front 1 1) The smallest cell structure that would most likely be visible with
a standard (not super- resolution) research-grade light microscope is
a _____. C) ribosome | back 1 A |
front 2 2) The advantage of light microscopy over electron microscopy is that
_____. B) light microscopy provides for higher resolving power than electron microscopy C) light microscopy allows one to view dynamic processes in living
cells | back 2 C |
front 3 3) In the fractionation of homogenized cells using centrifugation,
the primary factor that determines whether a specific cellular
component ends up in the supernatant or the pellet is the
_____. | back 3 B |
front 4 5) What technique would be most appropriate to use to observe the
movements of condensed chromosomes during cell division? C) transmission electron microscopy | back 4 A |
front 5 7) All of the following are part of a prokaryotic cell EXCEPT _____. A) a cell wall D) an endoplasmic reticulum | back 5 D |
front 6 9) Which of the following is a major difference between prokaryotic cells and eukaryotic cells? A) Prokaryotes have cells while eukaryotes do not. D) Prokaryotes are generally larger than eukaryotes. | back 6 B |
front 7 11) Prokaryotes are classified as belonging to two different domains. What are the domains? A) Bacteria and Eukarya D) Bacteria and Protista | back 7 B |
front 8 12) Which structure is common to plant and animal cells? A) chloroplast D) centriole | back 8 C |
front 9 13) Which of the following is present in a prokaryotic cell? A) mitochondrion D) ER | back 9 B |
front 10 15) Which organelle or structure is absent in plant cells? A) mitochondria D) peroxisomes | back 10 C |
front 11 16) What is the function of the nuclear pore complex found in
eukaryotes? | back 11 A |
front 12 17) Which of the following macromolecules leaves the nucleus of a
eukaryotic cell through pores in the nuclear membrane? C) mRNA | back 12 C |
front 13 18) Which of the following statements correctly describes some aspect
of protein secretion from prokaryotic cells? C) Proteins secreted by prokaryotes are synthesized on ribosomes bound to the cytoplasmic surface of the plasma membrane. D) Prokaryotes cannot secrete proteins because they lack ribosomes. | back 13 C |
front 14 19) Large numbers of ribosomes are present in cells that specialize
in producing which of the following molecules? C) proteins | back 14 C |
front 15 21) A cell with a predominance of free ribosomes is most likely _____. A) primarily producing proteins for secretion D) enlarging its vacuole | back 15 B |
front 16 23) A cell with an extensive area of smooth endoplasmic reticulum is specialized to _____. A) play a role in storage D) import and export protein molecules | back 16 B |
front 17 24) Which structure is NOT part of the endomembrane system? A) nuclear envelope D) plasma membrane | back 17 B |
front 18 27) Which structure is the site of the synthesis of proteins that may be exported from the cell? A) rough ER D) free cytoplasmic ribosomes | back 18 A |
front 19 29) The liver is involved in detoxification of many poisons and
drugs. Which of the following structures is primarily involved in this
process and, therefore, abundant in liver cells? C) Golgi apparatus | back 19 B |
front 20 30) Which of the following produces and modifies polysaccharides that will be secreted? A) lysosome D) peroxisome | back 20 C |
front 21 31) What is the most likely pathway taken by a newly synthesized
protein that will be secreted by a cell? C) ER → Golgi → vesicles that fuse with plasma
membrane | back 21 C |
front 22 32) Asbestos is a material that was once used extensively in construction. One risk from working in a building that contains asbestos is the development of asbestosis caused by the inhalation of asbestos fibers. Cells will phagocytize asbestos, but are not able to degrade it. As a result, asbestos fibers accumulate in _____. A) mitochondria | back 22 D |
front 23 33) Which of the following is NOT true? Both chloroplasts and mitochondria _____. A) have their own DNA D) are capable of reproducing themselves | back 23 C |
front 24 34) Which organelle is the primary site of ATP synthesis in eukaryotic cells? A) lysosome D) peroxisome | back 24 B |
front 25 35) Thylakoids, DNA, and ribosomes are all components found in _____. A) chloroplasts D) nuclei | back 25 A |
front 26 36) In a plant cell, DNA may be found _____. | back 26 C |
front 27 37) In a liver cell detoxifying alcohol and some other poisons, the
