Biology Ch. 4-6 (Exam 2)

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trans site

close to the cell membrane

glycolysis

first step in releasing the energy of glucose, in which a molecule of glucose is broken into two molecules of pyruvic acid

cell wall

strong layer around the cell membrane in plants, algae, and some bacteria

activation energy

the energy that is needed to get a reaction started

H20

A biochemist wanted to study how various substances were used in cellular respiration. In one experiment, he allowed a mouse to breathe air containing O2 "labeled" by a particular isotope. IN the mouse, the labeled O2 first showed up in...

redox reaction

A chemical reaction involving the transfer of one or more electrons from one reactant to another; also called oxidation-reduction reaction.

entropy

A measure of disorder or randomness

feedback inhibition

A method of metabolic control in which the end product of a metabolic pathway acts as an inhibitor of an enzyme within that pathway.

endergonic reaction

A non-spontaneous chemical reaction in which free energy is absorbed from the surroundings.

become turgid... burst

A plant cell placed in distilled water will _____; an animal cell placed in distilled water will _______.

chemiosmosis

A process for synthesizing ATP using the energy of an electrochemical gradient and the ATP synthase enzyme.

selective permeability

A property of biological membranes that allows some substances to cross more easily than others.

electron transport chain

A sequence of electron carrier molecules (membrane proteins) that shuttle electrons during the redox reactions that release energy used to make ATP.

exergonic reaction

A spontaneous chemical reaction in which there is a net release of free energy.

rough ER... Golgi... transport vesicle... plasma membrane

A type of cell called a lymphocyte makes proteins that are exported from the cell. Which of the following traces the path of a protein from the site where its polypeptides are made to its export?

endergonic; exergonic; requires

ADP + Pi --> ATP is an _______ reaction, ATP ----> ADP + Pi is an ______ reaction, and the conversion of ADP + Pi to ATP ________ energy.

Acetyl CoA

After grooming the pyruvate molecule, what molecule is formed?

More cis-unsaturated and polysaturated fatty acids

An animal cell membrane will be more fluid at room temp. if it contains...

exocytosis

As a cell grows, its plasma membrane expands. Does this involve endocytosis or exocytosis?

oxaloacetate

At the end, citric acid cycle generates which molecule?

Some of it is stored in ATP; other is released as heat

Cellular respiration is an exergonic process. Remembering that energy must be conserved, what becomes of the energy extracted from food during cellular respiration?

lacks membrane bound nucleus, lacks membrane bound organelles, circular DNA, cell membrane/ cell wall, and has ribosomes

Characteristics of Prokaryotic cells

No

Does FADH2 form during glycolysis?

enzymes are usually made of proteins; some are made of RNA

Enzymes are made up of what kinds of molecules?

endosymbiotic hypothesis

Explanation of the origin of eukaryotic cells. Mitochondria and chloroplasts were one free living cells that became engulfed in another cell.

transport proteins... down

Facilitated diffusion across a membrane requires ____ and moves a solute _______ its concentration gradient.

membrane proteins

Floats within the membrane; proteins that function in transport, enzymatic activity, signal transduction, cell-cell recognition, intercellular joining, attachment to the cytoskeleton and extracellular matrix

reduction

Gain of electrons

breaks down into amino acids

How does a cell harvest energy from protein?

breaks down into glycerol and three fatty acids

How does a cell harvest the energy from fat?

the ribosomes are attached in the rough ER; rough ER has flat tubes and smooth ER has round tubes

How does the rough ER differ from the smooth ER?

Anaerobic: glycolysis and fermentation

How is energy harvested from glucose in the absence of oxygen?

2

How many ATPs are formed during fermentation?

2; 4

How many ATPs are used and how many ATPs are formed during glycolysis?

