1) Substrate-level phosphorylation occurs _____.
A) in glycolysis
B) in the citric acid cycle
C) in both
glycolysis and the citric acid cycle
D) during oxidative phosphorylation
Answer: C
2) The molecule that functions as the reducing agent (electron donor)
in a redox or oxidation- reduction reaction _____.
A) gains
electrons and gains potential energy
B) loses electrons and
loses potential energy
C) gains electrons and loses potential energy
D) loses
electrons and gains potential energy
Answer: B
3) When electrons move closer to a more electronegative atom, what
happens? The more electronegative atom is _____.
A) reduced, and
energy is released
B) reduced, and energy is consumed
C) oxidized, and energy is consumed
D) oxidized, and energy
is released
Answer: A
4) Which of the listed statements describes the results of the following reaction? C6H12O6 + 6 O2 → 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + Energy
A) C6H12O6 is oxidized and O2 is reduced.
B) O2 is oxidized and H2O is reduced.
C) CO2 is reduced and
O2 is oxidized.
D) O2 is reduced and CO2 is oxidized.
Answer: A
5) When a glucose molecule loses a hydrogen atom as the result of an
oxidation-reduction reaction, the molecule becomes _____.
A)
hydrolyzed
B) oxidized
C) reduced
D) an oxidizing agent
Answer: B
6) When a molecule of NAD+ (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) gains
a hydrogen atom (not a proton), the molecule becomes _____.
A)
dehydrogenated
B) oxidized
C) reduced
D) redoxed
Answer: C
7) Which of the following statements about NAD+ is true?
A)
NAD+ is reduced to NADH during glycolysis, pyruvate oxidation, and the
citric acid cycle. B) NAD+ has more chemical energy than NADH.
C) NAD+ can donate electrons for use in oxidative phosphorylation.
D) In the absence of NAD+, glycolysis can still function.
Answer: A
8) The oxygen consumed during cellular respiration is involved
directly in which process or event?
A) glycolysis
B)
accepting electrons at the end of the electron transport chain
C) the citric acid cycle
D) the oxidation of pyruvate to
acetyl CoA
Answer: B
9) Carbohydrates and fats are considered high-energy foods because they _____.
A) have a lot of oxygen atoms.
B) have no nitrogen in their
makeup.
C) have a lot of electrons associated with hydrogen.
D) are easily reduced.
Answer: C
10) A cell has enough available ATP to meet its needs for about 30
seconds. What is likely to happen when an athlete exhausts his or her
ATP supply?
A) He or she has to sit down and rest.
B)
Catabolic processes are activated that generate more ATP.
C) ATP is transported into the cell from the circulatory
system.
D) Other cells take over, and the muscle cells that have
used up their ATP cease to function.
Answer: B
11) Substrate-level phosphorylation accounts for approximately what
percentage of the ATP formed by the reactions of glycolysis?
A)
0%
B) 2%
C) 38%
D) 100%
Answer: D
12) The free energy for the oxidation of glucose to CO2 and water is -686 kcal/mol and the free
energy for the reduction of NAD+ to NADH is +53 kcal/mol. Why are only two molecules of NADH formed during glycolysis when it appears that as many as a dozen could be formed?
A) Most of the free energy available from the oxidation of glucose is used in the production of ATP in glycolysis.
B) Glycolysis is a very inefficient reaction, with much of the energy of glucose released as heat.
C) Most of the free energy available from the oxidation of glucose
remains in pyruvate, one of the products of glycolysis.
D) There
is no CO2 or water produced as products of glycolysis.
Answer: C
13) Starting with one molecule of glucose, the energy-containing products of glycolysis are _____.
A) 2 NAD+, 2 pyruvate, and 2 ATP
B) 2 NADH, 2 pyruvate, and 2 ATP
C) 2 FADH2, 2 pyruvate, and 4 ATP
D) 6 CO2, 2 pyruvate, and 2 ATP
Answer: B
14) In glycolysis, for each molecule of glucose oxidized to pyruvate _____.
A) two molecules of ATP are used and two molecules of ATP are produced.
B) two molecules of ATP are used and four molecules of ATP are produced.
C) four molecules of ATP are used and two molecules of ATP are produced.
D) two molecules of ATP are used and six molecules of ATP are produced.
Answer: B
15) Which kind of metabolic poison would most directly interfere with glycolysis?
A) an agent that reacts with oxygen and depletes its concentration
in the cell
B) an agent that binds to pyruvate and inactivates
it
C) an agent that closely mimics the structure of glucose but
is not metabolized
D) an agent that reacts with NADH and oxidizes it to NAD+
Answer: C
16) Most of the CO2 from the catabolism of glucose is released during _____.
