front 5 -
5) 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?
- A) Living organisms do not obey the second law of
thermodynamics, which states that entropy must increase with
time.
- 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.
- C) Living organisms do not follow the laws of
thermodynamics.
- D) As a consequence of growing, organisms
cause a greater increase in entropy in their environment than
the decrease in entropy associated with their growth.
- E) Living organisms are able to transform energy into
entropy.
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front 6 -
Whenever energy is transformed, there is always an increase
in the
- A) free energy of the system.
- B)
free energy of the universe.
- C) entropy of the system.
- D) entropy of the universe.
- E) enthalpy of the
universe.
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front 7 -
7) Which of the following statements is a logical
consequence of the second law of thermodynamics?
- A) If the entropy of a system increases, there must be a
corresponding decrease in the entropy of the universe.
- B) If there is an increase in the energy of a system, there
must be a corresponding decrease in the energy of the rest of
the universe.
- C) Every energy transfer requires
activation energy from the environment.
- D) Every
chemical reaction must increase the total entropy of the
universe.
- E) Energy can be transferred or transformed,
but it cannot be created or destroyed.
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front 8 -
8) Which of the following statements is representative of
the second law of thermodynamics?
- A) Conversion
of energy from one form to another is always accompanied by some
gain of free energy.
- B) Heat represents a form of
energy that can be used by most organisms to do work.
- C) Without an input of energy, organisms would tend toward
decreasing entropy.
- D) Cells require a constant input
of energy to maintain their high level of organization.
- E) Every energy transformation by a cell decreases the
entropy of the universe.
| |
front 9 -
9) Which of the following types of reactions would decrease
the entropy within a cell?
- A) anabolic
reactions
- B) hydrolysis
- C) respiration
- D)
digestion
- E) catabolic reactions
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front 10 -
10) Biological evolution of life on Earth, from simple
prokaryote-like cells to large, multicellar eukaryotic
organisms,
- A) has occurred in accordance with the
laws of thermodynamics.
- B) has caused an increase in
the entropy of the planet.
- C) has been made possible by
expending Earthʹs energy resources.
- D) has occurred in
accordance with the laws of thermodynamics, by expending Earthʹs
energy resources and causing an increase in the entropy of the
planet.
- E) violates the laws of thermodynamics because
Earth is a closed system.
| |
front 11 -
11) Which of the following is an example of potential rather
than kinetic energy?
- A) the muscle contractions
of a person mowing grass
- B) water rushing over Niagara
Falls
- C) light flashes emitted by a firefly
- D) a
molecule of glucose
- E) the flight of an insect foraging for
food
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front 12 -
12) Which of the following is the smallest closed
system?
- A) a cell
- B) an organism
- C) an ecosystem
- D) Earth
- E) the universe
| |
front 13 -
13) 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.
- B) Metabolism
depends on an organismʹs adequate hydration.
- C) Metabolism
uses all of an organismʹs resources.
- D) Metabolism consists
of all the energy transformation reactions in an organism.
- E) Metabolism manages the increase of entropy in an
organism.
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front 14 -
14) The mathematical expression for the change in free
energy of a system is Δ G =ΔH - TΔS. Which of the following is
(are) correct?
- A) ΔS is the change in enthalpy,
a measure of randomness.
- B) ΔH is the change in entropy,
the energy available to do work.
- C) ΔG is the change in
free energy.
- D) T is the temperature in degrees
Celsius.
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front 15 -
15) A system at chemical equilibrium
- A)
consumes energy at a steady rate.
- B) releases energy at a
steady rate.
- C) consumes or releases energy, depending on
whether it is exergonic or endergonic.
- D) has zero kinetic
energy.
- E) can do no work.
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front 16 -
16) Which of the following is true for all exergonic
reactions?
- A) The products have more total energy
than the reactants.
- B) The reaction proceeds with a net
release of free energy.
- C) The reaction goes only in a
forward direction: all reactants will be converted to products,
but no products will be converted to reactants.
- D) A
net input of energy from the surroundings is required for the
reactions to proceed.
- E) The reactions are rapid.
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front 17 -
17) Chemical equilibrium is relatively rare in living cells.
Which of the following could be an example of a reaction at
chemical equilibrium in a cell?
