front 1 Which of the following membrane lipids does not contain a fatty acid tail? (a)Phosphatidylcholine (b)A glycolipid (c)Phosphatidylserine (d)Cholesterol | back 1 (d)Cholesterol |
front 2 Formation of a lipid bilayer seems to be energetically unfavorable. However, it is actually favored because it allows A higher level of entropy than any other alternative. What makes bilayer formation energetically favorable? (a)Polar head groups form a hydrogen bonding network at the interface with water. (b)Water molecules form cage-like structures around hydrophobic molecules. (c)Hydrogen bonds form between neighboring polar head groups in the bilayer. (d)Fatty acid tails are highly saturated and flexible. | back 2 (b)Water molecules form cage-like structures around hydrophobic molecules. |
front 3 3.A bacterium is suddenly expelled from a warm human intestine into the cold world outside. Which of the following adjustments might the bacterium make to maintain the same level of membrane fluidity? (a)Produce lipids with hydrocarbon tails that are longer and have fewer double bonds. (b)Produce lipids with hydrocarbon tails that are shorter and have more double bonds. (c)Decrease the amount of cholesterol in the membrane. (d)Decrease amount of glycolipids in the membrane. | back 3 (b)Produce lipids with hydrocarbon tails that are shorter and have more double bonds. |
front 4 Where does most new membrane synthesis take place in a eucaryotic cell? (a)Golgi | back 4 (b) endoplasmic reticulum |
front 5 Membrane lipids have different types of movement. Which doesn’t occur spontaneously In Biological membranes? (a)switching between lipid layers | back 5 (a)switching between lipid layers |
front 6 There are two properties of phospholipids that affect how tightly they pack together: length of hydrocarbon chain and # of double bonds. The degree of packing, in turn, influences the relative mobility of molecules in membrane. Which would yield the most highly mobile phospholipid? (a)24 carbons with 1 double bond | back 6 (b)15 carbons with 2 double bonds |
front 7 7.Cholesterol serves several functions in mammalian cells. Which is not influenced by cholesterol? (a)membrane permeability | back 7 (d)membrane thickness |
front 8 New membrane phospholipids are synthesized by enzymes bound to the ______ side of the________membrane. (a)cytosolic, mitochondrial | back 8 (c)cytosolic, ER |
front 9 Membrane synthesis in the cell requires the regulation of growth for both halves of the bilayer and the selective retention of certain types of lipids on one side or the other. Which enzymes accomplishes both tasks? (a)flippases (b)phospholipases (c)convertases (d)glycosylases | back 9 (a)flippases |
front 10 Unlike soluble, cytosolic proteins, membrane proteins are more difficult to purify. Which of the following substances is most commonly used to help purify a membrane protein? (a)high salt solution (b)sucrose (c)detergent (d)ethanol | back 10 (c)detergent |
front 11 We know the detailed molecular structure and mechanism of action of the transmembrane protein bacteriorhodopsin. This protein uses sunlight as the source of energy to pump ______ out of the cell. (a)4 ATP (b)7 H+ (c)7 K+ (d)4 Na+ | back 11 (b)7 H+ |
front 12 Plasma membranes are extremely thin and fragile, requiring an extensive support network of fibrous proteins. This network is called the ______. (a)cortex | back 12 cortex |
front 13 Red blood cells have been very useful in the study of membranes and the protein components that provide Structural support. Which of the following proteins is the principal fibrous protein in the cortex of the red blood cell? (a)tubulin | back 13 spectrin |
front 14 Diversity in the oligosaccharide chains found in the carbohydrate coating of the cell surface can be achieved in? (a)varying the types of sugar monomers used (b)varying the types of linkages between sugars (c)varying the number of branches in the chain (d)all of the above | back 14 all of the above |
front 15 The endothelial cells found closest to the site of an infection express proteins called lectins. Each lectin binds to a particular ______ that is presented on the surface of a target cell (a)oligosaccharide (b)aminophospholipid (c)polysaccharide (d)sphingolipid | back 15 oligosaccharide |