enzymes of the peroxisome remove hydrogen from these molecules and
_____. C) transfer the hydrogen to the mitochondria | back 27 D |
front 28 38) The evolution of eukaryotic cells most likely involved
_____. | back 28 A |
front 29 39) Where are proteins produced other than on ribosomes free in the
cytosol or ribosomes attached to the ER? C) in mitochondria | back 29 C |
front 30 40) Suppose a cell has the following molecules and structures:
enzymes, DNA, ribosomes, plasma membrane, and mitochondria. It could
be a cell from _____. C) nearly any eukaryotic organism | back 30 C |
front 31 41) Cyanide binds with at least one molecule involved in producing
ATP. If a cell is exposed to cyanide, most of the cyanide will be
found within the _____. C) lysosomes | back 31 A |
front 32 42) Suppose a young boy is always tired and fatigued, suffering from
a metabolic disease. Which of the following organelles is most likely
involved in this disease? C) ribosomes | back 32 D |
front 33 43) Motor proteins provide for molecular motion in cells by
interacting with what types of cellular structures? C) components of the cytoskeleton | back 33 C |
front 34 45) Vinblastine, a drug that inhibits microtubule polymerization, is
used to treat some forms of cancer. Cancer cells given vinblastine
would be unable to _____. C) separate chromosomes during cell division D) maintain the shape of the nucleus | back 34 C |
front 35 46) Amoebae move by crawling over a surface (cell crawling), which
involves _____. C) reinforcing the pseudopod with intermediate filaments | back 35 A |
front 36 49) Spherocytosis is a human blood disorder associated with a
defective cytoskeletal protein in the red blood cells (RBCs). What do
you suspect is the consequence of such a defect? C) an insufficient supply of oxygen-transporting proteins in the RBCs D) adherence of RBCs to blood vessel walls, causing plaque formation | back 36 A |
front 37 50) Cytochalasin D is a drug that prevents actin polymerization. A
cell treated with cytochalasin D will still be able to _____. C) extend pseudopodia | back 37 D |
front 38 51) Cells require which of the following to form cilia or flagella? A) tubulin D) intermediate filaments | back 38 A |
front 39 52) Which of the following statements about the cytoskeleton is
true? | back 39 C |
front 40 53) The cell walls of bacteria, fungi, and plant cells and the
extracellular matrix of animal cells are all external to the plasma
membrane. Which of the following is a characteristic common to all of
these extracellular structures? B) They must provide a rigid structure that maintains an
appropriate ratio of cell surface area to volume. D) They are composed of a mixture of lipids and nucleotides. | back 40 C |
front 41 54) A mutation that disrupts the ability of an animal cell to add
polysaccharide modifications to proteins would most likely cause
defects in its _____. C) Golgi apparatus and extracellular matrix D) nuclear pores and secretory vesicles | back 41 C |
front 42 56) Plasmodesmata in plant cells are most similar in function to
which of the following structures in animal cells? C) extracellular matrix | back 42 B |
front 43 57) Ions can travel directly from the cytoplasm of one animal cell to
the cytoplasm of an adjacent cell through _____. C) desmosomes | back 43 D |
front 44 58) In plant cells, the middle lamella _____. | back 44 A |
front 45 59) Where would you expect to find tight junctions? C) between plant cells in a woody plant | back 45 A |
front 46 61) Gaucher disease is the most common of lipid storage diseases in humans. It is caused by a deficiency of an enzyme necessary for lipid metabolism. This leads to a collection of fatty material in organs of the body including the spleen, liver, kidneys, lungs, brain, and bone marrow. Using your knowledge of the structure of eukaryotic cells,
identify the statement below that best explains how internal
membranes and the organelles of cells would be involved in Gaucher
disease. B) The rough endoplasmic reticulum contains too many ribosomes
which results in an overproduction of the enzyme involved in
carbohydrate catalysis. D) The Golgi apparatus produces vesicles with faulty membranes that leak their contents into the cytoplasm of the cell. | back 46 C |
front 47 1) For a protein to be an integral membrane protein, it would have to be _____. A) hydrophilic D) exposed on only one surface of the membrane | back 47 C |
