BIO ch11
Using the yeast signal transduction pathways, both types of mating cells release the mating factors. These factors bind to specific receptors on the correct cells,
A) which induce changes in the cells that lead to cell fusion.
B) which produce more of the a factor in a positive feedback.
C) then one cell nucleus binds the mating factors and produces a
new nucleus in the opposite cell.
D) stimulating cell membrane
disintegration, releasing the mating factors that lead to new yeast
cells.
E) which in turn releases a growth factor that stimulates
mitosis in both cells.
Answer: A
What is most likely to happen to an animal's target cells that lack
receptors for local regulators?
A) They might compensate by
receiving nutrients via a factor.
B) They could develop normally
in response to neurotransmitters instead.
C) They could divide
but never reach full size.
D) They might not be able to multiply
in response to growth factors from nearby cells.
E) Hormones
would not be able to interact with target cells.
Answer: D
Which of the following is a likely explanation of why natural
selection favored the evolution of signals for sexual reproduction?
A) Even in the simplest organisms, sexual reproduction required
several coordinated responses by cells.
B) Multicellular
eukaryotes required signals that were responded to by multiple organ
systems.
C) Cells of several kinds of mating types needed to
sort themselves to allow self-recognition.
D) Rooted plants
required chemical diffusible signals that could travel throughout the
organism.
E) Hormones required a mechanism for introducing
changes in their target tissues.
Answer: A
Which of the following is characterized by a cell releasing a signal
molecule into the environment, followed by a number of cells in the
immediate vicinity responding?
A) hormonal signaling
B)
autocrine signaling
C) paracrine signaling
D) endocrine
signaling
E) synaptic signaling
Answer: C
In the formation of biofilms, such as those forming on unbrushed
teeth, cell signaling serves which function?
A) formation of
mating complexes
B) secretion of apoptotic signals
C)
aggregation of bacteria that can cause cavities
D) secretion of
substances that inhibit foreign bacteria
E) digestion of
unwanted parasite populations
Answer: C
In yeast signal transduction, the yeast cells
A) must
physically and directly interact.
B) produce signal molecules
that change themselves so they can interact with one another.
C)
produce response molecules that diffuse to other yeast cells.
D)
secrete molecules that result in response by other yeast cells.
E) mate, after which the new cells secrete hybrid signals.
Answer: D
In which of the following ways do plant hormones differ from hormones
in animals?
A) Plant hormones interact primarily with
intracellular receptors.
B) Plant hormones may travel in air or
through vascular systems.
C) Animal hormones are found in much
greater concentration.
D) Plant hormones are synthesized from
two or more distinct molecules.
E) Animal hormones are primarily
for mating and embryonic development.
Answer: B
In an experiment to track the movement of growth factor molecules
from secretion to the point of receptor binding in a particular
species of mammal, a student found a 20-fold reduction in mm traveled
when in the presence of an adrenal hormone. This is in part
attributable to which of the following?
A) The growth factor is
a paracrine signal.
B) The growth factor depends on osmosis.
C) The mammal only carries growth factor through the lymph.
D) The growth factor is an exocrine signal.
E) The growth
factor is an endocrine signal.
Answer: A
When a neuron responds to a particular neurotransmitter by opening
gated ion channels, the neurotransmitter is serving as which part of
the signal pathway?
A) receptor
B) relay molecule
C)
transducer
D) signal molecule
E) endocrine molecule
Answer: D
Of the following, a receptor protein in a membrane that recognizes a
chemical signal is most similar to
A) the active site of an
allosteric enzyme that binds to a specific substrate.
B) tRNA
specifying which amino acids are in a polypeptide.
C) a
metabolic pathway operating within a specific organelle.
D) an
enzyme having an optimum pH and temperature for activity.
E) an
antibody in the immune system.
Answer: A
Which of the following is true for the signaling system in an animal
cell that lacks the ability to produce GTP?
A) It would not be
able to activate and inactivate the G protein on the cytoplasmic side
of the plasma membrane.
B) It could activate only the
epinephrine system.