front 16 Which of the following statements is true? (a)Phospholipids will spontaneously form liposomes in nonpolar solvents. (b)In eucaryotes, all membrane-enclosed organelles are surrounded by one lipid bilayer. (c)Membrane lipids diffuse within the plane of the membrane. (d)Membrane lipids frequently flip-flop between one monolayer and the other. | back 16 Membrane lipids diffuse within the plane of the membrane. |
front 17 Porin proteins form large, barrel-like channels in membrane. Which is not true about these channels? (a)They are made primarily of α helices. (b)They are made primarily
of β sheets. | back 17 (a)They are made primarily of α helices. |
front 18 Both glycoproteins and proteoglycans contribute to carbohydrate layer on cell’s surface. Which is not true? (a) can be secreted into the extracellular environment. | back 18 (c) They have long carbohydrate chains. |
front 19 Which of the following statements about the carbohydrate coating of the cell surface is false? (a) It is not usually found on the cytosolic side of the membrane. (b) It can play a role in cell–cell adhesion. (c)arrangement of the oligosaccharide side chains is highly ordered, much like the peptide bonds of a polypeptide chain. (d) Specific oligosaccharides can be involved in cell–cell recognition. | back 19 (c)arrangement of the oligosaccharide side chains is highly ordered, much like the peptide bonds of a polypeptide chain. |
front 20 Although cholesterol is hydrophobic, it has a hydrophilic head group like all other membrane lipids. | back 20 True |
front 21 Phosphatidylserine is the most abundant phospholipid found in cell membranes. | back 21 False |
front 22 Glycolipids lack the glycerol component found in phospholipids. | back 22 True |
front 23 The highly ordered structure of the lipid bilayer makes its generation & maintenance energetically favorable. | back 23 False |
front 24 Lipid-linked proteins are classified as peripheral membrane proteins because the polypeptide chain does not pass through the bilayer. | back 24 False |
front 25 A protein can be embedded on the cytosolic side of the membrane bilayer by employing a hydrophobic α helix. | back 25 False |
front 26 A protein that relies on protein–protein interactions to stabilize its membrane association is classified as a peripheral membrane protein because it can be dissociated without the use of detergents. | back 26 True |
front 27 Membrane proteins that pump ions in and out of the cell are classified as transporters. | back 27 False |
front 28 When a mouse cell is fused with a human cell, the movement of the respective membrane proteins is restricted to their original locations at the time of fusion. | back 28 False |
front 29 Epithelial cell membranes are asymmetric, and proteins from the apical side of the cell membrane cannot diffuse into the basal side of the membrane. | back 29 True |
front 30 The longest carbohydrates found on the surfaces of cells are linked to integral membrane proteins. | back 30 True |
front 31 The only role of the carbohydrate layer on the cell surface is to absorb water, which creates a slimy surface and helps the cell-cell recognition. | back 31 False |
front 32 The specialized functions of different membranes are largely determined by the _1_ they contain. Membrane lipids are _2_ molecules, composed of a hydrophilic portion and a hydrophobic portion. All cell membranes have the same _3__ structure, with the _4_ of the phospholipids facing into the interior of the membrane and the _5_ on the outside. The most common lipids in most cell membranes are the _6_. The head group of a glycolipid is composed of _7_. a.Amphipathic; b.hydrophobic; c.phosphatidylserine; d.cholesterol; e.lipid bilayer; f.phospholipids; g.fatty acid tails; h.lipid monolayer; i.proteins; j.glycolipids; k.lipids; l.sterols; m.hydrophilic head groups; n. phosphatidylcholine; o.sugars | back 32 1. proteins 2. amphipathic 3. lipid monolayer 4. fatty acid tails 5. hydrophilic head groups 6. phospholipids 7. sugars |
front 33 There are several ways that membrane proteins can associate with the cell membrane. Membrane proteins that extend through the lipid bilayer are _1_ proteins and have _2_ regions that are exposed to the interior of the bilayer. On the other hand, membrane-associated proteins do not span the bilayer and instead associate with the membrane through an α-helix that is _3_. Other proteins are _4_ attached to lipid molecules inserted in the membrane. _5_ membrane proteins are linked to the membrane through noncovalent interactions with other membrane-bound proteins. a.Amphipathic b.hydrophilic c.noncovalently d.Cortical e. hydrophobic f.peripheral g.Covalently h. integral i.transmembrane j.Detergent k.micelle l.unfolded | back 33 1. transmembrane 2. hydrophobic 3. amphipathic 4. covalently 5. peripheral |
