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Example Questions
Example Question #177 : Cell Structures
In which cellular compartment does glycolysis take place?
Intermembrane space
Mitochondrial matrix
Cytoplasm (Cytosol)
Golgi apparatus
Inner mitochondrial membrane
Cytoplasm (Cytosol)
Glycolysis (the process of breaking down glucose) takes place in the cytoplasm, or cytosol—the aqueous portion of the cytoplasm. It is in the cytoplasm where the enzymes required for glycolysis are found.
The citric acid cycle takes place in the mitochondrial matrix, and the electron transport chain takes place along the inner mitochondrial membrane in order to pump protons into the intermembrane space.
Example Question #178 : Cell Structures
What is the function of a kinase?
Remove phosphates from ligands
Add phosphates to ligands
Add ubiquitin to the ligand
Change the structure of the ligand
Add phosphates to ligands
The addition and removal of phosphate groups can serve critical functions in the regulation of protein activity. The binding or uncoupling of phosphate groups frequently serves to activate or deactivate proteins.
A kinase is an enzyme that phosphorylates—or adds a phosphate group to—its ligand.
A phosphatase removes a phosphate group from its ligand.
Several different types of proteins can change the structure of a ligand, such as isomerases, and ubiquitin ligases add ubiquitin to their ligands.
Example Question #11 : Transport And Signaling
What is the function of a phosphatase?
Remove a phosphate from its ligand
Add a phosphate to its ligand
Add an ubiquitin to its ligand
Change the structure of its ligand
Remove a phosphate from its ligand
The addition and removal of phosphate groups can serve critical functions in the regulation of protein activity. The binding or uncoupling of phosphate groups frequently serves to activate or deactivate proteins.
A phosphatase removes a phosphate group from its ligand.
A kinase is an enzyme that phosphorylates—or adds a phosphate group to—its ligand.
Several different types of proteins can change the structure of a ligand, such as isomerases, and ubiquitin ligases add ubiquitin to their ligands.
Example Question #12 : Transport And Signaling
What is the function of an ubiquitin ligase?
Remove an ubiquitin from its ligand
Add a phosphate to its ligand
Add an ubiquitin to its ligand
Remove a phosphate from its ligand
Add an ubiquitin to its ligand
Ubiquitin ligases add ubiquitin to their ligands. The addition of ubiquitin acts as a signal that a protein has become ineffective and is ready for degradation. When multiple ubiquitin residues have been added to a protein molecule, it is transported to the lysosome in the cell to be digested.
A phosphatase removes a phosphate group from its ligand.
A kinase is an enzyme that phosphorylates—or adds a phosphate group to—its ligand.
The addition and removal of phosphate groups can serve critical functions in the regulation of protein activity. The binding or uncoupling of phosphate groups frequently serves to activate or deactivate proteins.
Several different types of proteins can change the structure of a ligand, such as isomerases.
Example Question #13 : Transport And Signaling
In regard to cellular membranes, what does it mean to be selectively permeable?
Molecules and ions can pass freely through the phospholipid bilayer
Molecules and ions are always kept to the exterior of the phospholipid bilayer
Polarization of the cell membrane allows for no entrance of foreign molecules or ions
Polarization of the cell membrane allows for passive transport of all foreign molecules or ions
Molecules and ions outside the cell are selected to enter the cell via active or passive transport through the phospholipid bilayer
Molecules and ions outside the cell are selected to enter the cell via active or passive transport through the phospholipid bilayer
A cell must exchange molecules and ions with its surroundings. This process is controlled by the selective permeability of the plasma membrane. Passive transport requires no energy from the cell; molecules like water can diffuse into and out of the cell through the phospholipid bilayer freely by way of osmosis. Other molecules and ions, like sodium, are actively transported across the phospholipid bilayer. This requires ATP created by the cell. Active transport moves solutes against their concentration gradients, which is why it requires energy.