front 48 2) You have a planar bilayer with equal amounts of saturated and unsaturated phospholipids. After testing the permeability of this membrane to glucose, you increase the proportion of unsaturated phospholipids in the bilayer. What will happen to the membrane's permeability to glucose? A) Permeability to glucose will increase. | back 48 A |
front 49 3) According to the fluid mosaic model of cell membranes,
phospholipids _____. D) have hydrophilic tails in the interior of the membrane | back 49 A |
front 50 4) The membranes of winter wheat are able to remain fluid when it is
extremely cold by _____. A) increasing the percentage of unsaturated
phospholipids in the membrane D) cotransport of glucose and hydrogen | back 50 A |
front 51 5) Some regions of the plasma membrane, called lipid rafts, have a
higher concentration of cholesterol molecules. At higher temperatures,
these regions _____. C) detach from the plasma membrane and clog arteries | back 51 B |
front 52 6) Singer and Nicolson's fluid mosaic model of the membrane proposed
that membranes_____. A) are a phospholipid bilayer between two layers
of hydrophilic proteins D) consist of a mosaic of polysaccharides and proteins | back 52 C |
front 53 8) Which of these are NOT embedded in the hydrophobic portion of the
lipid bilayer at all? A) transmembrane proteins D) All of these are embedded in the hydrophobic portion of the lipid bilayer. | back 53 C |
front 54 9) Why are lipids and proteins free to move laterally in
membranes? | back 54 D |
front 55 15) Cell membranes are asymmetrical. Which of the following
statements is the most likely explanation for the membrane's
asymmetrical nature? B) Since cell membranes communicate signals from one organism
to another, the cell membranes must be asymmetrical. D) Proteins only function on the cytoplasmic side of the cell membrane, which results in the membrane's asymmetrical nature. | back 55 C |
front 56 16) In what way do the membranes of a eukaryotic cell vary? | back 56 B |
front 57 17) Which of the following is a reasonable explanation for why
unsaturated fatty acids help keep a membrane more fluid at lower
temperatures? B) Unsaturated fatty acids have a higher cholesterol content
and, therefore, more cholesterol in membranes. | back 57 A |
front 58 18) What kinds of molecules pass through a cell membrane most easily? A) large and hydrophobic D) ionic | back 58 B |
front 59 19) Which of the following most accurately describes selective
permeability? D) Only certain molecules can cross a cell membrane. | back 59 D |
front 60 20) Which of the following is a characteristic feature of a carrier protein in a plasma membrane? A) It exhibits a specificity for a particular type of
molecule. D) It has no hydrophobic regions. | back 60 A |
front 61 21) Which of the following would likely move through the lipid
bilayer of a plasma membrane most rapidly? B) an amino acid C) glucose D) K+ | back 61 A |
front 62 22) Which of the following allows water to move much faster across cell membranes? A) the sodium-potassium pump D) aquaporins | back 62 D |
front 63 24) Diffusion _____. | back 63 C |
front 64 25) Which of the following processes includes all others? A) osmosis D) transport of an ion down its electrochemical gradient | back 64 C |
front 65 26) When a cell is in equilibrium with its environment, which of the
following occurs for substances that can diffuse through the
cell? C) There is no movement of substances into and out of the cell. D) All movement of molecules is directed by active transport. | back 65 A |
front 66 27) Which of the following is true of osmosis? | back 66 C |
front 67 The solutions in the two arms of this U-tube are separated by a membrane that is permeable to water and glucose but not to sucrose. Side A is half-filled with a solution of 2 M sucrose and 1 M glucose. Side B is half-filled with 1 M sucrose and 2 M glucose. Initially, the liquid levels on both sides are equal. 28) Refer t o the figure. Initially, in terms of tonicity, the solution in side A with respect to the solution in side B is _____. A) hypotonic C) saturated | back 67 B |
front 68 The solutions in the two arms of this U-tube are separated by a membrane that is permeable to water and glucose but not to sucrose. Side A is half-filled with a solution of 2 M sucrose and 1 M glucose. Side B is half-filled with 1 M sucrose and 2 M glucose. Initially, the liquid levels on both sides are equal. 29) Refer to the figure. After the system reaches equilibrium, what changes are observed? A) The molarity of sucrose is higher than that of glucose on side