C) It would be able to carry out reception
and transduction but would not be able to respond to a signal.
D) It would use ATP instead of GTP to activate and inactivate
the G protein on the cytoplasmic side of the plasma membrane.
E)
It would employ a transduction pathway directly from an external messenger.
Answer: A
Testosterone functions inside a cell by
A) acting as a signal
receptor that activates tyrosine kinases.
B) binding with a
receptor protein that enters the nucleus and activates specific genes.
C) acting as a steroid signal receptor that activates ion
channel proteins.
D) becoming a second messenger that inhibits
adenylyl cyclase.
E) coordinating a phosphorylation cascade that
increases spermatogenesis.
Answer: B
Which of the following is true of transcription factors?
A)
They regulate the synthesis of DNA in response to a signal.
B)
They transcribe ATP into cAMP.
C) They initiate the epinephrine
response in animal cells.
D) They control gene expression.
E) They regulate the synthesis of lipids in the cytoplasm.
Answer: D
One of the major categories of receptors in the plasma membrane
reacts by forming dimers, adding phosphate groups, and then activating
relay proteins. Which type does this?
A) G protein-coupled
receptors
B) ligand-gated ion channels
C) steroid
receptors
D) receptor tyrosine kinases
Answer: D
Because most receptors are membrane proteins, which of the following
is usually true?
A) They lead to changes in intracellular ion
concentration.
B) They open and close in response to protein
signals.
C) They are only attached to one membrane surface:
exterior or interior.
D) They preferentially bind with lipid or
glycolipid signal molecules.
E) They change their conformation
after binding with signal polypeptides.
Answer: E
Since steroid receptors are located intracellularly, which of the
following is true?
A) The receptor molecules are themselves
lipids or glycolipids.
B) The steroid/receptor complex can cross
the nuclear membrane.
C) The unbound steroid receptors are
quickly recycled by lysosomes.
D) The concentration of steroid
receptors must be relatively high in most cells.
E) The receptor
molecules are free to move in and out of most organelles.
Answer: B
Receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) are found at high levels on various
cancer cells. A protein, Herceptin, has been found to bind to an RTK
known as HER2. This information can now be utilized in breast cancer
treatment if which of the following is true?
A) If Herceptin is
found in the breast lymph nodes of the patient.
B) If HER2,
administered by injection, is in sufficient concentration.
C) If
the patient's cancer cells have detectable HER2.
D) If the
patient's genome codes for the HER2 receptor.
E) If the
patient's genome codes for the manufacture of Herceptin.
Answer: C
The receptors for a group of signaling molecules known as growth
factors are often
A) ligand-gated ion channels.
B) G
protein-coupled receptors.
C) cyclic AMP.
D) receptor
tyrosine kinases.
E) neurotransmitters.
Answer: D
In general, a signal transmitted via phosphorylation of a series of
proteins
A) brings a conformational change to each protein.
B) requires binding of a hormone to a cytosol receptor.
C)
cannot occur in yeasts because they lack protein phosphatases.
D) requires phosphorylase activity.
E) allows target cells
to change their shape and therefore their activity.
Answer: A
Sutherland discovered that epinephrine signals
A) a decrease in
levels of cAMP as a result of bypassing the plasma membrane.
B)
lower blood glucose by binding to liver cells.
C) interactions
with insulin inside muscle cells.
D) interactions directly with
glycogen phosphorylase.
E) elevation of cytosolic concentrations
of cyclic AMP.
Answer: E
Which of the following is the best explanation for the inability of a
specific animal cell to reduce the Ca2⁺ concentration in its cytosol
compared with the extracellular fluid?
A) blockage of the
synaptic signal
B) loss of transcription factors
C)
insufficient ATP levels in the cytoplasm
D) low oxygen
concentration around the cell
E) low levels of protein kinase in
the cell
Answer: C
The toxin of Vibrio cholerae causes profuse diarrhea because it
A) modifies a G protein involved in regulating salt and water
secretion.
B) decreases the cytosolic concentration of calcium
ions, making the cells hypotonic.
