bio exam 5

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As ATP begins to build up in a cell, metabolism slows down. How does this happen?

ATP acts as an allosteric inhibitor to many of the enzymes involved in metabolism, thus slowing their function. -Chemical chaos would result if all of a cell's metabolic pathways were operating simultaneously. Intrinsic to life's processes is a cell's ability to tightly regulate its metabolic pathways by controlling when and where its various enzymes are active. It does this either by switching on and off the genes that encode specific enzymes or by regulating the activity of enzymes once they are made. Most enzymes known to be allosterically regulated are constructed from two or more subunits, each composed of a polypeptide chain with its own active site. The entire complex oscillates between two different shapes, one catalytically active and the other inactive. Fluctuating concentrations of regulators can cause a sophisticated pattern of responses in the activity of cellular enzymes. The products of ATP hydrolysis, for example, play a complex role in balancing the flow of traffic between anabolic and catabolic pathways because of their effects on key enzymes. ATP binds to several catabolic enzymes allosterically, lowering their affinity for substrate and thus inhibiting their activity. ADP, however, functions as an activator of the same enzymes.

Cells use ATP constantly, but ATP is considered a renewable resource. What process makes this possible?

ATP can be regenerated by the addition of a phosphate group to ADP. -An organism at work uses ATP continuously, but ATP is a renewable resource that can be regenerated by the addition of phosphate to ADP. The free energy required to phosphorylate ADP comes from exergonic breakdown reactions (catabolism) in the cell. This shuttling of inorganic phosphate and energy is called the ATP cycle, and it couples the cell's energy-yielding (exergonic) processes to the energy-consuming (endergonic) ones.

Which of the following correctly states the relationship between anabolic and catabolic pathways?

Anabolic pathways synthesize more complex organic molecules using the energy derived from catabolic pathways. -Metabolism as a whole manages the material and energy resources of the cell. Some metabolic pathways release energy by breaking down complex molecules to simpler compounds. These degradative processes are called catabolic pathways, or breakdown pathways. A major pathway of catabolism is cellular respiration, in which the sugar glucose and other organic fuels are broken down in the presence of oxygen to carbon dioxide and water. Energy that was stored in the organic molecules becomes available to do the work of the cell, such as ciliary beating or membrane transport. Anabolic pathways, in contrast, consume energy to build complicated molecules from simpler ones; they are sometimes called biosynthetic pathways. Examples of anabolism are the synthesis of an amino acid from simpler molecules and the synthesis of a protein from amino acids. Catabolic and anabolic pathways are the "downhill" and "uphill" avenues of the metabolic landscape. Energy released from the downhill reactions of catabolic pathways can be stored and then used to drive the uphill reactions of anabolic pathways.

At low temperatures, a particular enzyme catalyzes a reaction, but at a slow rate. At high temperatures, the enzyme is completely inactive. What statement best explains the difference in how temperature affects the function of this enzyme?

At low temperatures, there is not enough free energy for the enzyme to function at a high rate, and at high temperatures, the enzyme is denatured, leaving it nonfunctional. -The activity of an enzyme—how efficiently it functions—is affected by general environmental factors, such as temperature and pH. The three-dimensional structures of proteins are sensitive to their environment. As a consequence, each enzyme works better under some conditions than under other conditions because these optimal conditions favor the most active shape of the enzyme. Temperature and pH are environmental factors important to the activity of an enzyme. Up to a point, the rate of an enzymatic reaction increases with increasing temperature, partly because substrates collide with active sites more frequently when the molecules move rapidly. Above that temperature, however, the speed of the enzymatic reaction drops sharply. The thermal agitation of the enzyme molecule disrupts the hydrogen bonds, ionic bonds, and other weak interactions that stabilize the active shape of the enzyme, and the protein molecule eventually denatures. Each enzyme has an optimal temperature at which its reaction rate is greatest.

Which of the following statements correctly describes cofactors and coenzymes?