- A) a reaction in
which the free energy at equilibrium is higher than the energy
content at any point away from equilibrium
- B) a
chemical reaction in which the entropy change in the reaction is
just balanced by an opposite entropy change in the cellʹs
surroundings
- C) an endergonic reaction in an active
metabolic pathway where the energy for that reaction is supplied
only by heat from the environment
- D) a chemical
reaction in which both the reactants and products are not being
produced or used in any active metabolic pathway
- E) no
possibility of having chemical equilibrium in any living
cell
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front 18 -
18) Which of the following shows the correct changes in
thermodynamic properties for a chemical reaction in which amino
acids are linked to form a protein?
- A) +ΔH, +ΔS,
+ΔG
- B) +ΔH, -ΔS, -ΔG
- C) +ΔH, -ΔS, +ΔG
- D)
-ΔH, -ΔS, +ΔG
- E) -ΔH, +ΔS, +ΔG
| |
front 19 -
19) When glucose monomers are joined together by glycosidic
linkages to form a cellulose polymer, the changes in free energy,
total energy, and entropy are as follows:
- A)
+ΔG, +ΔH, +ΔS.
- B) +ΔG, +ΔH, -ΔS.
- C) +ΔG, -ΔH,
-ΔS.
- D) -ΔG, +ΔH, +ΔS. E) -ΔG, -ΔH, -ΔS.
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front 20 -
20) A chemical reaction that has a positive ΔG is correctly
described as
- A) endergonic.
- B)
endothermic.
- C) enthalpic.
- D) spontaneous.
- E) exothermic.
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front 21 -
21) Which of the following best describes enthalpy
(H)?
- A) the total kinetic energy of a system
- B) the heat content of a chemical system
- C) the
systemʹs entropy
- D) the cellʹs energy equilibrium
- E) the condition of a cell that is not able to react
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front 22 -
22) For the hydrolysis of ATP to ADP + i, the free energy
change is -7.3 kcal/mol under standard conditions (1 M
concentration of both reactants and products). In the cellular
environment, however, the free energy change is about -13
kcal/mol. What can we conclude about the free energy change for
the formation of ATP from ADP and under cellular
conditions?
- A) It is +7.3 kcal/mol.
- B) It
is less than +7.3 kcal/mol.
- C) It is about +13
kcal/mol.
- D) It is greater than +13 kcal/mol.
- E) The
information given is insufficient to deduce the free energy
change.
| |
front 23
23) Why is ATP an important molecule in metabolism?
- A) Its hydrolysis provides an input of free energy for
exergonic reactions.
- B) It provides energy coupling between
exergonic and endergonic reactions.
- C) Its terminal
phosphate group contains a strong covalent bond that, when
hydrolyzed, releases free energy.
- D) Its terminal phosphate
bond has higher energy than the other two.
- E) It is one of
the four building blocks for DNA synthesis.
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front 24
24) When 10,000 molecules of ATP are hydrolyzed to ADP and i
in a test tube, about twice as much heat is liberated as when a cell
hydrolyzes the same amount of ATP. Which of the following is the
best explanation for this observation?
- A) Cells are open systems, but a test tube is a closed
system.
- B) Cells are less efficient at heat production than
nonliving systems.
- C) The hydrolysis of ATP in a cell
produces different chemical products than does the reaction in a
test tube.
- D) The reaction in cells must be catalyzed by
enzymes, but the reaction in a test tube does not need enzymes.
- E) Reactant and product concentrations in the test tube are
different from those in the cell.
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front 25 -
25) Which of the following is most similar in structure to
ATP?
- A) a pentose sugar
- B) a DNA
nucleotide
- C) an RNA nucleotide
- D) an amino acid
with three phosphate groups attached
- E) a phospholipid
| |
front 26 -
26) Which of the following statements is true concerning
catabolic pathways?
- A) They combine molecules
into more energy-rich molecules.
- B) They supply energy,
primarily in the form of ATP, for the cellʹs work.
- C) They
are endergonic.
- D) They are spontaneous and do not need
enzyme catalysis.
- E) They build up complex molecules such
as protein from simpler compounds.
