20
18
16
17
mixed
100

This term describes the uncontrolled division of cells due to genetic mutations.

What is cancer?

100

This type of modification involves attaching a 76–amino acid protein to a target protein to mark it for degradation.

What is ubiquitination?

100

This type of signaling involves long-distance communication but targets very specific cells rather than widespread distribution like hormones.

What is neuronal signaling?

100

This cytoskeletal component is the most mechanically durable and is anchored at desmosomes to resist tensile stress.

What are intermediate filaments?

100

This process explains why proteins with short lifespans, such as regulatory proteins, must be rapidly removed from the cell.

What is regulated proteolysis for cellular control?

200

These are the two main classes of genes involved in cancer, based on whether mutations are dominant or recessive.

What are oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes?

200

If ubiquitin tagging fails, this type of cellular damage is likely to accumulate, potentially leading to disease.

What are misfolded or damaged proteins?

200

A mutation that inhibits this specific activity in Gα would lead to prolonged signaling similar to cholera toxin effects.

What is GTPase activity?

200

This structural feature of microtubules allows directional transport and is established by α/β-tubulin arrangement.

What is polarity (plus and minus ends)?

200

A mutation that prevents this activity in Ras keeps it permanently active and promotes cancer.

What is GTP hydrolysis?

300

This hallmark of cancer allows tumors to stimulate the formation of new blood vessels to supply nutrients.

What is angiogenesis?

300

A mutation that prevents proteasome function would most directly disrupt this critical cellular process.


What is protein turnover and regulation of protein levels?

300

This enzyme produces a second messenger that increases more than 20-fold within seconds after GPCR activation.

What is adenylyl cyclase?

300

Replacing GTP with a non-hydrolyzable analog would cause this specific effect on microtubule dynamics.

What is microtubules would never shrink (loss of dynamic instability)

300

These two second messengers are produced when phospholipase C cleaves a membrane phospholipid, with one remaining membrane-bound and the other diffusing into the cytosol.

What are DAG and IP₃?

400

This protein is mutated in about 50% of cancers and is responsible for halting the cell cycle in response to DNA damage.

What is p53?

400

This is the most likely outcome if ubiquitinated proteins could not enter the proteasome despite being properly tagged.

What is accumulation of tagged proteins leading to cellular dysfunction?

400

This regulatory mechanism reduces cellular sensitivity to persistent stimulation by decreasing receptor availability through internalization.

What is receptor downregulation?

400

This motor protein moves toward the minus end of microtubules and would cause cargo accumulation at the axon terminal if nonfunctional.

What is dynein?

400

This actin filament behavior occurs when monomers add at the plus end and dissociate at the minus end at equal rates.

What is treadmilling?

500

Loss of function in this tumor suppressor gene is associated with Familial Adenomatous Polyposis (FAP) and early colon tumor development.

What is APC?

500

The cylindrical structure of the proteasome is important because it performs this protective function for the cell.

What is sequestering proteolysis

500

This receptor class requires dimerization and autophosphorylation on tyrosine residues to initiate downstream signaling cascades.

What are receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs)?

500

This structural unit of muscle contains overlapping actin and myosin filaments and shortens without either filament changing length.

What is a sarcomere?

500

This calcium-sensitive protein complex shifts tropomyosin to expose myosin-binding sites on actin.

What is troponin?