Both are nonprotein enzyme helpers; but most cofactors are metal ions, and coenzymes are organic molecules that are a specific type of cofactor. -Many enzymes require nonprotein helpers for catalytic activity. These adjuncts, called cofactors, may be bound tightly to the enzyme as permanent residents, or they may bind loosely and reversibly along with the substrate. The cofactors of some enzymes, such as the metal atoms zinc, iron, and copper in ionic form, are inorganic. If the cofactor is an organic molecule, it is referred to more specifically as a coenzyme. Most vitamins are important in nutrition because they act as coenzymes or raw materials from which coenzymes are made.

How does ATP drive mechanical work inside a cell?

By binding to motor proteins -Transport and mechanical work in the cell are also nearly always powered by the hydrolysis of ATP. In these cases, ATP hydrolysis leads to changes in a protein's shape and often its ability to bind to another molecule. Sometimes this occurs via a phosphorylated intermediate. ATP hydrolysis causes changes in the shapes and binding affinities of proteins. This can occur directly, by phosphorylation, for a membrane protein carrying out active transport of a solute or indirectly, via noncovalent binding of ATP and its hydrolytic products, as is the case for motor proteins that move vesicles (and other organelles) along cytoskeletal "tracks" in the cell.

How does ATP drive transport work inside a cell?

By phosphorylating a transport protein -Transport and mechanical work in the cell are also nearly always powered by the hydrolysis of ATP. In these cases, ATP hydrolysis leads to changes in a protein's shape and often its ability to bind to another molecule. Sometimes this occurs via a phosphorylated intermediate. ATP hydrolysis causes changes in the shapes and binding affinities of proteins. This can occur directly, by phosphorylation, for a membrane protein carrying out active transport of a solute or indirectly, via noncovalent binding of ATP and its hydrolytic products, as is the case for motor proteins that move vesicles (and other organelles) along cytoskeletal "tracks" in the cell.

Which of the following pairs of pathways and their location in the cell is incorrectly matched?

Citric acid cycle: cytosol -The citric acid cycle does not occur in the cytosol. The citric acid cycle functions as a metabolic furnace that oxidizes organic fuel derived from pyruvate. Pyruvate is broken down to three CO2 molecules, including the molecule of CO2 released during the conversion of pyruvate to acetyl CoA. The cycle generates one ATP per turn by substrate-level phosphorylation, but most of the chemical energy is transferred to NAD+ and a related electron carrier, the coenzyme FAD (flavin adenine dinucleotide, which is derived from riboflavin, a B vitamin), during the redox reactions. The total yield per glucose from the citric acid cycle is six NADH molecules, two FADH2 molecules, and the equivalent of two ATP molecules. This pathway occurs in the matrix of the mitochondrion.

Which of the following statements is correct regarding competitive and noncompetitive enzyme inhibitors?

Competitive inhibitors bind to the active site of an enzyme while noncompetitive inhibitors bind to an enzyme away from the active site. -Certain chemicals selectively inhibit the action of certain enzymes. Sometimes, the inhibitor attaches to the enzyme by covalent bonds, in which case the inhibition is usually irreversible. Many enzyme inhibitors, however, bind to the enzyme by weak interactions, and when this occurs the inhibition is reversible. Some reversible inhibitors resemble the normal substrate molecule and compete for admission into the active site. These mimics, called competitive inhibitors, reduce the productivity of enzymes by blocking substrates from entering active sites. This kind of inhibition can be overcome by increasing the concentration of substrate so that as active sites become available, more substrate molecules than inhibitor molecules are around to gain entry to the sites. In contrast, noncompetitive inhibitors do not directly compete with the substrate to bind to the enzyme at the active site. Instead, they impede enzymatic reactions by binding to another part of the enzyme. This interaction causes the enzyme molecule to change its shape in such a way that the active site becomes less effective at catalyzing the conversion of substrate to product.

Which of the following states the relevance of the first law of thermodynamics to biology?

Energy can be freely transformed among different forms as long as the total energy is conserved. -The first law of thermodynamics is relevant to biology because acquiring and using energy are necessary tasks for survival. The first law of thermodynamics, the energy of the universe is constant: Energy can be transferred and transformed, but it cannot be created or destroyed. The first law is also known as the principle of conservation of energy. For example, the electric company does not make energy, it merely converts one form of energy to another that is more convenient for us to use. By converting sunlight to chemical energy, a plant acts as an energy transformer, not an energy producer.