Example Question #14 : Transport And Signaling
Which of the following is NOT true of the cytoplasmic protein structures known as tonofibrils?
They converge at desmosomes and hemidesmosomes.
They are primarily made of kertain tonofilaments.
They are most typically anchored to the cytoskeleton.
They are primarily found in endocrine tissues.
The protein filaggrin is thought to hold them together.
They are primarily found in endocrine tissues.
Tonofibrils are groups of keratin tonofilaments (intermediate filaments) most commonly found in the epithelial tissues, not endocrine tissues, and which play an important structural role in cell makeup.
Example Question #11 : Transport And Signaling
What is the primary purpose of secondary messenger systems? In other words, what can a secondary messenger do in the body that a first messenger cannot?
Secondary messengers can take up extra space in a cell, thus limiting the ability of other chemical reactions to interfere with cell processes.
None of these describe the unique role of secondary messengers.
Secondary messengers are able to bind to membranes, anchoring themselves in one place, whereas primary messengers float freely throughout the cell body and are unreliable.
Secondary messengers are capable of crossing the phospholipid bilayer cell membrane, whereas primary messengers often are not.
Secondary messengers help primary messengers cross the phospholipid bilayer by making them hydrophilic or hydrophobic.
Secondary messengers are capable of crossing the phospholipid bilayer cell membrane, whereas primary messengers often are not.
The primary ability of secondary messengers is their ability to leave the cell membrane and travel through the phospholipid bilayer by being selectively hydrophilic or -phobic, allowing egress. This enables, for example, a cascade effect that greatly amplifies the strength of the original primary messenger signal.
Example Question #12 : Transport And Signaling
Which of the following is NOT an example of a second messenger molecule?
Diacylglycerol
Calcium
Protein kinase C
Cyclic AMP
Cyclic GMP
Protein kinase C
All of the examples listed are considered second messengers except for protein kinase C, which interacts with second messenger pathways as an effector; however, it is not a second messenger itself.
Recall that second messengers are used to amplify signals within the cell. A ligand may bind to a receptor on the cell surface in order to activate a signaling cascade. Second messagers will help propagate this cascade throughout the cytosol. The messengers essentially help transfer the signal from the receptor on the cell membrane to the proteins in the cytosol that will ultimately be affected.
Example Question #12 : Transport And Signaling
Second messenger cascades can be triggered by the binding of an extracellular ligand to a membrane-spanning G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR).
Which of the following best describes what happens to the GPCR after a ligand has bound to it?
The GPCR opens to permit an influx of sodium ions (Na+)
The GPCR remains unchanged, as no covalent modifications have been made
The GPCR become inactivated
The GPCR undergoes a conformational change, making a binding site available for a G-protein within the cytosol
The GPCR is released from the membrane and enters the intracellular space to trigger downstream signaling cascades
The GPCR undergoes a conformational change, making a binding site available for a G-protein within the cytosol
G-protein coupled receptors begin the signal transduction pathway by interacting with intracellular G-proteins. This interaction isn't possible until a ligand forces a conformational change in the GPCR, thereby freeing up a site for the G-protein to bind. This interaction permits the G-protein to exchange a GDP for a GTP, thereby activating the G-protein and continuing signal transduction.
Example Question #13 : Transport And Signaling
Which of the following is NOT a primary benefit of utilizing second messengers to transduce signals within a cell?
Second messengers give cells direct access to extracellular material by permeabilizing the membrane
Second messengers eliminate the need for molecules to cross the semi-permeable membrane
Second messengers can activate more than one pathway
Second messengers permit amplification of the signal
Second messengers permit fine-tuned modulation of the signal through various intracellular enzymes
Second messengers give cells direct access to extracellular material by permeabilizing the membrane
The ligand binds the receptor on its extracellular terminus; therefore the ligand itself never enters the cell or passes through the membrane. Second messengers let the cell 'know' what is happening on the outside, but these extracellular molecules do not directly enter the cell.
All of the other answers describe benefits of the second messenger system.
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