front 34 Identify the 3 membrane components shown and label the chemical groups. A.glycerol B.sugar C.phospholipid D.glycolipid E.sterol F.unsaturated hydrocarbon G.saturated hydrocarbon H.sterol polar head group | back 34 |
front 35 Although the extracellular environment has a high sodium ion concentration and the intracellular environment has A high potassium ion concentration, both must be neutralized by negatively charged molecules. In the extracellular case, what is the principal anion? (a)HCO3 – (b)Cl– (c)PO4 3– (d)OH– | back 35 (b)Cl– |
front 36 Hungry yeast cell lands in a vat of grape juice and begins to feast on the sugars there, producing carbon dioxide and ethanol in the process: C6H12O6 + 2ADP + 2Pi + H+ 2CO2 + 2CH3CH2OH + 2ATP +2H2O. Unfortunately, the grape juice is contaminated with proteases that attack some of the transport proteins in the yeast cell mbr, and the yeast cell dies. Which of the following could account for the yeast cell’s demise? (a)toxic buildup of carbon dioxide inside the cell (b)toxic buildup of ethanol inside the cell (c)diffusion of ATP out of the cell (d)inability to import sugar into the cell | back 36 (d)inability to import sugar into the cell |
front 37 Ion channels are classified as membrane transport proteins. Channels discriminate by size and charge. In addition to Na+, which ions would you expect to freely diffuse through a Na+ channel? (a)Mg2+ (b)H+ (c)K+ (d)Cl– | back 37 (b)H+ H+ because it is positively charged and small enough to fit through the channel |
front 38 Transporters, in contrast to channels, work by ________________. (a)specific binding to solutes (c)filtering solutes by charge (d)filtering solutes by size | back 38 (a)specific binding to solutes |
front 39 Pumps are transporters that are able to harness energy provided by other components in the cells to drive the movement of solutes across membranes, against their concentration gradient. This type of transport is called _. (a)active transport (b)free diffusion (c)facilitated diffusion (d)passive transport | back 39 (a)active transport |
front 40 In cells H+ electrochemical gradients: which H+ transporters regulates pH in animal cells? (a)light-driven pump (b)H+ ATPase (c)H+ symporter (d)Na+-H+ exchanger | back 40 (d)Na+-H+ exchanger |
front 41 Ca2+ pumps in the plasma membrane and endoplasmic reticulum are important for _____________. (a)maintaining osmotic balance (b)preventing Ca2+ from altering activity of molecules in cytosol (c)providing enzymes in the endoplasmic reticulum with Ca2+ ions that are necessary for their catalytic activity (d)maintaining a negative membrane potential | back 41 (c)providing enzymes in the endoplasmic reticulum with Ca2+ ions that are necessary for their catalytic activity |
front 42 Which of the following best describes the behavior of a gated channel? (a)It stays open continuously when stimulated. (b)opens more frequently in response to a given stimulus. (c)opens more widely as stimulus becomes stronger (d)It remains closed if unstimulated. | back 42 (b)opens more frequently in response to a given stimulus. |
front 43 Voltage-gated channels contain charged protein domains, which are sensitive to changes in mbr potential. By responding to a threshold in the membrane potential, these voltage sensors trigger the opening of the channels. Which best describes the behavior of a population of channels exposed to such a threshold? (a)Some channels stay closed + some open completely. (b)All channels open completely. (c)All channels open partly, to the same degree. (d)All channels open partly, each to a different degree. | back 43 (a)Some channels stay closed + some open completely. |
front 44 K+ leak channels are found in the plasma membrane. These channels open and close in an unregulated, random fashion. What do they accomplish in a resting cell? (a)They set the K+ concentration gradient to zero (b)They set the membrane potential to zero. (c)They disrupt the resting membrane potential (d)They keep the electrochemical gradient for K+ at 0. | back 44 d)They keep the electrochemical gradient for K+ at 0. |
front 45 If Na+ channels are opened in a cell at rest, how will the resting membrane potential be affected? (a)The membrane potential is not affected by Na+.