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front 27 -
27) When chemical, transport, or mechanical work is done by
an organism, what happens to the heat generated?
- A) It is used to power yet more cellular work.
- B) It is
used to store energy as more ATP.
- C) It is used to generate
ADP from nucleotide precursors.
- D) It is lost to the
environment.
- E) It is transported to specific organs such as
the brain.
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front 28 -
28) When ATP releases some energy, it also releases
inorganic phosphate. What purpose does this serve (if any) in the
cell?
- A) The phosphate is released as an excretory
waste.
- B) The phosphate can only be used to regenerate more
ATP.
- C) The phosphate can be added to water and excreted as a
liquid.
- D) The phosphate may be incorporated into any
molecule that contains phosphate.
- E) It enters the nucleus
to affect gene expression.
| |
front 29 -
29) A number of systems for pumping ions across membranes
are powered by ATP. Such ATP-powered pumps are often called
ATPases although they donʹt often hydrolyze ATP unless they are
simultaneously transporting ions. Because small increases in
calcium ions in the cytosol can trigger a number of different
intracellular reactions, cells keep the cytosolic calcium
concentration quite low under normal conditions, using ATP-powered
calcium pumps. For example, muscle cells transport calcium from
the cytosol into the membranous system called the sarcoplasmic
reticulum (SR). If a resting muscle cellʹs cytosol has a free
calcium ion concentration of 10-7 while the concentration in the
SR is 10-2, then how is the ATPase acting?
- A)
ATPase activity must be powering an inflow of calcium from the
outside of the cell into the SR.
- B) ATPase activity
must be transferring i to the SR to enable this to occur.
- C) ATPase activity must be pumping calcium from the cytosol
to the SR against the concentration gradient.
- D) ATPase
activity must be opening a channel for the calcium ions to
diffuse back into the SR along the concentration gradient.
- E) ATPase activity must be routing calcium ions from the SR
to the cytosol, and then to the cellʹs environment.
| |
front 30 -
30) What is the difference (if any) between the structure of
ATP and the structure of the precursor of the A nucleotide in
RNA?
- A) The sugar molecule is different.
- B)
The nitrogen-containing base is different.
- C) The number of
phosphates is three instead of one.
- D) The number of
phosphates is three instead of two.
- E) There is no
difference.
| |
front 31 -
31) Which of the following statements is true about
enzyme-catalyzed reactions?
- A) The reaction is
faster than the same reaction in the absence of the enzyme.
- B) The free energy change of the reaction is opposite from
the reaction that occurs in the absence of the enzyme.
- C) The reaction always goes in the direction toward chemical
equilibrium.
- D) Enzyme-catalyzed reactions require energy
to activate the enzyme.
- E) Enzyme-catalyzed reactions
release more free energy than noncatalyzed reactions.
| |
front 32 -
32) Reactants capable of interacting to form products in a
chemical reaction must first overcome a thermodynamic barrier
known as the reactionʹs
- A) entropy.
- B)
activation energy.
- C) endothermic level.
- D)
equilibrium point.
- E) free-energy content.
| |
front 33 -
33) A solution of starch at room temperature does not
readily decompose to form a solution of simple sugars
because
- A) the starch solution has less free energy
than the sugar solution.
- B) the hydrolysis of starch to
sugar is endergonic.
- C) the activation energy barrier for
this reaction cannot be surmounted.
- D) starch cannot be
hydrolyzed in the presence of so much water.
- E) starch
hydrolysis is nonspontaneous.
| |
front 34 -
34) Which of the following statements regarding enzymes is
true?
- A) Enzymes increase the rate of a reaction by
making the reaction more exergonic.
- B) Enzymes increase the
rate of a reaction by lowering the activation energy barrier.
- C) Enzymes increase the rate of a reaction by reducing the rate
of reverse reactions.
- D) Enzymes change the equilibrium
point of the reactions they catalyze.
- E) Enzymes make the
rate of a reaction independent of substrate concentrations.
| |
front 35 -
35) During a laboratory experiment, you discover that an
enzyme-catalyzed reaction has a ∆G of -20 kcal/mol. If you double
the amount of enzyme in the reaction, what will be the ∆G for the
new reaction?