If the entropy of a living organism is decreasing, which of the following is most likely to be occurring simultaneously?

Energy input into the organism must be occurring to drive the decrease in entropy. -A logical consequence of the loss of usable energy during energy transfer or transformation is that each such event makes the universe more disordered. Scientists use a quantity called entropy as a measure of disorder, or randomness. The more randomly arranged a collection of matter is, the greater its entropy. The second law of thermodynamics states that every energy transfer or transformation increases the entropy of the universe. Although order can increase locally, there is an unstoppable trend toward randomization of the universe as a whole. Living systems increase the entropy of their surroundings, as predicted by thermodynamic law. It is true that cells create ordered structures from less organized starting materials. For example, simpler molecules are ordered into the more complex structure of an amino acid, and amino acids are ordered into polypeptide chains. At the organismal level as well, complex and beautifully ordered structures result from biological processes that use simpler starting materials. However, an organism also takes in organized forms of matter and energy from the surroundings and replaces them with less ordered forms. For example, an animal obtains starch, proteins, and other complex molecules from the food it eats. As catabolic pathways break these molecules down, the animal releases carbon dioxide and water—small molecules that possess less chemical energy than the food did. The depletion of chemical energy is accounted for by heat generated during metabolism. On a larger scale, energy flows into most ecosystems in the form of light and exits in the form of heat.

Which of the following statements about enzyme function is correct?

Enzymes can lower the activation energy of reactions, but they cannot change the equilibrium point because they cannot change the net energy output. -An enzyme catalyzes a reaction by lowering the activation energy (EA) barrier, enabling the reactant molecules to absorb enough energy to reach the transition state even at moderate temperatures. An enzyme cannot change the ΔG for a reaction; it cannot make an endergonic reaction exergonic. Enzymes can only hasten reactions that would eventually occur anyway, but this function makes it possible for the cell to have a dynamic metabolism, routing chemicals smoothly through the cell's metabolic pathways. And because enzymes are very specific for the reactions they catalyze, they determine which chemical processes will be going on in the cell at any particular time. Most metabolic reactions are reversible, and an enzyme can catalyze either the forward or the reverse reaction, depending on which direction has a negative ΔG. This in turn depends mainly on the relative concentrations of reactants and products. The net effect is always in the direction of equilibrium, a term that describes a state of maximum stability.

Which of the following statements about enzymes is true?

Enzymes speed up the rate of the reaction without changing the ΔG for the reaction. -An enzyme is a macromolecule that acts as a catalyst, a chemical agent that speeds up a reaction without being consumed by the reaction. An enzyme catalyzes a reaction by lowering the activation energy EA barrier, enabling the reactant molecules to absorb enough energy to reach the transition state even at moderate temperatures. An enzyme cannot change the ΔG for a reaction; it cannot make an endergonic reaction exergonic. Enzymes can only hasten reactions that would eventually occur anyway, but this function makes it possible for the cell to have a dynamic metabolism, routing chemicals smoothly through the cell's metabolic pathways. And because enzymes are very specific for the reactions they catalyze, they determine which chemical processes will be going on in the cell at any particular time. Although heat can speed a reaction by allowing reactants to attain the transition state more often, this solution would be inappropriate for biological systems. First, high temperature denatures enzymes, which are proteins, and kills cells. Second, heat would speed up all reactions, not just those that are needed. Instead of heat, organisms use enzymes to speed up reactions.

The primary manner in which cells manage their energy resources in order to do work is called energy coupling. Which of the following statements accurately defines energy coupling?

Exergonic reactions drive endergonic reactions. -Based on their free-energy changes, chemical reactions can be classified as either exergonic ("energy outward") or endergonic ("energy inward"). An exergonic reaction proceeds with a net release of free energy. An endergonic reaction absorbs free energy from its surroundings. A key feature in the way cells manage their energy resources in order to do this work is energy coupling, the use of an exergonic process to drive an endergonic one. ATP is responsible for mediating most energy coupling in cells, and in most cases it acts as the immediate source of energy that powers cellular work.

Which of the following reactions would be endergonic?