C) binds with adenylyl cyclase
and triggers the formation of cAMP.
D) signals IP3 to act as a
second messenger for the release of calcium.
E) modifies
calmodulin and activates a cascade of protein kinases.
Answer: A
Which of the following would be inhibited by a drug that specifically
blocks the addition of phosphate groups to proteins?
A) G
protein-coupled receptor signaling
B) ligand-gated ion channel
signaling
C) adenylyl cyclase activity
D) phosphatase
activity
E) receptor tyrosine kinase activity
Answer: E
Which of the following most likely would be an immediate result of
growth factor binding to its receptor?
A) protein kinase
activity
B) adenylyl cyclase activity
C) GTPase activity
D) protein phosphatase activity
E) phosphorylase activity
Answer: A
An inhibitor of phosphodiesterase activity would have which of the
following effects?
A) block the response of epinephrine
B)
decrease the amount of cAMP in the cytoplasm
C) block the
activation of G proteins in response to epinephrine binding to its
receptor
D) prolong the effect of epinephrine by maintaining
elevated cAMP levels in the cytoplasm
E) block the activation of
protein kinase A
Answer: D
Adenylyl cyclase has the opposite effect of which of the following?
A) protein kinase
B) protein phosphatase
C)
phosphodiesterase
D) phosphorylase
E) GTPase
Answer: C
Caffeine is an inhibitor of phosphodiesterase. Therefore, the cells
of a person who has recently consumed coffee would have increased
levels of
A) phosphorylated proteins.
B) GTP.
C)
cAMP.
D) adenylyl cyclase.
E) activated G proteins.
Answer: C
If a pharmaceutical company wished to design a drug to maintain low
blood sugar levels, one approach might be to design a compound
A) that activates epinephrine receptors.
B) that increases
cAMP production in liver cells.
C) to block G protein activity
in liver cells.
D) that increases phosphorylase activity.
E) that keeps sugar molecules from crossing the plasma membrane
of liver cells.
Answer: C
If a pharmaceutical company wished to design a drug to maintain low
blood sugar levels, one approach might be to design a compound
A) that mimics epinephrine and can bind to the epinephrine
receptor.
B) that stimulates cAMP production in liver cells.
C) to stimulate G protein activity in liver cells.
D) that
increases phosphodiesterase activity.
E) that does any of the above.
Answer: D
An inhibitor of which of the following could be used to block the
release of calcium from the endoplasmic reticulum?
A) tyrosine
kinases
B) serine/threonine kinases
C) phosphodiesterase
D) phospholipase C
E) adenylyl cyclase
Answer: D
Which of the following statements is true of signal molecules?
A) When signal molecules first bind to receptor tyrosine
kinases, the receptors phosphorylate a number of nearby molecules.
B) In response to some G protein-mediated signals, a special
type of lipid molecule associated with the plasma membrane is cleaved
to form IP₃ and calcium.
C) In most cases, signal molecules
interact with the cell at the plasma membrane and then enter the cell
and eventually the nucleus.
D) Toxins such as those that cause
botulism and cholera interfere with the ability of activated G
proteins to hydrolyze GTP to GDP, resulting in phosphodiesterase
activity in the absence of an appropriate signal molecule.
E)
Protein kinase A activation is one possible result of signal molecules
binding to G protein-coupled receptors.
Answer: E
Which of the following is a correct association?
A) kinase
activity and the addition of a tyrosine
B) phosphodiesterase
activity and the removal of phosphate groups
C) GTPase activity
and hydrolysis of GTP to GDP
D) phosphorylase activity and the
catabolism of glucose
E) adenylyl cyclase activity and the
conversion of cAMP to AMP
Answer: C
One inhibitor of cGMP is Viagra. It provides a signal that leads to
dilation of blood vessels and increase of blood in the penis,
facilitating erection. Since cGMP is inhibited, the signal is
prolonged. The original signal that is now inhibited would have
A) hydrolyzed cGMP to GMP.
B) hydrolyzed GTP to GDP.
