campbell chapter 7
Who was/were the first to propose that cell membranes are
phospholipid bilayers?
A) H. Davson and J. Danielli
B) I.
Langmuir
C) C. Overton
D) S. Singer and G. Nicolson
E) E. Gorter and F. Grendel
E
who proposed that membranes are a phospholipid bilayer betwen two layers of hydrophilic proteins?
A) H. davson and J. Danielli
B) I. Langmuir
C) C. overton
D) S. Singer and G. Nicolson
E) E.Gorter and F.Grendel
A
who proposed that the membrane is a mosaic of protein molecules bobbing in a fluid bilayer of phospholipids?
a) davson and J. Danielli
B) I. Langmuir
C) C. overton
D) S. Singer and G. Nicolson
E) E.Gorter and F.Grendel
D
Which of the following types of molecules are the major structural
components of the cell membrane?
A) phospholipids and cellulose
B) nucleic acids and proteins
C) phospholipids and
proteins
D) proteins and cellulose
E) glycoproteins and cholesterol
C
peripheral protein
D
cholesterol
E
fiber of the extracellular matrix
A
microfilament of the cytoskeleton
C
gycolipid
B
When biological membranes are frozen and then fractured, they tend to
break along the middle of the bilayer. The best explanation for this
is that
A) the integral membrane proteins are not strong enough
to hold the bilayer together.
B) water that is present in the
middle of the bilayer freezes and is easily fractured.
C)
hydrophilic interactions between the opposite membrane surfaces are
destroyed on freezing.
D) the carbon-carbon bonds of the
phospholipid tails are easily broken.
E) the hydrophobic
interactions that hold the membrane together are weakest at this point.
E
The presence of cholesterol in the plasma membranes of some animals
A) enables the membrane to stay fluid more easily when cell
temperature drops.
B) enables the animal to remove hydrogen
atoms from saturated phospholipids.
C) enables the animal to add
hydrogen atoms to unsaturated phospholipids.
D) makes the
membrane less flexible, allowing it to sustain greater pressure from
within the cell.
E) makes the animal more susceptible to
circulatory disorders.
A
According to the fluid mosaic model of cell membranes, which of the
following is a true statement about membrane phospholipids?
A)
They can move laterally along the plane of the membrane.
B) They
frequently flip-flop from one side of the membrane to the other.
C) They occur in an uninterrupted bilayer, with membrane
proteins restricted to the surface of the membrane.
D) They are
free to depart from the membrane and dissolve in the surrounding
solution.
E) They have hydrophilic tails in the interior of the membrane.
A
Which of the following is one of the ways that the membranes of
winter wheat are able to remain fluid when it is extremely cold?
A) by increasing the percentage of unsaturated phospholipids in
the membrane
B) by increasing the percentage of cholesterol
molecules in the membrane
C) by decreasing the number of
hydrophobic proteins in the membrane
D) by cotransport of
glucose and hydrogen
E) by using active transport
A
In order for a protein to be an integral membrane protein it would
have to be
A) hydrophilic.
B) hydrophobic.
C)
amphipathic, with at least one hydrophobic region.
D) completely
covered with phospholipids.
E) exposed on only one surface of
the membrane.
C
When a membrane is freeze-fractured, the bilayer splits down the
middle between the two layers of phospholipids. In an electron
micrograph of a freeze-fractured membrane, the bumps seen on the
fractured surface of the membrane are
A) peripheral proteins.
B) phospholipids.
C) carbohydrates.
D) integral
proteins.
E) cholesterol molecules.
D
Which of the following is a reasonable explanation for why
unsaturated fatty acids help keep any membrane more fluid at lower
temperatures?
A) The double bonds form kinks in the fatty acid
tails, preventing adjacent lipids from packing tightly.
B)
Unsaturated fatty acids have a higher cholesterol content and
therefore more cholesterol in membranes.
C) Unsaturated fatty
acids are more polar than saturated fatty acids.
D) The double
bonds block interaction among the hydrophilic head groups of the
lipids.
