front 1 Which substance is a product of glycolysis, a precursor of
gluconeogenesis and a precursor of the citric acid cycle? | back 1 B |
front 2 How many ATP molecules are consumed in the hexose stage of glycolysis
for every one molecule of glucose? | back 2 C |
front 3 The net energy gain in glycolysis is due to the production of | back 3 C |
front 4 During glycolysis, isomerization occurs during which of the following
reactions? | back 4 C |
front 5 Transfer of a high-energy phosphoryl group to ADP, resulting in ATP
occurs when | back 5 D |
front 6 An intramolecular phosphoryl-group transfer occurs when | back 6 D |
front 7 How would the liver normally respond under condition of high glucose?
| back 7 E |
front 8 Glucose 6-phosphate allosterically inhibits | back 8 E |
front 9 Isozymes are enzymes | back 9 A |
front 10 Phosphofructokinase I deficiency results in | back 10 D |
front 11 Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase causes | back 11 C |
front 12 The glucose 6-phospate isomerase reaction is a near-equilibrium
reaction. Therefore, at any time in a cell there is | back 12 B |
front 13 A cell that has been fed glucose containing carbon — radioactive with
carbon 14 in carbon #1 will have ________ percent of the radioactivity
in each mole of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate. | back 13 C |
front 14 Although the Gibbs free energy change for the reaction of triose
phosphate isomerase is positive (+6.7 kj/mole), the reaction product
(1, 3-bisphosphoglycerate) is reduced to zero because | back 14 B |
front 15 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate is | back 15 C |
front 16 Which of the following enzymatic reactions are control points for
glycolysis? | back 16 D |
front 17 Arsenate | back 17 B |
front 18 In the presence of arsenate poisoning | back 18 E |
front 19 Arsenite | back 19 C |
front 20 Substrate level phosphorylation | back 20 C |
front 21 Mutases are described as | back 21 B |
front 22 Which amino acid's residue plays a role in the phosphoglycerate
mutase reaction in glycolysis for muscle and yeast? | back 22 D |
front 23 Which of the following mutases catalyze the formation of a 2,3-BPG
intermediate? | back 23 D |
front 24 Which of the following elements is required for the enzymatic
reaction that produces phosphoenolpyruvate? | back 24 C |
front 25 Which of the following is not regulated in glycolysis? | back 25 B |
front 26 Transfer of the phosphoryl group from PEP to ADP is an example of
| back 26 D |
front 27 Which of the following is not a metabolically irreversible enzymatic
reaction of glycolysis? | back 27 D |
front 28 Enzymes that catalyze the same reaction are called ________. | back 28 A |
front 29 Cells that form ATP mainly by glycolysis are | back 29 E |
front 30 The conversion of pyruvate to ethanol also causes the ________.
| back 30 A |
front 31 Yeast will normally convert pyruvate to ethanol. Why is this better
for the yeast than a conversion to lactate? | back 31 C |
front 32 Compared to pyruvate, the carbon atoms in lactate ________. | back 32 A |
front 33 The enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of pyruvate to lactate is
________. | back 33 D |
front 34 Which is among the possible fates of pyruvate after glycolysis?
| back 34 D |
front 35 Pyruvate can be converted to the amino acid ________ in all
species. | back 35 C |
front 36 Fermentation is a process where electrons from glycolysis — in the
form of NADH — are passed to | back 36 C |
front 37 What happens to pyruvate if it is destined for the citric acid cycle?
| back 37 A |
front 38 Under what situation might lactic acidosis occur? | back 38 C |
front 39 Hamsters love to run on exercise wheels. Prolonged running at a high
rate of speed requires ATP. Could a hamster with a defective gene for
the enzyme lactate dehydrogenase meet the extra ATP demand for
prolonged, fast wheel-running by maintaining a high rate of glycolysis
when muscles are operating under anaerobic conditions? Why or why
not? | back 39 A |
front 40 Which substance causes muscles to ache during strenuous exercise?
