Gas Exchange I
Gas Exchange II
Immunity
Hormones I
Hormones II
100

What is the enzyme that catalyzes the reversible hydration of CO₂?

What is carbonic anhydrase

100

What metal does hemoglobin use to bind O₂?

Iron (Fe²⁺)

100

What are the four classic signs of inflammation?

Rubor, calor, tumor, dolor (redness, heat, swelling, pain)

100

What are the two main communication systems in animals?

Nervous (fast) and endocrine (slow)

100

What structure links the nervous and endocrine systems?

The hypothalamus

200

What evolutionary event allowed for the rise of aerobic respiration?

What is The Great Oxidation Event/Oxygen Revolution (2.5 BYA)

200

What is the Bohr effect?

Decreased pH (higher CO₂) lowers Hb’s O₂ affinity, enhancing release to tissues.

200

What distinguishes innate from adaptive immunity?

Innate is fast and non-specific

Adaptive is slow, specific, and provides memory.

200

Which class of hormones binds intracellular receptors?

Lipophilic (steroid) hormones

200

What are the two major hormones regulating blood glucose

Insulin and glucagon

300

Why does nitrogenase need to be protected from oxygen, and how do plants achieve this?

O₂ inactivates nitrogenase; legume hosts produce leghemoglobin to isolate O₂

300

Why do fetal and adult hemoglobins have different sensitivities to 2,3-BPG?

Fetal Hb binds O₂ more tightly (less affected by 2,3-BPG) to extract O₂ from maternal blood.

Evolutionary benefit because babies cannot breathe on their own

300

Explain how pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) like Toll-like receptors detect pathogens.

They recognize conserved microbial motifs (PAMPs) and trigger innate immune responses.

300

A mutation disables a plant’s auxin transport proteins. Predict two growth defects.

Loss of phototropism (growth towards light) and failure of apical dominance 

No auxin gradient to suppress lateral buds.

300

A patient shows lethargy, cold intolerance, and weight gain. Which axis is affected and how?

HPT axis → hypothyroidism (low thyroid hormone, reduced metabolism)

400

Rubisco can bind both CO₂ and O₂. Explain how carbon-concentrating mechanisms (CCMs) compensate for this problem

CCMs increase CO₂ concentration near Rubisco to outcompete O₂, improving photosynthetic efficiency (e.g., C₄ and CAM pathways)

400

Explain how fish gills maximize O₂ extraction from water.

Countercurrent exchange maintains a gradient favoring O₂ diffusion along the entire capillary.

400

Why is clonal deletion essential in the adaptive immune system?

It prevents autoimmunity by removing self-reactive B and T cells.

400

Explain how negative feedback maintains homeostasis using an endocrine example.

Insulin lowers high blood glucose, reducing its own stimulus (high blood sugars)

400

Explain why chronic stress can suppress the immune system.

Prolonged cortisol (HPA axis) reduces inflammation and immune cell activity.

500

Nitrogenase, the enzyme that fixes atmospheric nitrogen, is easily inactivated by oxygen. Explain why this is a problem for cyanobacteria that also perform photosynthesis, and describe one way they solve it.


Photosynthesis produces oxygen, which can inactivate nitrogenase by oxidizing its metal cofactors. Cyanobacteria solve this by separating the two processes 

This separation protects nitrogenase while allowing both processes to occur.

500

In hypoxic environments, predict how Hb’s dissociation curve might shift and explain the physiological benefit

Shifts right (lower affinity) to enhance O₂ unloading to tissues; adaptation improves survival at low O₂.

500

Compare RNA interference (RNAi) and CRISPR-Cas as antiviral systems and discuss how these ancient mechanisms have been repurposed in biotechnology.

Both detect and degrade foreign nucleic acids; RNAi silences viral RNA in eukaryotes, CRISPR cuts viral DNA in bacteria; now tools for gene editing and knockdown.

500

Auxin promotes stem elongation but can inhibit root growth at high concentrations. Explain how differences in auxin concentration lead to these opposite effects.

In shoots, moderate auxin levels stimulate cell wall loosening and elongation (the “acid growth” response). 

In roots, high auxin levels trigger stress hormones like ethylene, which slow cell expansion and growth. Thus, the same hormone has different effects depending on its local concentration and tissue sensitivity.

500

Compare the mechanisms of short-term and long-term stress responses and predict which would dominate in chronic psychological stress.

Short-term: SNS releases epinephrine, rapid fight-or-flight response

Long-term: glucocorticoids, sustained energy mobilization, but immune suppression → dominates under chronic stress (high cortisol levels for a prolonged period).