E) The double bonds result in shorter fatty acid tails
and thinner membranes.
A
Which of the following is true of integral membrane proteins?
A) They lack tertiary structure.
B) They are loosely bound
to the surface of the bilayer.
C) They are usually transmembrane
proteins.
D) They are not mobile within the bilayer.
E)
They serve only a structural role in membranes.
C
The primary function of polysaccharides attached to the glycoproteins
and glycolipids of animal cell membranes is
A) to facilitate
diffusion of molecules down their concentration gradients.
B) to
actively transport molecules against their concentration gradients.
C) to maintain the integrity of a fluid mosaic membrane.
D) to maintain membrane fluidity at low temperatures.
E)
to mediate cell-to-cell recognition.
E
An animal cell lacking oligosaccharides on the external surface of
its plasma membrane would likely be impaired in which function?
A) transporting ions against an electrochemical gradient
B) cell-cell recognition
C) maintaining fluidity of the
phospholipid bilayer
D) attaching to the cytoskeleton
E)
establishing the diffusion barrier to charged molecules
B
In the years since the proposal of the fluid mosaic model of the cell
membrane, which of the following observations has been added to the
model?
A) The membrane is only fluid across a very narrow
temperature range.
B) Proteins rarely move, even though they
possibly can do so.
C) Unsaturated lipids are excluded from the
membranes.
D) The concentration of protein molecules is now
known to be much higher.
E) The proteins are known to be made of
only acidic amino acids.
D
which of the following span t the phospholipid bilayer, usually a
number of times
A) a transmembrane protein.
B) an integral
protein.
C) a peripheral protein.
D) an integrin.
E)
a glycoprotein.
A
Which of these are not embedded in the hydrophobic portion of the
lipid bilayer at all?
A) transmembrane proteins
B)
integral proteins
C) peripheral proteins
D) integrins
E) glycoproteins
C
which of these are attached to the extracellular matrix?
a) transmembrane proteins
b) integral proteins
c) peripheral proteins
d) integrins
e) glycoproteins
D
which of these often serve as receptors or cell recognition molecules on cell surface?
A) transmembrane proteins
B) integral proteins
c)peripheral proteins
C) integrins
D) glycoproteins
D
[[[The formulation of a model for a structure or for a process serves
which of the following purposes?
A) It asks a scientific
question.
B) It functions as a testable hypothesis.
C) It
records observations.
D) It serves as a data point among
results.
E) It can only be arrived at after years of experimentation.
B
Cell membranes are asymmetrical. Which of the following is the most
likely explanation?
A) The cell membrane forms a border between
one cell and another in tightly packed tissues such as epithelium.
B) Cell membranes communicate signals from one organism to
another.
C) cell membrane proteins are determined as the
membrane is being packaged in the ER and Golgi
D) The
"innerness" and "outerness" of membrane is being
packaged in the ER and Golgi
E) Proteins can only be span cell
membranes if the are hydropholic
C
Which of the following is true of the evolution of cell membranes?
A) Cell membranes have stopped evolving now that they are fluid
mosaics.
B) Cell membranes cannot evolve if the membrane
proteins do not.
C) The evolution of cell membranes is driven by
the evolution of glycoproteins and glycolipids.
D) as population
of organism evolve,different properties of their cell membranes are
selected for or agains .
E) An individual organism selects its
preferred type of cell membrane for particular functions.
D
Why are lipids and proteins free to move laterally in membranes?
A) The interior of the membrane is filled with liquid water.
B) there are no covalent bonds between lipid and protein in the
membrane
C) Hydrophilic portions of the lipids are in the
interior of the membrane.
D) There are only weak hydrophobic
interactions in the interior of the membrane.
E) Molecules such
as cellulose can pull them in various directions.
C
What kinds of molecules pass through a cell membrane most easily?
A) large and hydrophobic
B) small and hydrophobic
C)
large polar
D) ionic
E) monosaccharides such as glucose
B
Which of the following is a characteristic feature of a carrier
protein in a plasma membrane?
