Characteristics of Life
Amino Acids, Proteins, and Enzymes
Chemistry + Macromolecules
Cell Structure and Theory
Chemistry Fundamentals
100

What are the 7 characteristics of life?

Adaptation/evolution, Homeostasis, Order, Response to stimuli, Development/growth, Energy, Reproduction.

100

 What is the fundamental unit of matter called?

An atom.

100

 What do we call the 5 parts of an amino acid?

Amino group, Carboxyl group, Hydrogen atom, R-group, Central carbon atom

100

What are the 3 tenets of cell theory?

Cells are the structural units of life, organisms are composed of one or more cells, and a cell must derive from the division of a preexisting cell.

100

What is the fundamental unit of matter called?

An atom.

200

Explain one example for each characteristic of life.

A- Adaptation: Changing over time based on the environment, organisms best suited for the environment survive and those traits live on. H- Homeostasis: Sweating in order to cool down. O- Order: Organelles maintain structure and organization in your cells. R- Response to stimuli: Thermoregulation. D- Development/growth: Growing from a baby, toddler, teenager, to an adult. E- Energy: Plants using solar energy and converting it to glucose. R- Reproduction: Asexual/sexual reproduction.

200

What is removed in a condensation/dehydration reaction?

Water.


200

What kind of protein helps fold other proteins?

Chaperone Protein.

200

Can Prokaryotes be multicellular? Are eukaryotes ALWAYS multicellular?

Prokaryotes can only be unicellular but eukaryotic cells can be multicellular or unicellular.

200

How many electron shells do these elements require: Oxygen, Helium, Boron, Iron?

 O: 2, He: 1, B: 2, Fe: 4.

300

What are the 3 domains of life?

Bacteria, Eukarya, Prokarya.
300

What kind of bond forms between nucleotides?

Phosphodiester bonds.

300

What is the term for an enzyme that lacks its necessary cofactor and thus, is not active?

 Apoenzyme.

300

What evidence has been found that supports the endosymbiotic theory?

Evidence includes circular DNA, similar ribosomes, and a double membrane in mitochondria and chloroplasts.

300

What kind of bond forms between Potassium and Chloride?

 An ionic bond.

400

Can cells arise from dead cells or from nothing?

: No, cells cannot arise from dead cells or from nothing; they can only arise from the division of a pre-existing cell.

400

Which out of the 4 polymers/macromolecules is the most complex and variable in structure?

Proteins.

400

What major protein is directly involved in the immune response?

Antibodies.

400

 What are the common eukaryotic cells (plants and animals)?

Animal cells, plant cells, fungi, and protists.

400

What is the strongest bond that can form?

 In aqueous solutions, covalent bonds are stronger than ionic bonds.

500

What is the endosymbiotic theory?

The endosymbiotic theory is the idea that a prokaryote once engulfed a eukaryote, forming a symbiotic relationship, leading to the creation of mitochondria and chloroplasts.

500

Why are proteins so variable in shape and function?

Proteins are variable due to different R-groups, which influence folding and determine function.

500

How do enzymes catalyze chemical reactions?

Enzymes reduce the energy needed for chemical reactions, known as activation energy, by facilitating various mechanisms such as bringing substrates close together, bending bonds, or changing electron densities.

500

What are the common eukaryotic cell organelles/components (plants and animals)?

Examples include Golgi apparatus, nucleus, mitochondria, centrioles, etc.

500

What kind of bond forms between nucleotides?

Phosphodiester bonds.

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