Glucose + fructose → sucrose -An endergonic reaction is one that absorbs free energy from its surroundings. Because this kind of reaction essentially stores free energy in molecules (G increases), ΔG is positive. Such reactions are nonspontaneous, and the magnitude of ΔG in the equation ΔG = ΔH - TΔS is the quantity of energy required to drive the reaction. Combining glucose and fructose to produce sucrose is an example of an energy storing endergonic reaction with the product more complex (lower entropy) than the reactants (glucose and fructose).

Which of the following statements is correct regarding kinetic and potential energy?

Kinetic energy is associated with the relative motion of objects, and potential energy is the energy that matter possesses because of its location or structure. -Energy is the capacity to cause change. In everyday life, energy is important because some forms of energy can be used to do work—that is, to move matter against opposing forces, such as gravity and friction. Put another way, energy is the ability to rearrange a collection of matter. Energy exists in various forms, and the work of life depends on the ability of cells to transform energy from one form to another. Energy can be associated with the relative motion of objects; this energy is called kinetic energy. Moving objects can perform work by imparting motion to other matter. Energy that is not kinetic is called potential energy; it is the energy that matter possesses because of its location or structure.

Which statement correctly describes the difference between alcohol fermentation and lactic acid fermentation?

Lactic acid fermentation produces lactate, and alcohol fermentation produces ethanol. -Fermentation consists of glycolysis plus reactions that regenerate NAD+ by transferring electrons from NADH to pyruvate or derivatives of pyruvate. The NAD+ can then be reused to oxidize sugar by glycolysis, which nets two molecules of ATP by substrate-level phosphorylation. There are many types of fermentation, and they differ in the end products formed from pyruvate. Two types commonly harnessed by humans for food and industrial production are alcohol fermentation and lactic acid fermentation. In alcohol fermentation, pyruvate is converted to ethanol (ethyl alcohol) in two steps. The first step releases carbon dioxide from the pyruvate, which is converted to the two-carbon compound acetaldehyde. In the second step, acetaldehyde is reduced by NADH to ethanol. This regenerates the supply of NAD+ needed for the continuation of glycolysis. During lactic acid fermentation, pyruvate is reduced directly by NADH to form lactate as an end product, with no release of CO2.

Which of the following is true regarding metabolic pathways?

Metabolic pathways consist of a series of reactions, each catalyzed by a different enzyme. -The totality of an organism's chemical reactions is called metabolism (from the Greek metabole, change). Metabolism is an emergent property of life that arises from orderly interactions between molecules. We can picture a cell's metabolism as an elaborate road map of the thousands of chemical reactions that occur in a cell, arranged as intersecting metabolic pathways. A metabolic pathway begins with a specific molecule that is then altered in a series of defined steps, resulting in a certain product. Each step of the pathway is catalyzed by a specific enzyme.

After completion of the citric acid cycle, most of the usable energy from the original glucose molecule is in the form of __________.

NADH -The citric acid cycle produces three NADH per turn of the cycle. Now let's tally the energy-rich molecules produced by the citric acid cycle. For each acetyl group entering the cycle, 3 NAD+ are reduced to NADH. However, in one step electrons are transferred not to NAD+, but to FAD, which accepts 2 electrons and 2 protons to become FADH2. previous

Most of the electrons removed from glucose by cellular respiration are used for which of the following processes?

Reducing NAD+ to NADH in glycolysis and the citric acid cycle AND producing a proton gradient for ATP synthesis in the mitochondria. -

Which of these statements about enzyme inhibitors is true?

The action of inhibitors may be reversible or irreversible. -Certain chemicals selectively inhibit the action of specific enzymes, and we have learned a lot about enzyme function by studying the effects of these molecules. If the inhibitor attaches to the enzyme by covalent bonds, inhibition is usually irreversible. Many enzyme inhibitors, however, bind to the enzyme by weak interactions, in which case inhibition is reversible. Some reversible inhibitors resemble the normal substrate molecule and compete for admission into the active site. These mimics, called competitive inhibitors, reduce the productivity of enzymes by blocking substrates from entering active sites. This kind of inhibition can be overcome by increasing the concentration of substrate so that as active sites become available, more substrate molecules than inhibitor molecules are around to gain entry to the sites. In contrast, noncompetitive inhibitors do not directly compete with the substrate to bind to the enzyme at the active site. Instead, they impede enzymatic reactions by binding to another part of the enzyme. This interaction causes the enzyme molecule to change its shape in such a way that the active site becomes less effective at catalyzing the conversion of substrate to product.