A. D) The water level is higher in side B than in side A. | back 68 B |
front 69 30) A patient was involved a serious accident and lost a large
quantity of blood. In an attempt to replenish body fluids, distilled
water—equal to the volume of blood lost—is added to the blood directly
via one of his veins. What will be the most probable result of this
transfusion? B) The patient's red blood cells will swell and possibly burst
because the blood has become hypotonic compared to the cells. D) The patient's red blood cells will burst because the blood has become hypertonic compared to the cells. | back 69 B |
front 70 The solutions in the arms of a U-tube are separated at the bottom of the tube by a selectively permeable membrane. The membrane is permeable to sodium chloride but not to glucose. Side A is filled with a solution of 0.4 M glucose and 0.5 M sodium chloride (NaCl), and side B is filled with a solution containing 0.8 M glucose and 0.4 M sodium chloride. Initially, the volume in both arms is the same.. 31) Refer to the figure. At the beginning of the experiment, A) side A is hypertonic to side B. D) side A is hypotonic to side B with respect to NaCl. | back 70 B |
front 71 32) Refer to the figure. If you examine side A after three days, you
should find _____. B) a decrease in the concentration of NaCl, an increase in water
level, and no change in the concentration of glucose | back 71 C |
front 72 36) Celery stalks that are immersed in fresh water for several hours become stiff. Similar stalks left in a 0.15 M salt solution become limp. From this we can deduce that the fresh water_____. A) and the salt solution are both hypertonic to the cells of the
celery stalks C) is hypertonic and the salt solution is hypotonic to the cells of the celery stalks D) is isotonic and the salt solution is hypertonic to the cells of the celery stalks | back 72 B |
front 73 37) What will happen to a red blood cell (RBC), which has an internal
ion concentration of about 0.9 percent, if it is placed into a beaker
of pure water? B) The cell would shrink because the water in the beaker is
hypertonic relative to the cytoplasm of the RBC. D) The cell will remain the same size because the solution outside the cell is isotonic. | back 73 C |
front 74 38) Which of the following statements correctly describes the normal
tonicity conditions for typical plant and animal cells? The animal
cell is in _____. C) a hypertonic solution, and the plant cell is in an isotonic solution D) an isotonic solution, and the plant cell is in a hypotonic solution | back 74 D |
front 75 39) In which of the following would there be the greatest need for osmoregulation? A) an animal connective tissue cell bathed in isotonic body
fluid D) a plant being grown hydroponically in a watery mixture of designated nutrients | back 75 B |
front 76 41) A sodium-potassium pump _____. | back 76 B |
front 77 43) Which of the following membrane activities requires energy from
ATP? B) movement of Na+ ions from a lower concentration in a mammalian
cell to a higher concentration in the extracellular fluid | back 77 B |
front 78 44) The voltage across a membrane is called the _____. A) chemical gradient D) electrochemical gradient | back 78 B |
front 79 45) Ions diffuse across membranes through specific ion channels down _____. A) their chemical gradients D) their electrochemical gradients | back 79 D |
front 80 1) Which of the following is true of metabolism in its entirety in
all organisms? A) Metabolism depends on a constant supply of energy
from food. D) Metabolism manages the increase of entropy in an organism. | back 80 C |
front 81 2) Which of the following is an example of potential rather than kinetic energy? A) water rushing over Niagara Falls D) a crawling beetle foraging for food | back 81 C |
front 82 3) Most cells cannot harness heat to perform work because _____. A) heat is not a form of energy D) heat must remain constant during work | back 82 B |
front 83 4) Which of the following involves a decrease in entropy? A) condensation reactions D) hydrolysis reactions | back 83 A |
front 84 5) Which term most precisely describes the cellular process of
breaking down large molecules into smaller ones? C) anabolism (anabolic pathways) | back 84 A |
front 85 6) Anabolic pathways _____. | back 85 B |
front 86 8) For living organisms, which of the following is an important