A) glycolysis
B) electron transport
C)
chemiosmosis
D) the citric acid cycle
Answer: D
17) Following glycolysis and the citric acid cycle, but before the electron transport chain and oxidative phosphorylation, the carbon skeleton of glucose has been broken down to CO2 with some net gain of ATP. Most of the energy from the original glucose molecule at that point in the process, however, is in the form of _____.
A) acetyl-CoA
B) glucose
C) pyruvate
D) NADH
Answer: D
18) Which electron carrier(s) function in the citric acid cycle?
A) NAD+ only
B) NADH and FADH2
C) the electron transport chain
D) ADP and ATP
Answer: B
19) If you were to add one of the eight citric acid cycle
intermediates to the culture medium of yeast growing in the
laboratory, what do you think would happen to the rates of ATP and
carbon dioxide production?
A) There would be no change in ATP
production, but we would observe an increased rate of carbon dioxide production.
B) The rates of ATP production and carbon dioxide production would
both increase.
C) The rate of ATP production would decrease, but
the rate of carbon dioxide production would increase.
D) Rates
of ATP and carbon dioxide production would probably both decrease.
Answer: B
20) Carbon dioxide (CO2) is released during which of the following stages of cellular respiration?
A) glycolysis and the oxidation of pyruvate to acetyl CoA
B)
oxidation of pyruvate to acetyl CoA and the citric acid cycle
C) oxidative phosphorylation and fermentation
D) fermentation
and glycolysis
Answer: B
21) If glucose is the sole energy source, what fraction of the carbon
dioxide exhaled by animals is generated by the reactions of the citric
acid cycle?
A) 1/6
B) 1/3
C) 2/3
D) all of it
Answer: C
In the presence of oxygen, the three-carbon compound pyruvate can be catabolized in the citric acid cycle. First, however, the pyruvate (1) loses a carbon, which is given off as a molecule of CO2, (2) is oxidized to form a two-carbon compound called acetate, and (3) is bonded to coenzyme A.
25) The three listed steps result in the formation of _____.
A) acetyl CoA, O2, and ATP
B) acetyl CoA, FADH2, and CO2
C) acetyl CoA, NADH, and CO2
D) acetyl CoA, NAD+, ATP, and CO2
Answer: C
In the presence of oxygen, the three-carbon compound pyruvate can be catabolized in the citric acid cycle. First, however, the pyruvate (1) loses a carbon, which is given off as a molecule of CO2, (2) is oxidized to form a two-carbon compound called acetate, and (3) is bonded to coenzyme A.
26) Which one of the following is formed by the removal of a carbon (as CO2) from a molecule of pyruvate?
A) glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate
B) oxaloacetate
C) acetyl
CoA
D) citrate
Answer: C
27) Which of the following events takes place in the electron
transport chain?
A) the breakdown of glucose into two pyruvate
molecules
B) the breakdown of an acetyl group to carbon
dioxide
C) the extraction of energy from high-energy electrons
remaining from glycolysis and the citric acid cycle
D) substrate-level phosphorylation
Answer: C
28) The electron transport chain _____.
A) is a series of redox reactions
B) is a series of
substitution reactions
C) is driven by ATP consumption
D) takes place in the cytoplasm of prokaryotic cells
Answer: A
29) The chemiosmotic hypothesis is an important concept in our
understanding of cellular metabolism in general because it explains
_____.
A) how ATP is synthesized by a proton motive force
B) how electron transport can fuel substrate-level phosphorylation
C) the sequence of the electron transport chain molecules
D)
the reduction of oxygen to water in the final steps of oxidative metabolism
Answer: A
30) During aerobic respiration, electrons travel downhill in which sequence?
A) glucose → NADH → electron transport chain → oxygen
B)
glucose → pyruvate → ATP → oxygen
C) glucose → ATP → electron
transport chain → NADH
D) food → glycolysis → citric acid cycle → NADH → ATP
Answer: A
31) Where are the proteins of the electron transport chain located?
A) mitochondrial outer membrane
B) mitochondrial inner
membrane
C) mitochondrial intermembrane space
D) mitochondrial matrix
Answer: B
32) During aerobic respiration, which of the following directly
donates electrons to the electron transport chain at the lowest energy
level?
A) NADH
B) ATP
C) ADP + Pi
D) FADH2
Answer: D
33) The primary role of oxygen in cellular respiration is to
_____.
A) yield energy in the form of ATP as it is passed down
the respiratory chain
B) act as an acceptor for electrons and hydrogen, forming
water
C) combine with carbon, forming CO2
D) combine with lactate, forming pyruvate
Answer: B
34) During aerobic respiration, H2O is formed. Where does the oxygen
atom for the formation of the water come from?
A) carbon dioxide (CO2)
B) glucose (C6H12O6)
C) molecular oxygen (O2)
D) pyruvate (C3H3O3-)
Answer: C
35) In chemiosmosis, what is the most direct source of energy that is used to convert ADP + Pi to ATP?