C) phosphorylated GDP.
D) dephosphorylated cGMP.
E)
removed GMP from the cell.
Answer: A
Which of the following is the best explanation for the fact that most
transduction pathways have multiple steps?
A) Most of the steps
were already in place because they are steps in other pathways.
B) Multiple steps in a pathway require the least amount of ATP.
C) Multiple steps provide for greater possible amplification of
a signal.
D) Each individual step can remove excess phosphate
groups from the cytoplasm.
E) Each step can be activated by
several G proteins simultaneously.
Answer: C
Which of the following amino acids are most frequently phosphorylated
by protein kinases in the cytoplasm during signal transduction?
A) tyrosines
B) glycine and histidine
C) serine and
threonine
D) glycine and glutamic acid
E) Any of the 20
amino acids are equally phosphorylated.
Answer: C
The function of phosphatases in signal transduction is best described
as to
A) move the phosphate group of the transduction pathway to
the next molecule of a series.
B) prevent a protein kinase from
being reused when there is another extracellular signal.
C)
amplify the transduction signal so it affects multiple transducers.
D) amplify the second messengers such as cAMP.
E)
inactivate protein kinases and turn off the signal transduction.
Answer: E
What explains the increased concentration of Ca⁺⁺ in the ER?
A)
Calcium ions are actively imported from the cytoplasm into the ER.
B) Calcium concentration is kept low in the cytoplasm because of
its high usage level.
C) Calcium cannot enter the plasma
membrane through ion channels.
D) Calcium levels in the blood or
other body fluids are extremely low.
E) The Ca ions are recycled
from other molecules in the ER.
Answer: A
In which of the following ways could signal transduction most
probably be explored in research to treat cancer?
A) removal of
serine/threonine phosphate acceptors from transduction pathways in
colon pre-cancerous growths
B) alteration of protein kinases in
cell cycle regulation in order to slow cancer growth
C) increase
in calcium ion uptake into the cytoplasm in order to modulate the
effects of environmental carcinogens
D) expansion of the role of
transduction inhibitors in the cells before they give rise to cancer
E) increase in the concentration of phosphodiesterases in order
to produce more AMP
Answer: B
A drug designed to inhibit the response of cells to testosterone
would almost certainly result in which of the following?
A)
lower cytoplasmic levels of cAMP
B) an increase in receptor
tyrosine kinase activity
C) a decrease in transcriptional
activity of certain genes
D) an increase in cytosolic calcium
concentration
E) a decrease in G protein activity
Answer: C
At puberty, an adolescent female body changes in both structure and
function of several organ systems, primarily under the influence of
changing concentrations of estrogens and other steroid hormones. How
can one hormone, such as estrogen, mediate so many effects?
A)
Estrogen is produced in very large concentration and therefore
diffuses widely.
B) Estrogen has specific receptors inside
several cell types, but each cell responds in the same way to its
binding.
C) Estrogen is kept away from the surface of any cells
not able to bind it at the surface.
D) Estrogen binds to
specific receptors inside many kinds of cells, each of which have
different responses to its binding.
E) The subcomponents of
estrogen, when metabolized, can influence cell response.
Answer: D
What are scaffolding proteins?
A) ladderlike proteins that
allow receptor-ligand complexes to climb through cells from one
position to another
B) microtubular protein arrays that allow
lipid-soluble hormones to get from the cell membrane to the nuclear
pores
C) large molecules to which several relay proteins attach
to facilitate cascade effects
D) relay proteins that orient
receptors and their ligands in appropriate directions to facilitate
their complexing
E) proteins that can reach into the nucleus of
a cell to affect transcription
Answer: C
The termination phase of cell signaling requires which of the
following?
A) removal of the receptor
B) activation of a
different set of relay molecules
C) converting ATP to camp
D) incompatibility of the binding of the signal molecule to the
receptor
E) apoptosis
Answer: D
GTPase activity is involved in the regulation of signal transduction
because it
A) increases the available concentration of
phosphate.
B) decreases the amount of G protein in the membrane.