| back 40 D |
front 41 Seven of the ten reactions in the glycolytic pathway have free energy
values close to zero. What does this tell us about those reactions?
| back 41 D |
front 42 The overall △G for glycolysis is -72 kJ/mol in erythrocytes. Which
statement below is true? | back 42 C |
front 43 Some reaction steps in the glycolytic pathway have positive standard
free energy changes. Which statements apply? | back 43 A |
front 44 Which must be satisfied to obtain net flux toward product in a
metabolic pathway? | back 44 D |
front 45 What chemical species activates the GLUT4 protein to transport
glucose into cells? | back 45 B |
front 46 Once inside a cell, glucose is rapidly phosphorylated to
glucose-6-phosphate. What is the main purpose of this phosphorylation?
| back 46 A |
front 47 The activity of which glycolytic enzyme shown below is not used to
control the rate of glycolysis? | back 47 C |
front 48 The activity of which glycolytic enzyme shown below is not used to
control the rate of glycolysis? | back 48 B |
front 49 ATP is a cosubstrate of the enzyme PFK-1. In most species ATP is also
an inhibitor of PFK-1 at higher concentrations. This seems to violate
Le Chatelier's Principle. Which statement below would provide a
suitable explanation? | back 49 D |
front 50 Insulin increases the capacity of a cell to transport glucose
by | back 50 D |
front 51 More than one step in the glycolytic pathway is subject to
regulation. It might seem most efficient to regulate only the first
step of a pathway to avoid buildup of intermediates and to conserve
materials and energy. Why is the first step of glycolysis not the only
regulated step? | back 51 A |
front 52 In strenuously working muscle the pH decreases. This inhibits the
activity of PFK-1 and glycolysis slows. Why would it be desirable to
slow glycolysis when the demand for ATP is high? | back 52 B |
front 53 PFK-2 and fructose 2,6-bisphosphatase are two names for the same
enzyme. The name PFK-2 is used for the enzyme's catalysis of the
phosphorylation of fructose 6-phosphate to fructose 2,6-bisphosphate.
The name fructose 2,6-bisphosphatase is used for its catalysis of the
reverse reaction. What is unique about this enzyme that makes it
logical to use two names? | back 53 D |
front 54 Which applies to fructose 1,6-bisphosphate? | back 54 D |
front 55 The slowing of glycolysis in the presence of oxygen is called the
________ effect. | back 55 C |
front 56 What are the effects of protein kinase A on PFK-2 and pyruvate
kinase? | back 56 B |
front 57 In the liver, ________ has a main use for maintaining blood glucose,
but it can also be used to synthesize glycogen, or enter the pentose
phosphate pathway to produce ribose 5-phosphate. | back 57 D |
front 58 A patient is found to be deficient in the enzyme galactose
1-phosphate uridylyltransferase. Specifically due to this deficiency
what might a doctor recommend? | back 58 D |
front 59 How does the number of molecules of ATP produced compare for
conversion of one molecule of either glucose or fructose to pyruvate?
| back 59 B |
front 60 The molecule 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate can be converted to
3-phosphoenolpyruvate two ways. One way is catalyzed by the glycolytic
pathway enzyme phosphoglycerate kinase. The other route is a two step
reaction sequence that uses the enzymes bisphosphoglycerate mutase and
2,3-bisphosphoglycerate phosphatase. The intermediate product of the
two-step sequence is 2,3-BPG which is an allosteric inhibitor of
hemoglobin. What disadvantage would there be if the glycolytic pathway
only used the two-step reaction sequence? | back 60 A |
front 61 How does mannose enter the glycolytic pathway? | back 61 A |
front 62 What is the function of the enzyme invertase? | back 62 D |
front 63 The genetic disorder galactosemia can cause ________ in
infants. | back 63 E |
front 64 Which statement is false about the Entner-Doudoroff pathway? | back 64 B |
front 65 Which is not part of the Entner-Doudoroff pathway? | back 65 A |
front 66 Which will be the main energy-producing degradation pathway for E.
coli being grown on a medium where gluconate is the only carbon
source? | back 66 B |