Which of the following is changed by the presence of an enzyme in a reaction?

The activation energy -An enzyme is a macromolecule that acts as a catalyst, a chemical agent that speeds up a reaction without being consumed by the reaction. An enzyme catalyzes a reaction by lowering the activation energy (EA) barrier, enabling the reactant molecules to absorb enough energy to reach the transition state even at moderate temperatures. An enzyme cannot change the ΔG for a reaction; it cannot make an endergonic reaction exergonic. Enzymes can only hasten reactions that would eventually occur anyway, but this function makes it possible for the cell to have a dynamic metabolism, routing chemicals smoothly through the cell's metabolic pathways. And because enzymes are very specific for the reactions they catalyze, they determine which chemical processes will be going on in the cell at any particular time.

Which of the following statements about the active site of an enzyme is correct?

The active site may resemble a groove or pocket in the surface of a protein into which the substrate fits. -Only a restricted region of the enzyme molecule actually binds to the substrate. This region, called the active site, is typically a pocket or groove on the surface of the enzyme where catalysis occurs. Usually, the active site is formed by only a few of the enzyme's amino acids, with the rest of the protein molecule providing a framework that determines the configuration of the active site. The specificity of an enzyme is attributed to a compatible fit between the shape of its active site and the shape of the substrate. An enzyme is not a stiff structure locked into a given shape. In fact, recent work by biochemists has shown clearly that enzymes (and other proteins as well) seem to "dance" between subtly different shapes in a dynamic equilibrium, with slight differences in free energy for each "pose." Many enzymes require nonprotein helpers for catalytic activity. These adjuncts, called cofactors, may be bound tightly to the enzyme as permanent residents, or they may bind loosely and reversibly along with the substrate. The cofactors of some enzymes are inorganic, such as the metal atoms zinc, iron, and copper in ionic form. If the cofactor is an organic molecule, it is more specifically called a coenzyme. Most vitamins are important in nutrition because they act as coenzymes or raw materials from which coenzymes are made. The shape that best fits the substrate isn't necessarily the one with the lowest energy, but during the very short time the enzyme takes on this shape, its active site can bind to the substrate. It has been known for more than 50 years that the active site itself is also not a rigid receptacle for the substrate.

Which of the following is an example of the second law of thermodynamics as it applies to biological reactions?

The aerobic respiration of one molecule of glucose produces six molecules each of carbon dioxide and water. -The second law of thermodynamics states that spontaneous processes, those requiring no outside input of energy, increase the entropy (disorder) of the universe. In this example, carbon dioxide and water are more disordered than glucose. Cellular respiration, in which the sugar glucose and other organic fuels are broken down in the presence of oxygen to release energy and produce carbon dioxide and water, is a major pathway of catabolism. Energy that was stored in the organic molecules becomes available to do the work of the cell, such as ciliary beating or membrane transport.

Which part of the catabolism of glucose by cellular respiration requires molecular oxygen (O2) and produces CO2?

The combination of the citric acid cycle and electron transport -CO2 is produced in the citric acid cycle, and O2 is taken up in electron transport. In eukaryotes, pyruvate enters the mitochondrion and is oxidized to a compound called acetyl CoA, which enters the citric acid cycle. There, the breakdown of glucose to carbon dioxide is completed. (In prokaryotes, these processes take place in the cytosol.) Thus, the carbon dioxide produced by respiration represents fragments of oxidized organic molecules.

Which of the following statements is correct regarding ATP?

The energy in an ATP molecule is released through hydrolysis of one of the phosphate groups. -ATP (adenosine triphosphate) is responsible for mediating most energy coupling in cells, and in most cases it acts as the immediate source of energy that powers cellular work. ATP contains the sugar ribose, with the nitrogenous base adenine and a chain of three phosphate groups (the triphosphate group) bonded to it. The bonds between the phosphate groups of ATP can be broken by hydrolysis. When the terminal phosphate bond is broken by the addition of a water molecule, a molecule of inorganic phosphate leaves the ATP, which becomes adenosine diphosphate, or ADP. The reaction is exergonic and releases 7.3 kcal of energy per mole of ATP hydrolyzed.