| back 45 (c)It becomes more positive. |
front 46 Which of the following is required for the secretion of neurotransmitters in response to an action potential? (a)neurotransmitter receptors (b)Na+-K+ pumps (c)voltage-gated K+ channels (d)voltage-gated Ca2+ channels | back 46 (d)voltage-gated Ca2+ channels |
front 47 The stimulation of a motor neuron ultimately results in the release of a neurotransmitter at the synapse between The neuron and a muscle cell. What type of neurotransmitter is used at these neuromuscular junctions? (a)acetylcholine (b)glutamate (c)GABA (d)glycine | back 47 (a)acetylcholine |
front 48 CO2 and O2 are water-soluble molecules that diffuse freely across cell membranes. | back 48 False. Lipid-linked proteins are classified as integral membrane proteins because although they are not transmembrane proteins, they are covalently bound to membrane lipids and cannot be dissociated without disrupting the membrane’s integrity. |
front 49 The differences in permeability between artificial lipid bilayers and cell membranes arise from variations in phospholipid content. | back 49 False. An embedded protein employs an amphipathic helix. The hydrophobic side interacts with the fatty acid tails of the membrane lipids and the hydrophilic portion interacts with the aqueous components of the cytosol. |
front 50 Transporters are similar to channels, except that they are larger, allowing folded proteins as well as smaller organic molecules to pass through them. | back 50 True |
front 51 Cells expend energy in the form of ATP hydrolysis so as to maintain ion concentrations that differ from those found outside the cell. | back 51 False. Membrane proteins that pump ions in either direction across the membrane are in the functional class of transporters. |
front 52 Facilitated diffusion or PASSIVE TRANSPORT can be described as the favorable movement of one solute down its concentration gradient being coupled with the unfavorable movement of a second solute up its concentration gradient. | back 52 False. This describes coupled transport, which is one type of active transport. Facilitated diffusion can also be called passive transport, in which a solute always moves down its concentration gradient. |
front 53 Transporters undergo transitions between different conformations, depending on whether the substrate-binding pocket is empty or occupied. | back 53 True |
front 54 The electrochemical gradient for K+ across the plasma membrane is small. Therefore, any movement of K+ from the inside to the outside of the cell is driven solely by its concentration gradient. | back 54 True |
front 55 The net negative charge on the cytosolic side of the membrane enhances the rate of glucose import into the cell by a uniporter. | back 55 False. Glucose is an uncharged molecule, and its import is not directly affected by the voltage difference across the membrane if glucose is being transported alone. If the example given were the Na/glucose symporter, we would have to consider the charge difference across the membrane. |
front 56 Neurotransmitters are small molecules released into the synaptic cleft after the fusion of synaptic vesicles with the presynaptic membrane. | back 56 True |
front 57 Action potentials are usually mediated by voltage-gated Ca2+ channels. | back 57 False. Action potentials are usually mediated by voltage-gated Na+ channels. |
front 58 Voltage-gated Na+ channels become automatically inactivated shortly after opening, which ensures that the action potential cannot move backward along the axon. | back 58 True |
front 59 Voltage-gated K+ channels also open immediately in response to local depolarization, reducing the magnitude of the action potential. | back 59 False. Voltage-gated K+ channels respond more slowly than the voltage gated Na+ channels. Because they do not open until the action potential reaches its peak, they do not affect its magnitude. Instead, they help to restore the local membrane potential quickly while the voltage-gated Na+ channels are in the inactivated conformation. |
front 60 A molecule moves down its concentration gradient by _1_ transport, but requires _2_transport to move up its concentration gradient. Transporter proteins and ion channels function in membrane transport by providing a _3_pathway through the membrane for specific polar solutes or inorganic ions. _4_ are highly selective in the solutes they transport, binding the solute at a specific site and changing its conformation so as to transport the solute across the membrane. On the other hand, _5_ discriminate between solutes mainly on the basis of size and electrical charge. a.Active b. transporter proteins c.ion channels d.amino acid e.hydrophilic f.Noncovalent g. amphipathic h.hydrophobic i.passive | back 60