A) It is a peripheral membrane
protein.
B) It exhibits a specificity for a particular type of
molecule.
C) It requires the expenditure of cellular energy to
function.
D) It works against diffusion.
E) It has few, if
any, hydrophobic amino acids.
B
after a membrane freezes and then thaws, it often becomes leaky to solutes. the most reasonable explanation for this is that
a) transport proteins become nonfunctional during freezing
b) the lipid bilayer loses its fluidity when it freezes
c) aqueaporins can no longer function after freezing
d) the integrity of the lipid bilayer is broken when the membrane freezes
e) the solubility of most solutes in the cytoplam decreases on freezing
D
Which of the following would likely move through the lipid bilayer of
a plasma membrane most rapidly?
A) CO₂
B) an amino acid
C) glucose
D) K⁺
E) starch
A
Which of the following statements is correct about diffusion?
A) It is very rapid over long distances.
B) It requires an
expenditure of energy by the cell.
C) It is a passive process in
which molecules move from a region of higher concentration to a region
of lower concentration.
D) It is an active process in which
molecules move from a region of lower concentration to one of higher
concentration.
E) It requires integral proteins in the cell membrane
C
Water passes quickly through cell membranes because
A) the
bilayer is hydrophilic.
B) it moves through hydrophobic
channels.
C) water movement is tied to ATP hydrolysis.
D)
it is a small, polar, charged molecule.
E) it moves through
aquaporins in the membrane.
E
the following information should be used to answer the following questions
cystic fibrosis is a genetic disease in human in which chloride ion channels in cell membranes are missing or nonfunctional.
35) CHLORIDE ion channels are membrane structures that include with of the following?
a) gap junctions
b) aquaporins
c) hydriohilic proteins
d) carbohydrates
e) sodium ions
C
the following information should be used to answer the following questions
cystic fibrosis is a genetic disease in human in which chloride ion channels in cell membranes are missing or nonfunctional.
which of the following would you expect to be a problem for someone with nonfunctional chloride channeling?
a) inadequeate secretion of mucus
b) buildup of excessive secretions in organs such as lungs
c) buildup of excessive secretions in glands such as the pancreas
d) sweat that includes no NACL
e) mental retardation due to low salt levels in brain tissue
B
he following information should be used to answer the following questions
cystic fibrosis is a genetic disease in human in which chloride ion channels in cell membranes are missing or nonfunctional.
37) of a young male child has cystic fibrosis, which of the following would affect his fertility?
A) inability to make sperm
b) incomplete maturation of the testes
c) failure to form genital structures appropriately
d) incorrect concentrations of ions in semen
e) abnormal PH in seminal fluid
D
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.
Initially, in
terms of tonicity, the solution in side A with respect to that in side
B is
A) hypotonic.
B) plasmolyzed.
C) isotonic.
D) saturated.
E) hypertonic.
C
After the system reaches equilibrium, what changes are observed?
A) The molarity of sucrose and glucose are equal on both sides.
B) The molarity of glucose is higher in side A than in side B.
C) The water level is higher in side A than in side B.
D)
The water level is unchanged.
E) The water level is higher in
side B than in side A
C
A patient has had a serious accident and lost a lot of blood. In an
attempt to replenish body fluids, distilled water–equal to the volume
of blood lost–is transferred directly into one of his veins. What will
be the most probable result of this transfusion?
A) It will have
no unfavorable effect as long as the water is free of viruses and
bacteria.
B) The patient's red blood cells will shrivel up
because the blood fluid has become hypotonic compared to the cells.
C) The patient's red blood cells will swell because the blood
fluid has become hypotonic compared to the cells.
D) The
patient's red blood cells will shrivel up because the blood fluid has
become hypertonic compared to the cells.
E) The patient's red
blood cells will burst because the blood fluid has become hypertonic
compared to the cells.
A
C
Celery stalks that are immersed in fresh water for several hours
become stiff and hard. Similar stalks left in a 0.15 M salt solution
become limp and soft. From this we can deduce that the cells of the
celery stalks are
A) hypotonic to both fresh water and the salt
solution.