At low pH, a particular enzyme catalyzes a reaction at a high rate. At neutral pH, the enzyme is completely inactive. What statement best explains the difference in how pH affects the function of this enzyme?

The enzyme is adapted for low pH but is denatured at neutral pH, leaving it nonfunctional. -The activity of an enzyme—how efficiently it functions—is affected by general environmental factors, such as temperature and pH. The three-dimensional structures of proteins are sensitive to their environment. As a consequence, each enzyme works better under some conditions than under other conditions because these optimal conditions favor the most active shape of the enzyme. Temperature and pH are environmental factors important to the activity of an enzyme. Just as each enzyme has an optimal temperature, it also has a pH at which it is most active. The optimal pH values for most enzymes fall in the range of pH 6-8, but there are exceptions. For example, pepsin, a digestive enzyme in the human stomach, works best at pH 2. Such an acidic environment denatures most enzymes, but pepsin has adapted to maintain its functional three-dimensional structure in the acidic environment of the stomach. In contrast, trypsin, a digestive enzyme residing in the alkaline environment of the human intestine, has an optimal pH of 8 and would be denatured in the stomach.

What best characterizes the role of ATP in cellular metabolism?

The free energy released by ATP hydrolysis that may be coupled to an endergonic process via the formation of a phosphorylated intermediate. -For example, with the help of specific enzymes, the cell is able to use the energy released by ATP hydrolysis directly to drive chemical reactions that, by themselves, are endergonic. If the ΔG of an endergonic reaction is less than the amount of energy released by ATP hydrolysis, then the two reactions can be coupled so that, overall, the coupled reactions are exergonic. This usually involves the transfer of a phosphate group from ATP to some other molecule, such as the reactant. The recipient with the phosphate group covalently bonded to it is then called a phosphorylated intermediate. The key to coupling exergonic and endergonic reactions is the formation of this phosphorylated intermediate, which is more reactive (less stable) than the original unphosphorylated molecule.

The process of stabilizing the structure of an enzyme in its active form by the binding of a molecule is an example of __________.

allosteric regulation -Allosteric regulation involves stabilizing the structure of an enzyme in its active form by the binding of a molecule. Intrinsic to life's processes is a cell's ability to tightly regulate its metabolic pathways by controlling when and where its various enzymes are active. It does this either by switching on and off the genes that encode specific enzymes or by regulating the activity of enzymes once they are made. In many cases, the molecules that naturally regulate enzyme activity in a cell behave something like reversible noncompetitive inhibitors: These regulatory molecules change an enzyme's shape and the functioning of its active site by binding to a site elsewhere on the molecule, via noncovalent interactions. Allosteric regulation is the term used to describe any case in which a protein's function at one site is affected by the binding of a regulatory molecule to a separate site. It may result in either inhibition or stimulation of an enzyme's activity. Most enzymes known to be allosterically regulated are constructed from two or more subunits, each composed of a polypeptide chain with its own active site. The entire complex oscillates between two different shapes, one catalytically active and the other inactive. In the simplest kind of allosteric regulation, an activating or inhibiting regulatory molecule binds to a regulatory site (sometimes called an allosteric site), often located where subunits join. The binding of an activator to a regulatory site stabilizes the shape that has functional active sites, whereas the binding of an inhibitor stabilizes the inactive form of the enzyme. The subunits of an allosteric enzyme fit together in such a way that a shape change in one subunit is transmitted to all others. Through this interaction of subunits, a single activator or inhibitor molecule that binds to one regulatory site will affect the active sites of all subunits.