Glycolysis will decrease; the citric acid cycle will increase

How will excess acetyl CoA affect the rates of glycolysis and the citric acid cycle?

hydrolysis

Hydrolysis or dehydration synthesis breaks down ATP.

energy coupling

In cellular metabolism, the use of energy released from an exergonic reaction to drive an endergonic reaction.

oxidizes NADH to NAD+

In the absence of respiration (no oxidative phosphorylation), a cell can generate ATP by substrate-level phosphorylation in glycolysis if it:

synthesize ATP from ADP and Pi; increase oxygen consumption

Intact, isolated mitochondria are equilibrated to pH 8 in phosphate buffer, then transferred to phosphate buffer at pH 4 containing equal concentrations of ATP and ADP. These mitochondira will:

Lipid composition and temperature

Membrane fluidity is affected by...

tight junctions

Membranes of neighboring cells are pressed together, preventing leakage of extracellular fluid

surface proteins

Reside primarily on the inner or outer surface of the membrane; glycoproteins

ATP synthesis will decrease, oxygen consumption will stay the same

Some drugs known as uncouplers facilitate diffusion of protons across the mitochondrial inner membrane. When such a drug is added, what will happen to ATP synthesis and oxygen consumption?

is hypotonic to the protozoan

Some protozoans have special organelles called contractile vacuoles that continually eliminate excess water from the cell. The presence of these organelles tells you that the environment...

False

T or F. Cholesterol and long chain, saturated fatty acids make more fluid membrane.

False.

T or F. Most of the energy stored in ATP is present in the H-O bonds.

False

T or F. Plant cells perform photosynthesis, and animal cells perform cellular respiration.

True.

T or F. Short chain and unsaturated fatty acids are more fluid membrane.

contractile vacuole

The cell structure that collects extra water from the cytoplasm and then expels it from the cell

Small cells can better take up sufficient nutrients and oxygen to service their cell volume.

The cells of an ant and a horse are, on average, the same small size; a horse just has more of them. What is the main advantage of small cell size?

mitochondria

The cellular structure that is involved in producing ATP during aerobic respiration is the

lactic acid fermentation

The conversion of pyruvate to lactate with no release of carbon dioxide.

Singer and Nicholson

The fluid mosaic model was developed by...

receptor-mediated endocytosis

The movement of specific molecules into a cell by the inward budding of membranous vesicles containing proteins with receptor sites specific to the molecules being taken in; enables a cell to acquire bulk quantities of specific substances.

proteins embedded in a phospholipid bilayer

The plasma membrane consists principally of

First Law of Thermodynamics

The principle of conservation of energy. Energy can be transferred and transformed, but it cannot be created or destroyed.

endergonic reaction

The product of light by living organisms is referred as bioluminesence. It is an example of ________ reaction.

temp., size of molecule, and concentration gradient

The rate of diffusion depends on...

nucleoid

The region where the bacterial DNA occur...

active transport

The sodium concentration in a cell is 10 times less than the concentration in the surrounding fluid. How can the cell move sodium out of the cell?

stores energy in a form that can drive cellular work

The synthesis of ATP from ADP and Pi...

phosphorylation

The transfer of a phosphate group, usually from ATP, to a molecule. Nearly all cellular work depends on ATP energizing other molecules by phosphorylation.

transmission electron microscope

The ultrastructure of a chloroplast is best studied using a

True.

True or False. Bound ribosomes generally synthesize membrane proteins and secretory proteins.

True

True or False. Mitochondria are often more numerous near areas of major cellular activity.

False.

True or False. Prokaroytic and eukaryotic cells both have a cell wall.

protists, fungi, plants, and animals

Types of eukaryotic cells

All organisms are composed of one or more cells. The cell is the smallest unit having the properties of life.

What are Schleiden and Schwann proposed cell theories?

block the electron transport chain, block the gate of ATP synthase, and make the membrane of mitochondria leaky to H+

What are the 3 different categories of cellular poisons?

phospholipids, proteins, chloesterol, and sugar

What are the components of cell membrane?