consequence of the first law of thermodynamics? C) The entropy of an organism decreases with time as the organism grows in complexity. D) Organisms grow by converting energy into organic matter. | back 86 B |
front 87 9) Living organisms increase in complexity as they grow, resulting in
a decrease in the entropy of an organism. How does this relate to the
second law of thermodynamics? B) Life obeys the second law of thermodynamics because the decrease
in entropy as the organism grows is exactly balanced by an increase in
the entropy of the universe. D) Living organisms are able to transform energy into entropy. | back 87 C |
front 88 10) Which of the following statements is a logical consequence of the
second law of thermodynamics? | back 88 C |
front 89 12) Which of the following types of reactions would decrease the entropy within a cell? A) anabolic reactions D) catabolic reactions | back 89 A |
front 90 15) A system at chemical equilibrium _____. A) consumes energy at a
steady rate D) can do no work | back 90 D |
front 91 16) Which of the following is true for all exergonic
reactions? D) A net input of energy from the surroundings is required for the reactions to proceed. | back 91 B |
front 92 19) Choose the pair of terms that correctly completes this sentence:
Catabolism is to anabolism as _____ is to _____. C) free energy; entropy | back 92 B |
front 93 21) Why is ATP an important molecule in metabolism? | back 93 B |
front 94 24) Catabolic pathways _____. C) are endergonic | back 94 B |
front 95 25) When chemical, transport, or mechanical work is done by an
organism, what happens to the heat generated? C) It is used to generate ADP from nucleotide precursors. D) It is lost to the environment. | back 95 D |
front 96 30) Which of the following is true of enzymes? B) Enzyme function is independent of physical and chemical
environmental factors such as pH and temperature. | back 96 C |
front 97 32) The lock-and-key analogy for enzymes applies to the specificity
of enzymes _____. A) as they form their tertiary and quaternary
structure D) interacting with ions | back 97 B |
front 98 33) You have discovered an enzyme that can catalyze two different
chemical reactions. Which of the following is most likely to be
correct? C) Two types of allosteric regulation occur: The binding of one
molecule activates the enzyme, while the binding of a different
molecule inhibits it. | back 98 D |
front 99 34) Reactants capable of interacting to form products in a chemical
reaction must first overcome a thermodynamic barrier known as the
reaction's _____. C) equilibrium point | back 99 B |
front 100 36) The active site of an enzyme is the region that _____. A) binds allosteric regulators of the enzyme D) is inhibited by the presence of a coenzyme or a cofactor | back 100 B |
front 101 37) According to the induced fit hypothesis of enzyme catalysis,
_____. C) the binding of the substrate changes the shape of the enzyme's active site D) the active site creates a microenvironment ideal for the reaction | back 101 C |
front 102 38) Increasing the substrate concentration in an enzymatic reaction
could overcome which of the following? C) competitive inhibition | back 102 C |
front 103 40) A noncompetitive inhibitor decreases the rate of an enzyme reaction by _____. A) binding at the active site of the enzyme D) acting as a coenzyme for the reaction | back 103 B |
front 104 Succinate dehydrogenase catalyzes the conversion of succinate to fumarate. The reaction is inhibited by malonic acid, which resembles succinate but cannot be acted upon by succinate dehydrogenase. Increasing the ratio of succinate to malonic acid reduces the inhibitory effect of malonic acid. 51) What is malonic acid's role with respect to succinate dehydrogenase? Malonic acid _____. A) is a competitive inhibitor D) is an allosteric regulator | back 104 A |
front 105 56) You have isolated a previously unstudied protein, identified its complete structure in detail, and determined that it catalyzes the breakdown of a large substrate. You notice it has two binding sites. One of these is large, apparently the bonding site for the large substrate; the other is small, possibly a binding site for a regulatory molecule. What do these findings tell you about the mechanism of this protein? A) It is probably a structural protein that is involved in cell-to-cell adhesion. B) It is probably an enzyme that works through allosteric
regulation. | back 105 B |
front 106 57) Allosteric enzyme regulation is usually associated with _____. A) feedback inhibition D) the need for cofactors | back 106 C |