- A) -40 kcal/mol
- B) -20
kcal/mol
- C) 0 kcal/mol
- D) +20 kcal/mol
- E)
+40 kcal/mol
| |
front 36 -
36) The active site of an enzyme is the region
that
- A) binds allosteric regulators of the
enzyme.
- B) is involved in the catalytic reaction of the
enzyme.
- C) binds noncompetitive inhibitors of the
enzyme.
- D) is inhibited by the presence of a coenzyme or a
cofactor.
| |
front 37 -
37) According to the induced fit hypothesis of enzyme
catalysis, which of the following is correct?
- A)
The binding of the substrate depends on the shape of the active
site.
- B) Some enzymes change their structure when activators
bind to the enzyme.
- C) A competitive inhibitor can
outcompete the substrate for the active site.
- D) The
binding of the substrate changes the shape of the enzymeʹs active
site.
- E) The active site creates a microenvironment ideal for
the reaction.
| |
front 38 -
38) Mutations that result in single amino acid substitutions
in an enzyme
- A) can have no effect on the
activity or properties of the enzyme.
- B) will almost
always destroy the activity of the enzyme.
- C) will
often cause a change in the substrate specificity of the
enzyme.
- D) may affect the physicochemical properties of
the enzyme such as its optimal temperature and pH.
- E)
may, in rare cases, cause the enzyme to run reactions in
reverse.
| |
front 39 -
39) Increasing the substrate concentration in an enzymatic
reaction could overcome which of the following?
- A) denaturization of the enzyme
- B) allosteric
inhibition
- C) competitive inhibition
- D) saturation
of the enzyme activity
- E) insufficient cofactors
| |
front 40 -
40) Which of the following is true of enzymes?
- A) Nonprotein cofactors alter the substrate specificity of
enzymes.
- B) Enzyme function is increased if the 3-D
structure or conformation of an enzyme is altered.
- C)
Enzyme function is independent of physical and chemical
environmental factors such as pH and temperature.
- D)
Enzymes increase the rate of chemical reaction by lowering
activation energy barriers.
- E) Enzymes increase the
rate of chemical reaction by providing activation energy to the
substrate.
| |
front 41 -
41) Zinc, an essential trace element for most organisms, is
present in the active site of the enzyme carboxypeptidase. The
zinc most likely functions as a(n)
- A)
competitive inhibitor of the enzyme.
- B) noncompetitive
inhibitor of the enzyme.
- C) allosteric activator of the
enzyme.
- D) cofactor necessary for enzyme activity.
- E) coenzyme derived from a vitamin.
| |
front 42 -
2) In order to attach a particular amino acid to the tRNA
molecule that will transport it, an enzyme, an aminoacyl-tRNA
synthetase, is required, along with ATP. Initially, the enzyme has
an active site for ATP and another for the amino acid, but it is
not able to attach the tRNA. What must occur in order for the
final attachment to occur?
- A) The ATP must first
have to attach to the tRNA.
- B) The binding of the first
two molecules must cause a 3-D change that opens another active
site on the enzyme.
- C) The ATP must be hydrolyzed to
allow the amino acid to bind to the synthetase.
- D) The
tRNA molecule must have to alter its shape in order to be able
to fit into the active site with the other two molecules.
- E) The 3ʹ end of the tRNA must have to be cleaved before it
can have an attached amino acid.
| |
front 43 -
43) Some of the drugs used to treat HIV patients are
competitive inhibitors of the HIV reverse transcriptase enzyme.
Unfortunately, the high mutation rate of HIV means that the virus
rapidly acquires mutations with amino acid changes that make them
resistant to these competitive inhibitors. Where in the reverse
transcriptase enzyme would such amino acid changes most likely
occur in drug-resistant viruses?
- A) in or near
the active site
- B) at an allosteric site
- C) at a
cofactor binding site
- D) in regions of the protein that
determine packaging into the virus capsid
- E) such mutations
could occur anywhere with equal probability
| |
front 44 -
44) Protein kinases are enzymes that transfer the terminal
phosphate from ATP to an amino acid residue on the target protein.
Many are located on the plasma membrane as integral membrane
proteins or peripheral membrane proteins. What purpose may be
served by their plasma membrane localization?
- A)
ATP is more abundant near the plasma membrane.