B) hypertonic to both fresh water and the salt
solution.
C) hypertonic to fresh water but hypotonic to the salt
solution.
D) hypotonic to fresh water but hypertonic to the salt
solution.
E) isotonic with fresh water but hypotonic to the salt solution.
C
a cell whose cytoplasm has a concetration of 0.02 molar glucose is placed in a test tube of water containing 0.02 molar glucose. assuming that glucose is not actively transported into the cell, which of the following terms describes the tonicity of the external solution relative to the cytoplam of the cell?
a) turgid
b) hypertonic
c) hypotonic
d) flaccid
e) isotonic
E
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.
At the beginning of the experiment,
A) side A is
hypertonic to side B.
B) side A is hypotonic to side B.
C)
side A is isotonic to side B.
D) side A is hypertonic to side B
with respect to glucose.
E) side A is hypotonic to side B with
respect to sodium chloride.
B
f you examine side A after three days, you should find
A) a
decrease in the concentration of NaCl and glucose and an increase in
the water level.
B) a decrease in the concentration of NaCl, an
increase in water level, and no change in the concentration of
glucose.
C) no net change in the system.
D) a decrease in
the concentration of NaCl and a decrease in the water level.
E)
no change in the concentration of NaCl and glucose and an increase in
the water level.
D
Which of the following statements correctly describes the normal
tonicity conditions for typical plant and animal cells?
A) The
animal cell is in a hypotonic solution, and the plant cell is in an
isotonic solution.
B) The animal cell is in an isotonic
solution, and the plant cell is in a hypertonic solution.
C) The
animal cell is in a hypertonic solution, and the plant cell is in an
isotonic solution.
D) The animal cell is in an isotonic
solution, and the plant cell is in a hypotonic solution.
E) The
animal cell is in a hypertonic solution, and the plant cell is in a
hypotonic solution.
D
Five dialysis bags, constructed from a semipermeable membrane that is
impermeable to sucrose, were filled with various concentrations of
sucrose and then placed in separate beakers containing an initial
concentration of 0.6 M sucrose solution. At 10-minute intervals, the
bags were massed (weighed) and the percent change in mass of each bag
was graphed.
Which line in the graph represents the bag
that contained a solution isotonic to the 0.6 M solution at the
beginning of the experiment?
A) A
B) B
C) C
D)
D
E) E
C
Which line in the graph represents the bag with the highest initial
concentration of sucrose?
A) A
B) B
C) C
D) D
E) E
A
Which line or lines in the graph represent(s) bags that contain a
solution that is hypertonic at 60 minutes?
A) A and B
B) B
C) C
D) D
E) D and E
B
You are working on a team that is designing a new drug. In order for
this drug to work, it must enter the cytoplasm of specific target
cells. Which of the following would be a factor that determines
whether the molecule selectively enters the target cells?
A)
blood or tissue type of the patient
B) hydrophobicity of the
drug molecule
C) lack of charge on the drug molecule
D)
similarity of the drug molecule to other molecules transported by the
target cells
E) lipid composition of the target cells' plasma membrane
D
In which of the following would there be the greatest need for
osmoregulation?
A) an animal connective tissue cell bathed in
isotonic body fluid
B) a terrestrial animal such as a snake
C) a red blood cell surrounded by plasma
D) a lymphocyte
before it has been taken back into lymph fluid
E) a plant being
grown hydroponically (in a watery mixture of designated nutrients)
B
When a plant cell, such as one from a peony stem, is submerged in a
very hypotonic solution, what is likely to occur?
A) The cell
will burst.
B) The cell membrane will lyse.
C) Plasmolysis
will shrink the interior.
D) The cell will become flaccid.
E) The cell will become turgid.
E
Which of the following membrane activities require energy from ATP
hydrolysis?
