________
Chemical Compound
Which type of bond is formed by the sharing of a pair of electrons between two atoms?
Covalent
Movements of gas molecules (oxygen and carbon dioxide) between the air in the lungs and the blood or between the blood and the tissues is by which process?
Diffusion
Sucrose is an example of a ________
Disaccharide
Which of the following is the most hypotonic solution?
Distilled Water
What term defines the simplest form of matter to have unique chemical properties?
Element
An active site is found on a(n) _________
Enzyme
What effects do enzymes have on the activation energy of a chemical reaction in the body?
Enzymes lower the activation energy
What are all body fluids that are located outside of cells called?
Extracellular fluid
The three types of carrier mediated transport are ___________, diffusion, primary active transport, and secondary active transport.
Facilitated
True or False: The cytoskeleton is composed of calcium salts
False
True or False: Unsaturated fatty acids do not have double bonds
False
What is a hydrophobic substance?
Fats
The process in which a physical pressure forces fluid through a selectively permeable membrane is called _______
Filtration
Groups of atoms that are added to carbon backbones and that gives organic molecules a variety of unique properties are generally known as _________ groups
Functional
In a solution, the solute can be a _______
Gas, solid, or liquid
A starch molecule may contain thousands of smaller glucose subunits. Which of the following statements is true?
Glucose is a monomer of starch
Glycolipids are lipid molecules with __________ attached to them.
Glycerol
A long branched chain of glucose molecules is _________
Glycogen
What is the polysaccharide used for energy storage in animals?
Glycogen
Alternative splicing helps explain what?
How one gene can produce more than one protein
Where is the neutron located?
In the nucleus of an atom
When a sodium atom loses an electron, it becomes a sodium __________
Ion
Atoms of the same element that differ only in the number of neutrons are known as ___________
Isotopes
Describe Mendelian Genetics
It deals with parent-offspring and larger family relationships to discern and predict patterns of inheritance within a family line
Genomic Medicine
It studies the entire DNA endowment of an individual and how it influences health and disease.
Describe Molecular Genetics
It uses the techniques of biochemistry to study DNA structure and function
Describe Cytogenetics
It uses the techniques of cytology and microscopy to study chromosomes and their relationship to hereditary traits
What are examples of channel proteins?
Leak channels, Gated channels, and Ligand-gated channels
A hydrophobic organic compound composed mainly of carbon and a high ration of hydrogen to oxygen is a __________. Examples include fatty acids, fats, phospholipids, steroids, and prostaglandins
Lipids
In which of the following sub disciplines of genetics are family relationships analyzed to predict patterns of inheritance within a family line?
Mendelian Genetics
What are the three types of protein structures that contribute to the cytoskeleton?
Microfilaments, Intermediate filaments, and Microtubules
One mole of a chemical is the number of grams equal to its ________
Molecular weight
Glucose is a ________ of starch
Monomer
The simplest carbohydrates are monomers called ____________
Monosaccharides
In a solution, the solvent is ___________ the solute
More abundant than
Which of the following is an acidic polymer of nucleotides, found or produced in the nucleus, that functions in heredity and protein synthesis?
Nucleic Acid
The fluidity of the plasma membrane is primarily by the __________
Phospholipids
What derives filtration through a membrane?
Physical Pressure
Fatty acids with multiple C=C bonds are called ___________ fatty acids
Polyunsaturated
The Na+-K+ pump is a good example of which type of transport?
Primary active transport
A uniport carries _______
Proteins only
What best defines an acid?
Proton donor
Palmitic acid is an example of a(n) _________ fatty acid
Saturated
Name the level of protein structure that is determined by the folding of the protein into alpha helices and beta sheets due to hydrogen bonding between amino acids.
Secondary
Describe a covalent bond.
Sharing of electrons between two atoms
If side B of a selectively permeable membrane contains a higher concentration of solutes than side A, which side would have the greatest osmotic pressure?
Side B
Plasma membranes are selectively permeable. What does this mean?
Some compounds can permeate (pass through) the membrane while others cannot
What are 4 examples of lipids?
Steriods, Triglycerides, Fatty Acids, and phospholipids
Keratin and collagen are types of _________ proteins.
Structural
Glycolipids are lipid molecules with ________ attached to them
Sugars
What is Cytology
The study of cells
A substrate is ________
The substance an enzyme acts upon
What do proteins do?
They act as receptors on cell's surfaces, they make up molecules that can transport oxygen, and they catalyze chemical reactions
The ability of a solution to affect the fluid volume and pressure in a cell is _________
Tonicity
What is a protein that extends through the cell membrane called?
Transmembrane
True or False: A molecule may be composed of one element or more than one element
True
True or False: Nearly every human cell has a single, non-motile primary cilium a few micrometers long.
True
How many double covalent bonds are in the carbon chain of a polyunsaturated fatty acids.
Two or more
Cotransport is carried out by a(n) __________
Uniport
Motile cilia are located in the ___________
Uterine Tubes, Respiratory tract, and ventricles of the brain
The type of channel that responds to change in electrical potential across the the membrane is called a(n) ____________-gated channel.
Voltage
Which are usually prevented form moving across the selectively permeable membrane of a cell?
Wastes
What is the active site of an enzyme?
Where it binds it substrate
In a solution, the solute _________, when the solution is allowed to stand.
Will not separate from the solvent
HCl is a compound that releases hydrogen ions when put into water. Therefore, it is a(n) _________
acid
The number of molecules of a chemical that is equal to its molecular weight in grams, is a(n) ______
mole
Essential fatty acids are ___________
not made by the human body
Substances in a mixture are _________
physically bonded together
Which are classifications of fatty acids?
saturated and unsaturated
Substances that are physically blended but not chemically bound are called _________
solutions
Saltwater is a solution made out of naCl (salt) dissolved in water. In this case, water is the solvent and NaCl is the ___________
solvent
Once the enzyme sucrase breaks the bond between two sugars, sucrase is ________
used again
Once the enzyme sucrase breaks the bond between two sugars, sucrase is ___________
destroyed
A carbohydrate composed of two covalently-bonded simple sugars is called a(n) __________
disaccharide
List the three monosaccharides
fructose, glucose, galactose
A chemical bond that involves that attraction of a cation to an anion is called a(n) ________
ionic
In a solution, the solvent is __________ the solute
less abundant than