Fermentation is essentially glycolysis plus an extra step in which pyruvate is reduced to form lactate or alcohol and carbon dioxide. This last step __________.

enables the cell to recycle the reduced NADH to oxidized NAD+ -Normally, the reduced NADH delivers its electrons to the electron transport chain, enabling NAD+ to be recycled to glycolysis. As an alternative to respiratory oxidation of organic nutrients, fermentation is an extension of glycolysis that allows continuous generation of ATP by the substrate-level phosphorylation of glycolysis. For this to occur, there must be a sufficient supply of NAD+ to accept electrons during the oxidation step of glycolysis. Without some mechanism to recycle NAD+ from NADH, glycolysis would soon deplete the cell's pool of NAD+ by reducing it all to NADH and would shut itself down for lack of an oxidizing agent. Under aerobic conditions, NAD+ is recycled from NADH by the transfer of electrons to the electron transport chain. An anaerobic alternative is to transfer electrons from NADH to pyruvate, the end product of glycolysis.

ATP allosterically inhibits enzymes in ATP-producing pathways. The result of this is called __________.

feedback inhibition -When ATP allosterically inhibits an enzyme in an ATP-generating pathway, the result is feedback inhibition, a common mode of metabolic control. In feedback inhibition, a metabolic pathway is halted by the inhibitory binding of its end product to an enzyme that acts early in the pathway. Feedback inhibition thereby prevents the cell from making more product than is necessary and thus wasting chemical resources.

In the overall process of glycolysis and cellular respiration, __________ is oxidized and __________ is reduced.

glucose; oxygen -In cellular respiration, electrons and hydrogen are removed from glucose and added to oxygen. During aerobic respiration, glucose (C6H12O6) is oxidized to CO2, and O2 is reduced to H2O. Electrons lose potential energy during their transfer from glucose or other organic compounds to oxygen. The energy-yielding redox process of greatest interest to biologists is respiration, which involves the oxidation of glucose and other molecules in food. The summary equation for cellular respiration can be considered a redox process: C6H12O6 + 6 O2 → 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + Energy.

Enzyme activity is affected by pH because __________.

high or low pH may disrupt hydrogen bonding or ionic interactions and thus change the shape of the active site -Just as each enzyme has an optimal temperature, it also has a pH at which it is most active. Enzyme activity is affected by pH because high or low pH may disrupt hydrogen bolding or ionic interactions that stabilize the molecule and thus change the shape of the active site. The optimal pH values for most enzymes fall in the range of pH 6-8, but there are exceptions. For example, pepsin, a digestive enzyme in the human stomach, works best at pH 2. Such an acidic environment denatures most enzymes, but pepsin is adapted to maintain its functional three-dimensional structure in the acidic environment of the stomach. In contrast, trypsin, a digestive enzyme residing in the alkaline environment of the human intestine, has an optimal pH of 8 and would be denatured in the stomach.

What would the value of ΔS be for a chemical reaction in which a molecule is broken down into smaller components?

positive -ΔS is the change in a system's entropy. When entropy is increased, as in a reaction in which a molecule is broken down, the ΔS value is positive.

An exergonic (spontaneous) reaction is a chemical reaction that __________.

releases energy when proceeding in the forward direction -Based on their free-energy changes, chemical reactions can be classified as either exergonic ("energy outward") or endergonic ("energy inward"). An exergonic reaction proceeds with a net release of free energy (ΔG < 0). From the equation ΔG = ΔH - TΔS, for ΔG to be negative then either ΔH must be negative (the system gives up enthalpy and H decreases) or TΔS must be positive (the system gives up order and S increases), or both. More than a century of experiments has shown that only processes with a negative ΔG are spontaneous. When ΔH and TΔS are tallied, ΔG has a negative value (ΔG < 0) for all spontaneous processes. In other words, every spontaneous process decreases the system's free energy, and processes that have a positive or zero ΔG are never spontaneous.

An exergonic reaction __________ free energy, and an endergonic reaction __________ free energy.

releases; absorbs -Based on their free-energy changes, chemical reactions can be classified as either exergonic ("energy outward") or endergonic ("energy inward"). An exergonic reaction proceeds with a net release of free energy. An endergonic reaction absorbs free energy from its surroundings.

In general, the hydrolysis of ATP drives cellular work by __________.

releasing free energy that can be coupled to other reactions -Energy coupling is key feature in the way cells manage their energy resources to do work, which is the use of an exergonic process to drive an endergonic one. ATP is responsible for mediating most energy coupling in cells, and in most cases it acts as the immediate source of energy (not a catalyst) that powers cellular work. Byproducts such as heat are not effective energy sources for such work.


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