1. branching 2. ester linkage/ ether linkage 3. L-glycerol/ D-glycerol

What are the differences between archaebacteria and bacteria membrane?

heat, light, electric current, mechanical energy, and radiation

What are the different forms of energy?

mitochondria and chloroplast

What are the energy related organelles in eukaryotic cells?

make proteins that are destined for secretion like insulin and milk

What are the functions of Rough ER?

synthesizes lipids, detoxifies toxic substances, and regulates muscle contractions by release of Ca+

What are the functions of Smooth ER?

structural support, recognition, catalyst, communication, transport

What are the functions of membrane proteins?

glucose, ATP, ADP, and NAD+

What are the inputs of glycolysis?

protection, structure, and transport

What are the major functions of cell membrane?

fat and protein

What are the other molecules by which a cell can harvest the energy?

1. Glycolysis 2. Citric acid cycle/ Kerbs cycle 3. Oxidative phosphorylation

What are the stages of cellular respiration?

chemical, mechanical, and transport

What are the three main types of cellular work?

1. yields 2 ATPs 2. yields 2 NADH 3. yield 2 Pyruvate

What are the three things glycolysis accomplishes?

yield 2 ATP, converts the carbon atoms into CO2, and transfers eight electrons to NADH and FADH2.

What are the three things the citric acid cycle accomplishes?

phagocytosis, pinocytosis, and receptor-mediated endocytosis

What are the three types of endocytosis?

kinetic and potential energy

What are the two states of energy?

transmission and scanning electron microscopes

What are the two types of electron microscopes?

alcoholic and lactic acid fermentation

What are the two types of fermentations?

exergonic and endergonic reactions

What are the two types of metabolic reactions?

transfer of phosphate and electrons

What are the two types of transferring energy in cells?

Inorganic and organic cofactors

What are two types of enzyme helpers?

competitive and noncompetitive inhibitors

What are two types of enzyme inhibitors?

nucleus and membrane bound organelles

What do eukaryotic cells have that prokarotic cells don't?

nuclear envelope, endoplasmic reticulum, golgi apparatus, and vesicles

What does the endomembrane system consists of?

lowers the activation energy

What does the enzyme do to the activation energy when it speeds up a chemical reaction?

All cells come only from other cells.

What is Virchow proposed cell theory?

basic unit of life

What is a cell?

It is a series of chemical reactions that involve energy changes

What is a metabolic reaction?

citrate and oxaloacetate

What is the beginning 6 carbon in the citric acid cycle? what is the end 4 carbon in the citric acid cycle?

Pyruvate

What is the end product of glycolysis?

water

What is the end product of oxidative phosphorylation?

It accepts electrons from the electron transport chain

What is the role of oxygen in cellular respiration?

It replenishes NAD+ so that glycolysis can produce ATP.

What is the value of the alcoholic fermentation pathway?

environmental factors (temp, pH, and light/dark), concentration of substrate, genes, phosphorylation, and enzyme inhibitors

What types of factors regulates the enzyme's activity?

water will move across the membrane by osmosis

When the concentration of solutes differs on the two sides of a membrane permeable only to water,

They run out of NAD+ and FAD

When the poison cyanide blocks the electron transport chain, glycolysis and the citric acid cycle soon grind to a halt as well. Why do they stop?

mitochondria matrix

Where does citric acid cycle occur in the cell?

electron transport system

Where does the oxidative phosphorylation occurs?

glycolysis; citric acid cycle and oxidative phosphorylation

Which of the three stages occurs in the cytoplasm? And which of the other two occur in the mitochondira?

1. light microscope 2. scanning electron microscope 3. transmission electron microscope

Which type of microscope would you use to study 1. the changes in shape of a living human white blood cell 2. the finest details of surface texture of a human hair 3. the detailed structure of an organelle in a liver cell?

Kidney cells must reabsorb a large amount of water when producing urine

Why are aquaporins important in kidney cells?

Because of hydrophobic tails and hydrophillic heads

Why can't the flipping of lipids occur across a bilayer?

The cell does not expend energy when it's going down it's concentration gradient.

Why is diffusion across a membrane called passive transport?