- B) They
can more readily encounter and phosphorylate other membrane
proteins.
- C) Membrane localization lowers the activation
energy of the phosphorylation reaction.
- D) They flip
back and forth across the membrane to access target proteins on
either side.
- E) They require phospholipids as a
cofactor.
| |
front 45 -
45) When you have a severe fever, what grave consequence may
occur if the fever is not controlled?
- A)
destruction of your enzymesʹ primary structure
- B) removal
of amine groups from your proteins
- C) change in the
tertiary structure of your enzymes
- D) removal of the amino
acids in active sites of your enzymes
- E) binding of your
enzymes to inappropriate substrates
| |
front 46 -
46) How does a noncompetitive inhibitor decrease the rate of
an enzyme reaction?
- A) by binding at the active
site of the enzyme
- B) by changing the shape of the enzymeʹs
active site
- C) by changing the free energy change of the
reaction
- D) by acting as a coenzyme for the reaction
- E) by decreasing the activation energy of the reaction
| |
front 47 -
47) The mechanism in which the end product of a metabolic
pathway inhibits an earlier step in the pathway is most precisely
described as
- A) metabolic inhibition.
- B) feedback inhibition.
- C) allosteric inhibition.
- D) noncooperative inhibition.
- E) reversible
inhibition.
| |
front 48 - 48) Which of the following statements describes enzyme
cooperativity?
- A) A multienzyme complex contains
all the enzymes of a metabolic pathway.
- B) A product of
a pathway serves as a competitive inhibitor of an early enzyme
in the pathway.
- C) A substrate molecule bound to an
active site of one subunit promotes substrate binding to the
active site of other subunits.
- D) Several substrate
molecules can be catalyzed by the same enzyme.
- E) A
substrate binds to an active site and inhibits cooperation
between enzymes in a pathway.
| |
front 49 -
49) Allosteric enzyme regulation is usually associated
with
- A) lack of cooperativity.
- B) feedback
inhibition.
- C) activating activity.
- D) an enzyme
with more than one subunit.
- E) the need for cofactors.
| |
front 50 - 50) Which of the following is an example of
cooperativity?
- A) the binding of an end product of a metabolic pathway
to the first enzyme that acts in the pathway
- B) one
enzyme in a metabolic pathway passing its product to act as a
substrate for the next enzyme in the pathway
- C) a
molecule binding at one unit of a tetramer, allowing faster
binding at each of the other three
- D) the effect of
increasing temperature on the rate of an enzymatic reaction
- E) binding of an ATP molecule along with one of the substrate
molecules in an active site
| |
front 51 -
51) Protein kinases are enzymes that catalyze
phosphorylation of target proteins at specific sites, whereas
protein phosphatases catalyze removal of phosphate(s) from
phosphorylated proteins. Phosphorylation and dephosphorylation can
function as an on-off switch for a proteinʹs activity, most likely
through:
- A) the change in a proteinʹs charge leading
to a conformational change.
- B) the change in a proteinʹs
charge leading to cleavage.
- C) a change in the optimal pH
at which a reaction will occur.
- D) a change in the optimal
temperature at which a reaction will occur.
- E) the excision
of one or more peptides.
| |
front 52 -
52) Besides turning enzymes on or off, what other means does
a cell use to control enzymatic activity?
- A)
cessation of cellular protein synthesis
- B) localization of
enzymes into specific organelles or membranes
- C) exporting
enzymes out of the cell
- D) connecting enzymes into large
aggregates
- E) hydrophobic interactions
| |
front 53 -
53) An important group of peripheral membrane proteins are
enzymes such as the phospholipases that cleave the head groups of
phospholipids. What properties must these enzymes
exhibit?
- A) resistance to degradation
- B)
independence from cofactor interaction
- C) water
solubility
- D) lipid solubility
- E) membrane-spanning
domains
| |
front 54 -
54) In experimental tests of enzyme evolution, where a gene
encoding an enzyme is subjected to multiple cycles of random
mutagenesis and selection for altered substrate specificity, the
resulting enzyme had multiple amino acid changes associated with
altered substrate specificity. Where in the enzyme were these
amino acid changes located?