C) hydrolyzes GTP binding to G protein.
D) converts cGMP
to GTP.
E) phosphorylates protein kinases.
Answer: C
Why has C. elegans proven to be a useful model for understanding
apoptosis?
A) The animal has as many genes as complex organisms,
but finding those responsible is easier than in a more complex
organism.
B) The nematode undergoes a fixed and
easy-to-visualize number of apoptotic events during its normal
development.
C) This plant has a long-studied aging mechanism
that has made understanding its death just a last stage.
D)
While the organism ages, its cells die progressively until the whole
organism is dead.
E) All of its genes are constantly being
expressed so all of its proteins are available from each cell.
Answer: B
Which of the following describes the events of apoptosis?
A)
The cell dies, it is lysed, its organelles are phagocytized, and its
contents are recycled.
B) Its DNA and organelles become
fragmented, it dies, and it is phagocytized.
C) The cell dies
and the presence of its fragmented contents stimulates nearby cells to
divide.
D) Its DNA and organelles are fragmented, the cell
shrinks and forms blebs, and the cell self-digests.
E) Its
nucleus and organelles are lysed, then the cell enlarges and bursts.
Answer: D
If an adult person has a faulty version of the human analog to ced-4
of the nematode, which of the following is most likely to result?
A) neurodegeneration
B) activation of a developmental
pathway found in the worm but not in humans
C) a form of cancer
in which there is insufficient apoptosis
D) webbing of fingers
or toes
E) excess skin exfoliation
Answer: C
Why is apoptosis potentially threatening to the healthy
"neighbors" of a dying cell?
A) Cell death would
usually spread from one cell to the next via paracrine signals.
B) Lysosomal enzymes exiting the dying cell would damage
surrounding cells.
C) Released cellular energy would interfere
with the neighbors' energy budget.
D) Bits of membrane from the
dying cell could merge with neighbors and bring in foreign receptors.
E) Neighboring cells would activate immunological responses.
Answer: B
In C. elegans, ced-9 prevents apoptosis in a normal cell in which of
the following ways?
A) It prevents the caspase activity of ced-3
and ced-4.
B) Ced-9 remains inactive until it is signaled by
ced-3 and other caspases.
C) Ced-9 cleaves to produce ced-3 and
ced-4.
D) Ced-9 enters the nucleus and activates apoptotic
genes.
E) Ced-9 prevents blebbing by its action on the cell membrane.
Answer: A
In research on aging (both cellular aging and organismal aging), it
has been found that aged cells do not progress through the cell cycle
as they had previously. Which of the following would provide evidence
that this is related to cell signaling?
A) Growth factor ligands
do not bind as efficiently to receptors.
B) Their lower hormone
concentrations elicit a lesser response.
C) cAMP levels change
very frequently.
D) Enzymatic activity declines.
E) ATP
production decreases.
Answer: A
Where do apoptotic signals come from?
A) the nucleus only
B) the ER only
C) ligand binding only
D)
mitochondrial protein leakage only
E) all of the above
Answer: E
The human population's life expectancy has increased significantly
but seems to have an upper limit. Which of the following might be
described as an ecological consequence of passing that upper limit by
regulating cell death?
A) an increase in the relative frequency
of deaths from cancer
B) an increased need for gerontologists
and other professionals to care for the elderly
C) an increase
in the total population of humans on the planet
D) a decrease in
the ratio of younger to older members of the population
E) a
decrease in the birth rate
Answer: C
Which of the following types of signaling is represented in the
figure?
A) autocrine
B) paracrine
C) hormonal
D) synaptic
E) long distance
Answer: D
In the figure, the dots in the space between the two structures
represent which of the following?
A) receptor molecules
B)
signal transducers
C) neurotransmitters
D) hormones
E) pheromones
Answer: C
A major group of G protein-coupled receptors contains seven transmembrane α helices. The amino end of the protein lies at the exterior of the plasma membrane. Loops of amino acids connect the helices either at the exterior face or on the cytosol face of the membrane. The loop on the cytosol side between helices 5 and 6 is usually substantially longer than the others.