A) energy released as electrons flow through the electron transport
system
B) energy released from substrate-level
phosphorylation
C) energy released from movement of protons
through ATP synthase, down their electrochemical gradient
D) No
external source of energy is required because the reaction is exergonic.
Answer: C
36) Energy released by the electron transport chain is used to pump
H+ into which location in eukaryotic cells?
A) mitochondrial
outer membrane
B) mitochondrial inner membrane
C) mitochondrial intermembrane space
D) mitochondrial matrix
Answer: C
37) When hydrogen ions are pumped from the mitochondrial matrix
across the inner membrane and into the intermembrane space, the result
is the _____.
A) formation of ATP
B) reduction of NAD+
C) creation of a proton-motive
force
D) lowering of pH in the mitochondrial matrix
Answer: C
38) Approximately how many molecules of ATP are produced from the complete oxidation of one molecule of glucose (C6H12O6) in aerobic cellular respiration?
A) 2
B) 4
C) 18-24
D) 30-32
Answer: D
39) The synthesis of ATP by oxidative phosphorylation, using the energy released by movement of protons across the membrane down their electrochemical gradient, is an example of _____.
A) active transport
B) an endergonic reaction coupled to an
exergonic reaction
C) a reaction with a positive ΔG
D) allosteric regulation
Answer: B
40) If a cell is able to synthesize 30 ATP molecules for each
molecule of glucose completely oxidized to carbon dioxide and water,
approximately how many ATP molecules can the cell synthesize for each
molecule of pyruvate oxidized to carbon dioxide and water?
A) 0
B) 12
C) 14
D) 26
Answer: C
41) In liver cells, the inner mitochondrial membranes are about five
times the area of the outer mitochondrial membranes. What purpose must
this serve?
A) It allows for an increased rate of
glycolysis.
B) It allows for an increased rate of the citric
acid cycle.
C) It increases the surface for oxidative phosphorylation.
D)
It increases the surface for substrate-level phosphorylation.
Answer: C
42) You have a friend who lost 7 kg (about 15 pounds) of fat on a
regimen of strict diet and exercise. How did the fat leave his
body?
A) It was released as CO2 and H2O.
B) It was
converted to heat and then released.
C) It was converted to ATP, which weighs much less than fat. D) It was converted to urine and eliminated from the body.
Answer: A
Exposing inner mitochondrial membranes to ultrasonic vibrations will disrupt the membranes. However, the fragments will reseal "inside out." The little vesicles that result can still transfer electrons from NADH to oxygen and synthesize ATP.
43) After the disruption, when electron transfer and ATP synthesis
still occur, what must be present?
A) all of the electron
transport proteins and ATP synthase
B) all of the electron
transport system and the ability to add CoA to acetyl groups
C) the ATP synthase system
D) the electron transport system
Answer: A
Exposing inner mitochondrial membranes to ultrasonic vibrations will disrupt the membranes. However, the fragments will reseal "inside out." The little vesicles that result can still transfer electrons from NADH to oxygen and synthesize ATP.
44) These inside-out membrane vesicles will _____.
A) become
acidic inside the vesicles when NADH is added
B) become alkaline
inside the vesicles when NADH is added
C) make ATP from ADP and
Pi if transferred to a pH 4 buffered solution after incubation in a
pH 7 buffered solution
D) hydrolyze ATP to pump protons out
of the interior of the vesicle to the exterior
Answer: A
45) Chemiosmotic ATP synthesis (oxidative phosphorylation) occurs in _____.
A) all cells, but only in the presence of oxygen
B) only
eukaryotic cells, in the presence of oxygen
C) only in
mitochondria, using either oxygen or other electron acceptors
D) all respiring cells, both prokaryotic and eukaryotic, using either oxygen or other electron acceptors
Answer: D
46) Which of the following normally occurs regardless of whether or not oxygen (O2) is present?
A) glycolysis
B) fermentation
C) citric acid
cycle
D) oxidative phosphorylation (chemiosmosis)
Answer: A
47) Which of the following occurs in the cytosol of a eukaryotic cell?
A) glycolysis and fermentation
B) fermentation and
chemiosmosis
C) oxidation of pyruvate to acetyl CoA
D) citric acid cycle
Answer: A
48) In the absence of oxygen, yeast cells can obtain energy by
fermentation, resulting in the production of _____.
A) ATP, CO2,
and ethanol (ethyl alcohol)
B) ATP, CO2, and lactate
C) ATP, NADH, and pyruvate
D) ATP, pyruvate, and acetyl CoA
Answer: A
49) One function of both alcohol fermentation and lactic acid fermentation is to _____.