A) facilitated diffusion of chloride ions across the
membrane through a chloride channel
B) movement of water into a
cell
C) Na⁺ ions moving out of a mammalian cell bathed in
physiological saline
D) movement of glucose molecules into a
bacterial cell from a medium containing a higher concentration of
glucose than inside the cell
E) movement of carbon dioxide out
of a paramecium
C
what are the membrane structure that function in active transport?
a) peripheral proteins
b) carbohydrates
c) cholesterol
d) cytoskeleton filaments
e) integral proteins
E
glucose diffuses slowly through artificial phospholipid bilayers. the cells lining the small intestine, however, rapidly move large quantities of glucose from the glucose- rich food into their glucose- poor cytoplasm. using this information, which transport mechanism is most probably functioning in the intestinal cells?
a) simple diffusion
b) phagocytosis
c) exocytosis
d) faciliated diffusion
E
what is the voltage across a membrane called?
a) water potential
b) chemical gradient
c) membrane potential
d) osmotic potential
e) electrochemical gradient
C
in most cells, there are electrochemical gradient of many ions across the plasma membrane even though there are usually one one or two electrogenic pumps present in the membrane. the gradients of the other ions are most likely accounted for by
a) cotransport proteins
b) ion channels
c) carrier proteins
d)B and C only
e) A,B, and C
A
The sodium-potassium pump is called an electrogenic pump because it
A) pumps equal quantities of Na⁺ and K⁺ across the membrane.
B) pumps hydrogen ions out of the cell.
C) contributes to
the membrane potential.
D) ionizes sodium and potassium atoms.
E) is used to drive the transport of other molecules against a
concentration gradient.
C
If a membrane protein in an animal cell is involved in the cotransport of glucose and sodium ions into the cell, which of the following is most likely true?
A) The sodium ions are moving down their electrochemical gradient while glucose is moving up.
B) Glucose is entering the cell along its concentration gradient.
C) Sodium ions can move down their electrochemical gradient through the cotransporter whether or not glucose is present outside the cell.
D) Potassium ions move across the same gradient as sodium ions.
E) A substance that blocked sodium ions from binding to the cotransport protein would also block the transport of glucose.
E
the movement of potassium into an animal cell requires
A) low cellular concentrations of sodium.
B) high cellular concentrations of potassium.
C) an energy source such as ATP or a proton gradient.
D) a cotransport protein.
E) a gradient of protons across the plasma membrane.
C
Ions diffuse across membranes down their
A) chemical gradients.
B) concentration gradients.
C) electrical gradients.
D) electrochemical gradients.
E) A and B are correct.
D
What mechanisms do plants use to load sucrose produced by photosynthesis into specialized cells in the veins of leaves?
A) an electrogenic pump
B) a proton pump
C) a contransport protein
D) A and C only
E) A, B, and C
E
The sodium-potassium pump in animal cells requires cytoplasmic ATP to pump ions across the plasma membrane. When the proteins of the pump are first synthesized in the rough ER, what side of the ER membrane will the ATP binding site be on?
A) It will be on the cytoplasmic side of the ER.
B) It will be on the side facing the interior of the ER.
C) It could be facing in either direction because the orientation of proteins is scrambled in the Golgi apparatus.
D) It doesnʹt matter, because the pump is not active in the ER.
A
Proton pumps are used in various ways by members of every kingdom of organisms. What does this most probably mean?
A) Proton pumps must have evolved before any living organisms were present on the earth.
B) Proton pumps are fundamental to all cell types.
C) The high concentration of protons in the ancient atmosphere must have necessitated a pump mechanism.
D) Cells with proton pumps were maintained in each Kingdom by natural selection.
E) Proton pumps are necessary to all cell membranes.
D
Several seriously epidemic viral diseases of earlier centuries were then incurable because they resulted in severe dehydration due to vomiting and diarrhea. Today they are usually not fatal because we have developed which of the following?
A) antiviral medications that are efficient and work well with all viruses
B) antibiotics against the viruses in question
C) intravenous feeding techniques
D) medication to prevent blood loss
E) hydrating drinks that include high concentrations of salts and glucose
E
An organism with a cell wall would have the most difficulty doing which process?