Where would you expect to find the carboxyl end?
A) at the
exterior surface
B) at the cytosol surface
C) connected
with the loop at H5 and H6
D) between the membrane layers
Answer: B
A major group of G protein-coupled receptors contains seven transmembrane α helices. The amino end of the protein lies at the exterior of the plasma membrane. Loops of amino acids connect the helices either at the exterior face or on the cytosol face of the membrane. The loop on the cytosol side between helices 5 and 6 is usually substantially longer than the others.
The coupled G protein most likely interacts with this receptor
A) at the NH₃ end.
B) at the COO– end.
C) along the
exterior margin.
D) along the interior margin.
E) at the
loop between H5 and H6.
Answer: E
A major group of G protein-coupled receptors contains seven transmembrane α helices. The amino end of the protein lies at the exterior of the plasma membrane. Loops of amino acids connect the helices either at the exterior face or on the cytosol face of the membrane. The loop on the cytosol side between helices 5 and 6 is usually substantially longer than the others.
If you wish to design an experiment to block the G protein-coupled receptor interaction, the block would preferentially affect which of the following?
A) the exterior (cytoplasmic) end of the receptor
B) the
cytosolic end of the receptor
C) the phospholipid's
transmembrane domain
D) the amino acid sequence in the binding
site for the G protein
E) the amino acids in the binding site
for the transduction molecules
Answer: D
Phosphorylation cascades involving a series of protein kinases are
useful for cellular signal transduction because
A) they are
species specific.
B) they always lead to the same cellular
response.
C) they amplify the original signal manyfold.
D)
they counter the harmful effects of phosphatases.
E) the number
of molecules used is small and fixed.
Answer: C
Binding of a signaling molecule to which type of receptor leads directly to a change in the distribution of ions on opposite sides of the membrane?
A) receptor tyrosine kinase
B) G protein-coupled receptor
C) phosphorylated receptor tyrosine kinase dimer
D)
ligand-gated ion channel
E) intracellular receptor
Answer: D
The activation of receptor tyrosine kinases is characterized by
A) dimerization and phosphorylation.
B) dimerization and
IP3 binding.
C) a phosphorylation cascade.
D) GTP
hydrolysis.
E) channel protein shape change.
Answer: A
Lipid-soluble signaling molecules, such as testosterone, cross the
membranes of all cells but affect only target cells because
A)
only target cells retain the appropriate DNA segments.
B)
intracellular receptors are present only in target cells.
C)
most cells lack the Y chromosome required.
D) only target cells
possess the cytosolic enzymes that transduce the testosterone.
E) only in target cells is testosterone able to initiate the
phosphorylation cascade leading to activated transcription factor.
Answer: B
Consider this pathway: epinephrine → G protein-coupled receptor → G
protein → adenylyl cyclase → cAMP. Identify the second messenger.
A) cAMP
B) G protein
C) GTP
D) adenylyl
cyclase
E) G protein-coupled receptor
Answer: A
Apoptosis involves all but which of the following?
A)
fragmentation of the DNA
B) cell-signaling pathways
C)
activation of cellular enzymes
D) lysis of the cell
E)
digestion of cellular contents by scavenger cells
Answer: D
Which observation suggested to Sutherland the involvement of a second
messenger in epinephrine's effect on liver cells?
A) Enzymatic
activity was proportional to the amount of calcium added to a
cell-free extract.
B) Receptor studies indicated that
epinephrine was a ligand.
C) Glycogen breakdown was observed
only when epinephrine was administered to intact cells.
D)
Glycogen breakdown was observed when epinephrine and glycogen
phosphorylase were combined.
E) Epinephrine was known to have
different effects on different types of cells.
Answer: C
Protein phosphorylation is commonly involved with all of the
following except
A) regulation of transcription by extracellular
signaling molecules.
B) enzyme activation.
C) activation
of G protein-coupled receptors.
D) activation of receptor
tyrosine kinases.
E) activation of protein kinase molecules.
Answer: C