Homeostasis & Tissues
Chemical Composition
Cell Physiology
Enzymes and Cellular Metabolism
Protein Synthesis and Cell Transport
100

What is the definition of homeostasis?

Biochemical mechanisms used by body components to maintain the balance of internal environments.

100

What is the charge of a proton, neutron, and electron?

Electrons – negative charge
Protons – positive charge
Neutrons – neutral (no charge)

100

What's the function of ribosomes? 

Involved in protein synthesis

100

What does it mean if something is “aerobic”?

It requires oxygen

100

Which molecules can and cannot easily pass through the plasma membrane? 

Easy- Small hydrophobic / non polar molecules 

Hard- Large or/and polar molecules 

200

What is a negative feedback loop? What is an example?

Drives parameter back to the set point. 

Examples- body temperature regulation and control of blood glucose

200

What is the difference between a covalent and ionic bond?

Covalent – electrons are shared

Ionic – electrons are transferred

200

What does selectively permeable mean in regard to the plasma membrane?

Selectively permeable – chemical properties set
mechanisms to regulate transport inside and outside of the cell

200

What is activation energy? 

The amount of energy necessary to carry out a chemical reaction

200

What is a concentration gradient? 

Difference in substance concentration across a membrane

300

What are the three types of muscle tissue? 

Skeletal, cardiac, smooth

300

What is the difference between dehydration synthesis and hydrolysis? 

dehydration synthesis- form bonds

hydrolysis - make bonds 

300

What's the function of a lysosome?

Host digestive enzymes that breakdown phagocytized material & recycle cell components

300

What factors effect optimal conditions for enzymes? 

pH, Temperature, Concentration of cofactors or coenzymes

300

What is the difference between transcription and translation?

In protein synthesis, "transcription" refers to the process of copying genetic information from DNA into a messenger RNA (mRNA) molecule, while "translation" is the process of using that mRNA sequence to assemble amino acids into a protein chain

400

Exocrine glands secrete/excrete materials to the
____ environment. Endocrine secretes material to the ____ environment. 

external, internal

400

What is a buffer? Give a common example of a buffer. 

Buffers – family of molecules and ions that can resist drastic changes in pH.
Example- Bicarbonate

400

What are the phases of mitosis? 

• Prophase P

• Metaphase M

• Anaphase A

• Telophase T

400
What's the difference between reduction and oxidations?

Reduction – electrons are gained

Oxidation – electrons are lost



400

What is DNA polymerase for? 

- Unwinding DNA

- stabilizing unwound DNA

- Promoting DNA nucleotide base pairing (T&A and C&G)

500

What are antagonistic factors? Provide an example. 

Relationship between two components in a feedback loop where one component opposes the function of the other. 

Ex. Insulin and glucagon have opposite effects on blood glucose. 

500

What must the body do in the absence of glucose?

In the absence of glucose, the body must
rely on alternative energy sources (ex. glycogen, fats, proteins)

500

What is the function of the mitochondria?

Produces chemical energy (ATP) through cellular respiration.

500

What are the substrates of glycolysis? 

Glucose, 2 ATP (energy investment)

500

Explain secondary active transport and give an example.

A molecule is moved against its concentration gradient by utilizing the energy stored in an existing electrochemical gradient of another molecule

Ex. sodium ions (Na+) moving down its gradient to bring glucose into the cell