A) reduce NAD+ to NADH
B) reduce FAD+ to FADH2
C) oxidize NADH to NAD+
D) reduce FADH2 to FAD+
Answer: C
50) An organism is discovered that thrives in both the presence and
absence of oxygen in the air. Curiously, the consumption of sugar
increases as oxygen is removed from the organism's environment, even
though the organism does not gain much weight. This organism
_____.
A) is a normal eukaryotic organism
B) is photosynthetic
C) is an anaerobic organism
D) is
a facultative anaerobe
Answer: D
51) Why is glycolysis considered to be one of the first metabolic pathways to have evolved?
A) It produces much less ATP than does oxidative
phosphorylation.
B) It does not involve organelles or
specialized structures, does not require oxygen, and is present in
most organisms.
C) It is found in prokaryotic cells but not in eukaryotic
cells.
D) It requires the presence of membrane-enclosed cell
organelles found only in eukaryotic cells.
Answer: B
52) Yeast cells that have defective mitochondria incapable of
respiration will be able to grow by catabolizing which of the
following carbon sources for energy?
A) glucose
B) proteins
C) fatty acids
D) Such yeast cells will not be capable of
catabolizing any food molecules, and therefore, will die.
Answer: A
53) What is the oxidizing agent in the following reaction?
Pyruvate + NADH + H+ → Lactate + NAD+
A) NADH
B) NAD+
C) lactate
D) pyruvate
Answer: D
54) High levels of citric acid inhibit the enzyme
phosphofructokinase, a key enzyme in glycolysis. Citric acid binds to
the enzyme at a different location from the active site. This is an
example of _____.
A) competitive inhibition
B) allosteric
regulation
C) the specificity of enzymes for their
substrates
D) positive feedback regulation
Answer: B
55) Glycolysis is active when cellular energy levels are _____; the
regulatory enzyme, phosphofructokinase, is _____ by ATP.
A) low;
activated
B) low; inhibited
C) high; activated
D) high; inhibited
Answer: B
56) Canine phosphofructokinase (PFK) deficiency afflicts Springer
spaniels, affecting an estimated 10% of the breed. Given its critical
role in glycolysis, one implication of the genetic defect resulting in
PFK deficiency in dogs is _____.
A) early embryonic
mortality
B) elevated blood-glucose levels in the dog's
blood
C) an intolerance for exercise
D) a reduced life span
Answer: C
57) A young dog has never had much energy. He is brought to a veterinarian for help and she decides to conduct several diagnostic tests. She discovers that the dog's mitochondria can use only fatty acids and amino acids for respiration, and his cells produce more lactate than normal. Of the following, which is the best explanation of the dog's condition?
A) His mitochondria lack the transport protein that moves pyruvate
across the outer mitochondrial membrane.
B) His cells cannot
move NADH from glycolysis into the mitochondria.
C) His cells
lack the enzyme in glycolysis that forms pyruvate.
D) His cells have a defective electron transport chain, so glucose goes to lactate instead of to acetyl CoA.
Answer: A
58) Even though plants cells photosynthesize, they still use their
mitochondria for oxidation of pyruvate. This will occur in
_____.
A) photosynthetic cells in the light, while
photosynthesis occurs concurrently
B) cells that are storing
glucose only
C) all cells all the time
D) photosynthesizing cells in the
light and in other tissues in the dark
Answer: C
59) In respiration, beta oxidation involves the _____.
A) oxidation of glucose
B) oxidation of pyruvate
C)
regulation of glycolysis
D) breakdown of fatty acids
Answer: D
60) Fatty acids usually have an even number of carbons in their
structures. They are catabolized by a process called beta-oxidation.
The end products of the metabolic pathway are acetyl groups of acetyl
CoA molecules. These acetyl groups _____.
A) directly enter the
electron transport chain
B) directly enter the energy-yielding stages of glycolysis
C) are directly decarboxylated by pyruvate dehydrogenase
D) directly enter the citric acid cycle
Answer: D
61) New biosensors, applied like a temporary tattoo to the skin, can alert serious athletes that they are about to "hit the wall" and find it difficult to continue exercising. These biosensors monitor lactate, a form of lactic acid, released in sweat during strenuous exercise.
Which of the statements below is the best explanation of why
athletes would need to monitor lactate levels?
A) During aerobic
respiration, muscle cells cannot produce enough lactate to fuel muscle
cell contractions and muscles begin to cramp, thus athletic
performance suffers.
B) During anaerobic respiration, lactate levels increase when
muscles cells need more energy, however muscles cells eventually
fatigue, thus athletes should modify their activities to increase
aerobic respiration.
C) During aerobic respiration, muscles
cells produce too much lactate which causes a rise in the pH of the
muscle cells, thus athletes must consume increased amounts of sports
drinks, high in electrolytes, to buffer the pH.
D) During anaerobic respiration, muscle cells receive too little oxygen and begin to convert lactate to pyruvate (pyruvic acid), thus athletes experience cramping and fatigue.
Answer: B