- A) only in the
active site
- B) only in the active site or near the active
site
- C) in or near the active site and at surface sites away
from the active site
- D) only at surface sites away from the
active site
- E) only in the hydrophobic interior of the
folded protein
| |
front 55
55) How might an amino acid change at a site distant from the
active site of the enzyme alter the enzymeʹs substrate specificity?
- A) by changing the enzymeʹs stability
B) by changing the
enzymeʹs location in the cell - C) by changing the shape of
the protein
- D) by changing the enzymeʹs pH optimum
- E) an amino acid change away from the active site cannot alter
the enzymeʹs substrate specificity
| |
front 56
56) For the enzyme-catalyzed reaction shown in the figure,
which of these treatments will cause the greatest increase in the
rate of the reaction, if the initial reactant concentration is 1.0 micromolar?
- doubling the
activation energy needed
- cooling the reaction by 10°C
- doubling the concentration of the reactants to 2.0
micromolar
- doubling the enzyme concentration
- increasing the concentration of reactants to 10.0 micromolar,
while reducing the concentration of enzyme by 1/2
| |
front 57
57) In the figure, why does the reaction rate plateau at
higher reactant concentrations?
- A) Feedback inhibition by product occurs at high reactant
concentrations.
- B) Most enzyme molecules are occupied by
substrate at high reactant concentrations.
- C) The reaction
nears equilibrium at high reactant concentrations.
D) The
activation energy for the reaction increases with reactant
concentration. - E) The rate of the reverse reaction increases
with reactant concentration.
| |
front 58
58) Which curve(s) on the graphs may represent the temperature
and pH profiles of an enzyme taken from a bacterium that lives in a
mildly alkaline hot springs at temperatures of 70°C or higher?
- A) curves 1 and 5
- B) curves 2 and 4
- C)
curves 2 and 5
- D) curves 3 and 4
- E) curves 3 and
5
| |
front 59
59) Which temperature and pH profile curves on the graphs were
most likely generated from analysis of an enzyme from a human
stomach where conditions are strongly acid?
- A) curves 1 and 4
- B) curves 1 and 5
- C)
curves 2 and 4
- D) curves 2 and 5
- E) curves 3 and
4
| |
front 60 - 60) Which of the following terms best describes the forward
reaction in Figure 8.1?
- A) endergonic, ∆G > 0
- B) exergonic, ∆G < 0
- C) endergonic, ∆G < 0
- D) exergonic, ∆G > 0
- E) chemical equilibrium, ∆G =
0
| |
front 61 - 61) Which of the following represents the ΔG of the reaction in
Figure 8.1?
| |
front 62 - 62) Which of the following in Figure 8.1 would be the same in
either an enzyme-catalyzed or a noncatalyzed reaction?
| |
front 63 - 63) Which of the following represents the activation energy
needed for the enzyme-catalyzed reverse reaction, C + D → A + B, in
Figure 8.1?
| |
front 64 - 64) Which of the following represents the difference between
the free-energy content of the reaction and the free-energy content
of the products in Figure 8.1?
| |
front 65 - 65) Which of the following represents the activation energy
required for the enzyme-catalyzed reaction in Figure 8.1?
| |
front 66 - 66) Which of the following represents the activation energy
required for a noncatalyzed reaction in Figure 8.1?
| |
front 67 - 67) Which of the following represents the activation energy
needed for the noncatalyzed reverse reaction, C + D → A + B, in
Figure 8.1?
| |
front 68 - 68) Assume that the reaction in Figure 8.1 has a ΔG of -5.6
kcal/mol. Which of the following would be true?
- A) The
reaction could be coupled to power an endergonic reaction with a
ΔG of +6.2 kcal/mol.
- B) The reaction could be coupled
to power an exergonic reaction with a ΔG of +8.8 kcal/mol.
- C) The reaction would result in a decrease in entropy (S)
and an increase in the total energy content (H) of the system.
- D) The reaction would result in an increase in entropy
(S) and a decrease in the total energy content (H) of the
system.
- E) The reaction would result in products (C +
D) with a greater free-energy content than in the initial
reactants (A + B).
| |
front 69
69) Which of the following is the most correct interpretation
of the figure?
- A) Inorganic phosphate is created from organic
phosphate.