Yes

Yes or no. Is the movement of H+ across a membrane down its concentration gradient, the most immediate source of energy for making most of the ATP in cells?

endoplasmic reticulum

a cell structure that forms a maze of passageways in which proteins and other materials are carried from one part of the cell to another

concentration gradient

a difference in the concentration of a substance across a distance

Tay Sac disease

a disease caused by a malfunction of lysosomes

central vacuole

a membranous sac in a mature plant cell with diverse roles in reproduction, protection, growth, and development

compound microscope

a microscope that examines small or thinly sliced sections of an object

dissecting microscope

a microscope that studies an entire specimen in 3-D

micrograph

a photograph of the view through a light microscope

endomembrane system

a series of membrane that divides the inner cell's space into compartments where different cellular functions occur.

microfilament

about 7 nanometers in diameter, a solid rod of actin protein in the cytoplasm of almost all eukaryotic cells, making up part of the cytoskeleton and acting alone or with myosin to cause cell contraction

acetyl CoA

acetyl coenzyme A, a compound that is synthesized by cells and that plays a major role in metabolism

energy in biochemistry

capacity to change in the chemical composition and properties of molecule

lysosomes

cell organelle filled with enzymes needed to break down certain materials in the cell

cis site

close to the ER

chromatin

combination of DNA and protein molecules, in the form of long, thin fibers, making up the genetic material in the nucleus of a eukaryotic cell

gap junctions

communicating channels, provide cytoplasmic channels between adjacent cells

hypertonic

describes a solution whose solute concentration is higher than the solute concentration inside a cell

hypotonic

describes a solution whose solute concentration is lower than the solute concentration inside a cell

facilitated diffusion

diffusion of specific molecules across cell membranes through protein channels

osmosis

diffusion of water through a selectively permeable membrane

kinetic energy

energy of motion

potential energy

energy stored due to an object's position or arrangement

active transport

energy-requiring process that moves material across a cell membrane against a concentration difference

anchoring/ adhering function

fastening cells together into strong sheets

chlorophyll

green pigment in plants that absorbs light energy used to carry out photosynthesis

isotonic

having a solute concentration equal to that of another solution

Antoni van Leeuwenhoek

he improved lens on a microscope and was able to see more detail in his observations

microtubules

hollow tubes of protein about 25 nanometers in diameter, support the cell and moves organelles within the cell

citric acid cycle

in cellular respiration, series of chemical reactions that break down glucose and produce ATP; energizes electron carriers that pass the energized electrons on to the electron transport chain

ribosomes

located in the nucleus, cytoplasm and on the rough ER, make up RNA and proteins

oxidation

loss of electrons

peroxisomes

membranous sacs containing enzymes used to break down hydrogen peroxide, dispose of toxic substances and fatty acids

electron microscope

microscope that forms an image by focusing beams of electrons onto a specimen

cytoskeleton

network of protein filaments within some cells that helps the cell maintain its shape and is involved in many forms of cell movement

Robert Hooke

one of the first people to observe cells in a cork

chloroplast

organelle found in cells of plants and some other organisms that captures the energy from sunlight and converts it into chemical energy

golgi bodies

organelles that package cellular materials and transport them within the cell or out of the cell

cilia and flagella

part of cytoskeleton; consists of parts of microtubules arranged in a 9 + 2 arrangement, involved in a cells movement

chemical energy

potential energy in a substance that can be released by a chemical reaction

mitochondria

powerhouse of the cell, produces energy (ATP) from oxygen and sugar(Cellular respiration)

pinocytosis

process by which a cell takes in liquid from the surrounding environment

phagocytosis

process in which extensions of cytoplasm surround and engulf large particles and take them into the cell

enzymes

proteins that act as biological catalysts

deamination

removal of an amino group

metabolic pathway

set of chemical reactions through which an organism builds up or breaks down materials as it carries out its life processes

cell theory

states that all living things are composed of cells and that all cells come from other cells

alcoholic fermentation

the anaerobic process by which yeasts and bacteria break down sugars to form carbon dioxide and ethanol

energy

the capacity to do work

cellular respiration

the chemical energy stored in organic molecules is converted to a form that the cell can use to perform work