|
front 61 For an uncharged molecule, the direction of passive transport across a membrane is determined solely by its _1_ gradient. On the other hand, for a charged molecule, the _2_ must also be considered. The net driving force for a charged molecule across a membrane therefore has two components and is referred to as the _3_ gradient. Active transport allows the movement of solutes against this gradient. The transporter proteins called _4_ transporters use the movement of one solute down its gradient to provide the energy to drive the uphill transport of a second gradient. When this transporter moves both ions in the same direction across the membrane, it is considered a(n) _5_; if the ions move in opposite directions, the transporter is considered a(n) _6_. a.Antiport b. coupled c.membrane potential d.ATP hydrolysis e. electrochemical f.symport g.Concentration h. light-driven i.uniport | back 61
|
front 62 The action potential is a wave of _1_ that spreads rapidly along the neuronal plasma membrane. This wave is triggered by a local change in the membrane potential to a value that is _2_ negative than the resting membrane potential. The action potential is propagated by the opening of _3_-gated channels. During an action potential, the membrane potential changes from _4_ to _5_. The action potential travels along the neuron’s _6_ to the nerve terminals. Neurons chiefly receive signals at their highly branched _7_. a.Anions b.depolarization c.negative d.Axon e.hyperpolarization f.Neutral g.synaptic vesicle h. less i-positive j. cytoskeleton k.ligand l.pressure m.dendrites n.more o.voltage | back 62 1. depolarization 2. less 3. voltage 4. negative 5. pressure 6. axon 7. dendrites |
front 63 Neurons communicate with each other through specialized sites called _1_. Many neurotransmitter receptors are ligand-gated ion channels that open transiently in the _2__ cell membrane in response to neurotransmitters released by the _3_ cell. Ligand-gated ion channels in nerve cell membranes convert _4_ signals into _5_ ones. Neurotransmitter release is stimulated by the opening of voltage-gated _6_ in the nerve terminal membrane. a.Ach receptor b.GABA receptor c.presynaptic d.Ca2+ channels e.K+ channel f.synapses g.chemical h. Na+ channels i.electrical j.postsynaptic | back 63 1. synapses 2. postsynaptic 3. presynaptic |
front 64 You have prepared lipid vesicles (spherical lipid bilayers) that
contain Na+-K+ pumps as the sole membrane
protein. All of the Na+-K+ pumps are oriented in
such a way that the portion of the molecule that normally faces the
cytosol is on the inside of the vesicle and the portion of the
molecule that normally faces the extracellular space is on the outside
of the vesicle. Assume that each pump transports one Na+
ion in one direction and one K+ ion in the other direction
during each pumping cycle (see figure for how the Na+
K+ pump normally functions in the plasma membrane). | back 64 |
front 65 A. The solutions inside and outside the vesicles contain both Na+ and K+ ions but no ATP. | back 65 No ATP>> no ions pumped. |
front 66 B. The solution outside the vesicles contains both Na+ & K+ ions; the solution inside contains Na+ and K+ ions and ATP. | back 66 pumps + ATP>> transport Na+ out & K+ into |
front 67 C. The solution outside contains Na+; the solution inside contains Na+ and ATP. | back 67 pump stuck at 3 |
front 68 You are testing the rate of glucose transport into vesicles using the Na+ glucose pump. A.In experiment 1, you employ liposomes that have the pump in the same orientation as that found in the plasma membrane in epithelial cells. These liposomes contain glucose but no Na+ ions. You then transfer the liposomes to a series of tubes with solutions containing the same glucose concentration as that inside the vesicle and 0, 1, 2, 3, or 10 mM Na+. You measure the initial rates of glucose transport and plot your results. Why do the initial rates of glucose transport into the liposome reach a plateau as the concentration of Na+ increases? | back 68 transporters require recognition+binding substrate>> reach max capacity (saturation) 10 mM |
front 69 In experiment 2, there is one new variable: you have included leaky Na+ channels in the liposomal membrane. Explain the reason for obtaining such different results in experiment 2. | back 69 leaky Na+ channels>> equilibration Na+ >> destroying gradient required for glucose transport into liposome |
front 70 Match the numbered lines with the following structures: A.nerve terminal B.cell body C.axon D.dendrite | back 70 1. Cell Body 2. Dendrite 3. Axon 4. Nerve Terminal |