- B) Energy from catabolism can be used directly
for performing cellular work.
- C) ADP + i are a set of
molecules that store energy for catabolism.
- D) ATP is a
molecule that acts as an intermediary to store energy for cellular
work.
- E) i acts as a shuttle molecule to move energy from
ATP to ADP.
| |
front 70
70) How do cells use the ATP cycle shown in the figure?
- A) Cells use the cycle to recycle ADP and phosphate.
- B) Cells use the cycle to recycle energy released by ATP
hydrolysis.
- C) Cells use the cycle to recycle ADP, phosphate,
and the energy released by ATP hydrolysis.
- D) Cells use the
cycle to generate or consume water molecules as needed.
- E)
Cells use the cycle primarily to generate heat.
| |
front 71
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.
-
71) Based on this information, which of the following is
correct?
A) Succinate dehydrogenase is the enzyme,
and fumarate is the substrate. - B) Succinate dehydrogenase
is the enzyme, and malonic acid is the substrate.
- C)
Succinate is the substrate, and fumarate is the product.
D)
Fumarate is the product, and malonic acid is a noncompetitive
inhibitor. - E) Malonic acid is the product, and fumarate is a
competitive inhibitor.
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front 72
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.
72) What is malonic acidʹs role with respect to succinate dehydrogenase?
- A) It is a competitive inhibitor.
- B) It blocks the
binding of fumarate.
- C) It is a noncompetitive
inhibitor.
- D) It is able to bind to succinate.
- E) It
is an allosteric regulator.
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front 73
A series of enzymes
catalyze the reaction X → Y → Z → A. Product A binds to the enzyme
that converts X to Y at a position remote from its active site. This
binding decreases the activity of the enzyme.
73) What is substance X?
- A) a coenzyme
- B) an allosteric inhibitor
- C) a substrate
- D) an intermediate
- E) the
product
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front 74
A series of enzymes
catalyze the reaction X → Y → Z → A. Product A binds to the enzyme
that converts X to Y at a position remote from its active site. This
binding decreases the activity of the enzyme.
74) With respect to the enzyme that converts X to Y, substance
A functions as
- A) a coenzyme.
- B) an allosteric inhibitor.
- C) the substrate.
- D) an intermediate.
- E) a
competitive inhibitor.
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front 75
75) Choose the pair of terms that correctly completes this
sentence: Catabolism is to anabolism as ________ is to ________.
- A) exergonic; spontaneous
- B) exergonic;
endergonic
- C) free energy; entropy
- D) work;
energy
- E) entropy; enthalpy
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front 76 -
76) Most cells cannot harness heat to perform work
because
- A) heat is not a form of energy.
- B)
cells do not have much heat; they are relatively cool.
- C)
temperature is usually uniform throughout a cell.
- D) heat
can never be used to do work.
- E) heat must remain constant
during work.
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front 77 - 77) Which of the following metabolic processes can occur
without a net influx of energy from some other process?
- A)
ADP + i → ATP + H2O
- B) C6H12O6 + 6 O2 → 6 CO2 + 6 H2O
- C) 6CO2+6H2O→C6H12O6+6O2 D) amino acids → protein
- E)
glucose + fructose → sucrose
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front 78 - 78) If an enzyme in solution is saturated with substrate, the
most effective way to obtain a faster yield of products is to
- A) add more of the enzyme.
- B) heat the solution to
90°C.
- C) add more substrate.
- D) add an allosteric
inhibitor.
- E) add a noncompetitive inhibitor.
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front 79 -
79) Some bacteria are metabolically active in hot springs
because
- A) they are able to maintain a lower
internal temperature.
- B) high temperatures make catalysis
unnecessary.
- C) their enzymes have high optimal
temperatures.
- D) their enzymes are completely insensitive to
temperature.
- E) they use molecules other than proteins or
RNAs as their main catalysts.
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front 80
80) If an enzyme is added to a solution where its substrate
and product are in equilibrium, what will occur?
- A) Additional product will be formed.
- B)
Additional substrate will be formed.
- C) The reaction will
change from endergonic to exergonic.
- D) The free energy of
the system will change.
- E) Nothing; the reaction will stay
at equilibrium.
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