osmoregulation

the control of water balance

substrate

the molecule to which the enzyme attaches itself to

passive transport

the movement of substances across a cell membrane without the use of energy by the cell

endocytosis

the process by which a cell membrane surrounds a particle and encloses the particle in a vesicle to bring the particle into the cell

exocytosis

the process by which a substance is released from the cell through a vesicle that transports the substance to the cell surface and then fuses with the membrane to let the substance out

diffusion

the process by which molecules move from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration

transmembrane proteins

the proteins of a membrane that span the entire membrane; integrins and junction proteins

active site

the site on an enzyme that attaches to a substrate

Thermodynamics

the study of energy transformations that occur in a collection of matter

product

the substances that form as a result of reaction

heat

thermal energy, is a type of kinetic energy associated with the random movement of atoms or molecules

noncompetitive inhibitors

these inhibitors bind to the enzyme somewhere else and change the shape of the enzyme

competitive inhibitors

these inhibitors compete with natural substrate for the enzyme's active site

plasma membrane

thin flexible barrier that regulates what enters and exits the cell; composed of two layers of lipids

nuclear membrane

thin structure that surrounds and protects the nucleus

chromosomes

threadlike structures made of DNA molecules that contain the genes

light microscope

uses visible light rays; specimens can be magnified up to 1,000 times their actual size

nucleus E.R. Golgi complex lysosome peroxisome mitochondria chloroplast

what are membrane bound organelles?

mitochondria matrix

where chemicals are transformed into ATP(energy) and where the ATP is stored, , chemical fluid filling the cristae, holds ribosomes, DNA, and enzymes

microscope resolution

Ability of a lens to separate or distinguish small objects that are close together.; shorter wavelength = greater resolution

scanning electron microscope

An electron microscope used to study the fine details of cell surfaces.

transmission electron microscope

An electron microscope used to study the internal structure of thin sections of cells

No, they have glyoxisomes.

Do plants have peroxisomes?

Second Law of Thermodynamics

Energy cannot be changed from one form to another without loss of usable energy.

2

How many ATPs are formed during citric acid cycle?

glucose... NAD+

In glycolysis, _____ is oxidized and ______ is reduced.

hypotonic solution

In what type of solution is a plant cell healthy in?

1. living material cannot be examined 2. very expensive 3. require much prep time 4. complicated to use

Limitations of electron microscope

extracellular matrix

Network of molecules outside of an animal cell membrane primarily composed of glycoproteins

plasmodesmata

Open channels in the cell wall of a plant through which strands of cytosol connect from an adjacent cell.

True

T or F. Citric acid cycle releases or captures more free energy than glycolysis.

False

T or F. Enzymes are chemically changed following the chemical reaction.

induced fit

The change in shape of the active site of an enzyme so that it binds more snugly to the substrate, induced by entry of the substrate.

bacteria and archaea

Types of prokaryotic cells

NADH, CO2, and Acetyl CoA

What molecules are formed during grooming of pyruvate molecule?

small

What size cell has a greater ratio of surface area to volume than a large cell of the same shape?

eukaryote

Which is a bigger cell eukaryote or prokaryote?

cytochromes proteins

Which protein serves as electron carriers in electron transport system?

lumen

a network of interconnected cavities and channels in the E.R.

nucleus

a part of the cell containing DNA and RNA and responsible for growth and reproduction

aquaporins

a transport protein in the plasma membrane of a plant or animal cell that specifically facilitates the diffusion of water across the membrane

tonicity

ability of a solution to cause a cell to gain or lose water

intermediate filament

about 10 nanometers in diameter, a component of the cytoskeleton that includes all filaments intermediate in size between microtubules and microfilaments.

ATP

adenosine triphosphate, an organic molecule that acts as the main energy source for cell processes; composed of a nitrogenous base, a sugar, and three phosphate groups

NAD+

an organic molecule that serves as an electron carrier by being oxidized and reduced to NADH

centrioles

animal only, involved in cell division, short cylinders with a 9 + 0 pattern of microtubule triplets


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