Unit 1
Unit 2
Unit 3
Unit 4
Misc.
100

What are the main structural components of an amino acid?

Amino group, carboxyl group, H atom, alpha C, and R group

100

Cellular respiration is...

The process of converting food into energy

100

By what mechanism did chloroplasts and mitochondria evolve?

Symbiosis with prokaryotic cells

100

Define Apoptosis

Programmed cell death

100

How is oxygen generated by photosynthesis?

From the splitting of water molecules

200

What types of structures are present in primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary organizational levels?

In order... amino acid chains, alpha helix, beta pleated sheets & polypeptide chains, and assembled subunit

200

Describe the three stages of food breakdown. What happens and where does it take place? What is this breakdown of complex molecules called?

Digestion, glycolysis, and respiration; they occur in the cytoplasm and mitochondria; catabolism

200

What are signal sequences or sorting signals and how long are they?

A sequence of amino acids that directs proteins to a specific location; typically 15-60 amino acids long

200

Define Necrosis 

Sudden cell death; messy, and unplanned

200

What is the coat on a coated vesicle and what are its two functions?

Clathrin; helps in vesicle formation and directs transport

300

Compare cooperativity and allosteric regulation.

Cooperativity: Where the binding of one substrate molecule affects the binding affinity of additional substrate molecules

Allosteric: involves the binding of molecules at sites other than the active site

300

What enzyme complex is used to convert pyruvate? What are the products of pyruvate decarboxylation?

Pyruvate dehydrogenase; acetyl CoA, CO2, and NADH

300

Are proteins folded or unfolded as they enter mitochondria or chloroplasts?

Proteins enter unfolded

300

What allows the same signaling molecule to cause different responses in different cell types?

The different signaling pathways and intracellular molecules present in the cells.

300

What family of proteases regulates apoptosis? How are the inactive molecules activated?

Caspases; they are activated by cleavage in response to apoptotic signals.

400

Describe the structure and components of the plasma membrane?

Phospholipid bilayer is composed of two layers of phospholipids with hydrophobic tails facing inward and hydrophilic heads facing outward, proteins are embedded or attached to the bilayer and are involved in transport, signaling, and structural support, carbohydrates are attached to proteins or lipids, and involved in cell recognition and signaling, cholesterol is within the bilayer, affecting membrane fluidity

400

What is meant by chemiosmotic coupling?

The coupling of electron transport to ATP synthesis through a proton gradient

400

What is exocytosis? Endocytosis?

Exocytosis is the release of materials; endocytosis is the intake of materials

400

What is the fast response to a molecular signal? What is the slow response to a molecular signal?

Fast: changes in protein activity; Slow: changes in gene expression.

400

What are the three configurations of the voltage-gated Na+ channel, how do they work and why are they important?

Open: Allows Na+ ions to flow through the channel. 

Inactivated: Prevents Na+ ions from passing through, shutting down the channel after opening. 

Closed: The channel is not open but is capable of opening in response to a depolarizing stimulus. They are important because they ensure action potential travels in one direction so neurons ca return to resting state

500

What is an excitatory synapse? An inhibitory synapse? Give one example of each.

Excitatory Synapse: Promotes the generation of an action potential in the postsynaptic neuron (ex. glutamate) 

Inhibitory Synapse: Prevents the generation of an action potential in the postsynaptic neuron (ex. A neuronal synapse that uses GABA as its transmitter)

500

What is the pathway the excited electrons take through photosystem II? What is the pathway the excited electrons take through photosystem I?

From chlorophyll to plastoquinone in photosystem II and to ferredoxin in photosystem I

500

What does it mean that Rab proteins are GTPases

They hydrolyze GTP to GDP for vesicle docking and fusion

500

M-Cdk drives entry into M phase and mitosis. What is the role of Cdc25 and the positive feedback loop it establishes in promoting M phase?

Cdc25 activates M-Cdk by dephosphorylation, and positive feedback amplifies this activation.

500

What family of proteins regulate the intrinsic apoptotic death pathway? Describe the intrinsic apoptotic pathway.

Bcl-2 family; the intrinsic pathway involves mitochondrial release of cytochrome c and activation of caspases.