A) diffusion
B) osmosis
C) active transport
D) phagocytosis
E) facilitated diffusion
D
White blood cells engulf bacteria through what process?
A) exocytosis
B) phagocytosis
C) pinocytosis
D) osmosis
E) receptor-mediated exocytosis
B
Familial hypercholesterolemia is characterized by which of the following? A) defective LDL receptors on the cell membranes
B) poor attachment of the cholesterol to the extracellular matrix of cells
C) a poorly formed lipid bilayer that cannot incorporate cholesterol into cell membranes
D) inhibition of the cholesterol active transport system in red blood cells
E) a general lack of glycolipids in the blood cell membranes
A
The difference between pinocytosis and receptor-mediated endocytosis is that
A) pinocytosis brings only water into the cell, but receptor-mediated endocytosis brings in other molecules as well.
B) pinocytosis increases the surface area of the plasma membrane whereas receptor -mediated endocytosis decreases the plasma membrane surface area.
C) pinocytosis is nonselective in the molecules it brings into the cell, whereas receptor-mediated endocytosis offers more selectivity.
D) pinocytosis requires cellular energy, but receptor-mediated endocytosis does not.
E) pinocytosis can concentrate substances from the extracellular fluid, but receptor-mediated endocytosis cannot.
A
In receptor-mediated endocytosis, receptor molecules initially project to the outside of the cell. Where do they end up after endocytosis?
A) on the outside of vesicles
B) on the inside surface of the cell membrane
C) on the inside surface of the vesicle
D) on the outer surface of the nucleus
E) on the ER
C
SQ
In what way do the membranes of a eukaryotic cell vary?
A) Phospholipids are found only in certain membranes.
B) Certain proteins are unique to each membrane.
C) Only certain membranes of the cell are selectively permeable.
D) Only certain membranes are constructed from amphipathic molecules.
E) Some membranes have hydrophobic surfaces exposed to the cytoplasm, while others have hydrophilic surfaces facing the cytoplasm.
B
According to the fluid mosaic model of membrane structure, proteins of the membrane are mostly
A) spread in a continuous layer over the inner and outer surfaces of the membrane.
B) confined to the hydrophobic core of the membrane.
C) embedded in a lipid bilayer.
D) randomly oriented in the membrane, with no fixed inside-outside polarity.
E) free to depart from the fluid membrane and dissolve in the surrounding solution.
C
sq
Which of the following factors would tend to increase membrane fluidity? A) a greater proportion of unsaturated phospholipids
B) a greater proportion of saturated phospholipids
C) a lower temperature
D) a relatively high protein content in the membrane
E) a greater proportion of relatively large glycolipids compared with lipids having smaller molecular masses
A
SQ
Which of the following processes includes all others?
A) osmosis
B) diffusion of a solute across a membrane
C) facilitated diffusion
D) passive transport
E) transport of an ion down its electrochemical gradient
D
Based on Figure 7.19 in your textbook, which of these experimental treatments would increase the rate of sucrose transport into the cell?
A) decreasing extracellular sucrose concentration
B) decreasing extracellular pH
C) decreasing cytoplasmic pH
D) adding an inhibitor that blocks the regeneration of ATP
E) adding a substance that makes the membrane more permeable to hydrogen ions
B
An artificial cell consisting of an aqueous solution enclosed in a selectively permeable membrane has just been immersed in a beaker containing a different solution. The membrane is permeable to water and to the simple sugars glucose and fructose but completely impermeable to the disaccharide sucrose. Which solute will exhibit a net diffusion into the cell, if the cell contains .03 sucrose and .02 glucose and out side is .01 sucrose glucose and fructose? Which solute will diffuse out of the cell? What type of solution exists outside the cell? and In which direction will there be net osmotic movement of water?
Fructose will diffuse into the cell (b/c .01M fruc is only outside)
Glucose will diffuse out of the cell (b/c theres a lower
concentration of glucose out side and it the only solute in the cell
than is permeable)
The tonicity of the enviornment outside the cell is hypotonic
Water would move into the cell