Biology Section Bank Flashcards

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1
Q

<p>if a substrate requires phosphorylation, which enzyme is most likely to suppress it?</p>

A

<p>A phosphatase is an enzyme that removes a phosphate group from its substrate. This makes it likely to suppress the substrate.</p>

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2
Q

<p>which components are made out of actin?</p>

A

<p>Microfilaments are made out of actin.</p>

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3
Q

<p>Which amino acids are the most likely to be phosphorylated?

The amino acids with the a free what group? </p>

A

<p>Within a protein, phosphorylation can occur on several amino acids. Phosphorylation on serine is the most common, followed by threonine. Tyrosine phosphorylation is relatively rare but is at the origin of protein phosphorylation signaling pathways in most of the eukaryotes.

OH GROUP

</p>

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4
Q

<p>which amino acid is least likely to be found in the transmembrane domains?</p>

A

<p>The amino acids that are not hydrophobic.

| </p>

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5
Q

<p>What are the hydrophobic amino acids?</p>

A

<p>lycine (Gly), alanine (Ala), valine (Val), leucine (Leu), isoleucine (Ile), proline (Pro), phenylalanine (Phe), methionine (Met), and tryptophan (Trp). </p>

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6
Q

<p>Alanine contains what type of side chain?</p>

A

<p>An unbranched alkane, just a methyl side chain.</p>

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7
Q

<p>The stereochemical designators alpha and beta distinguish between?</p>

A

<p>epimers (L and D configurations) only at anomeric carbons</p>

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8
Q

<p>Which solution would have the greatest osmotic pressure?</p>

A

<p>The one with the highest concentration and the one that can dissasociate into the most ions.</p>

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9
Q

<p>In order for a southern blot to be useful, the mutation should either ?</p>

A

<p>Create or eliminate a restriction site, most of them are palindromes.</p>

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10
Q

<p>DNA from a retroviral will be the same as?</p>

A

<p>The original viral genome will be the same as the trasncribed mRNA.</p>

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11
Q

<p>Competitive inhibition can be determined in what way?</p>

A

<p>Through rate experiment by applying the principles of Michaleis-Menten.

Keep the enzyme concentration constant, vary the substrate concentration, and either include or exclude the inhibitor</p>

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12
Q

<p>ow much would a monomer of 288 amino acids weight approximately? A tetramer? Per amino acid?</p>

A

<p>The average weight for an amino acid is 110 Da. A 288 amino acids will weight 32kDa. a tetramer would be 128kDa</p>

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13
Q

<p>A denaturing agent and reducing in gel electrophoresis would affect?</p>

A

<p>Denaturing agent will disrupt the interactions between monomers. A reducing agent will only disrupt any disulfide bonds.</p>

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14
Q

<p>In an experiment the Y-axis represents the? Where as the x-axis represents the?</p>

A

<p>The y-axis is the dependent variable. The x-axis is the independent variable.</p>

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15
Q

which amino acids are the polar ones?

A

Polar amino acids include serine, threonine, asparagine, glutamine, histidine and tyrosine.

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16
Q

<p>Repeat question 31 bio</p>

A

<p>31</p>

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17
Q

<p>A Hill coefficient greater than 1 means that?

If the Hill coefficient is essentially one it means that?</p>

A

<p>If the Hill coeficient is greater than one (2.25 was the example) it shows cooperativity.

If is essentially one (1.01 was the example) it does not show cooperativity. </p>

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18
Q

<p>What is the Hill coeficient and what does it measure?</p>

A

<p>The hill coefficient measured the degree of cooperativity of an enzyme.

cooperativity is a phenomenon displayed by systems involving identical or near-identical elements, which act dependently of each other, relative to a hypothetical standard non-interacting system in which the individual elements are acting independently. One manifestation of this is enzymes or receptors that have multiple binding sites where the affinity of the binding sites for a ligand is apparently increased, positive cooperativity, or decreased, negative cooperativity, upon the binding of a ligand to a binding site. For example, when an oxygen atom binds to one of hemoglobin's four binding sites, the affinity to oxygen of the three remaining available binding sites increases; i.e. oxygen is more likely to bind to a hemoglobin bound to one oxygen than to an unbound hemoglobin. This is referred to as cooperative binding.[1]</p>

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19
Q

<p>Describe the Lineweaver burk plot and variables for each of the inhibitors.</p>

A

<p>Good</p>

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20
Q

What is one of the amino acids that contain an amide as part of its side chain?

A

Glutamine

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21
Q

What is the strucutre of GTP?

A

Look it up

22
Q

Which amino acid is similar in size to serine and cannot be phosphorylated?

A

Alanine. It can choosen a s substitude if that is what you want.

23
Q

Different combination of exons produce?

A

Different protein isoforms.

24
Q

Ovarian cells are what type of cells? Osteoclasts?

A

Epithelial and connective.

25
Q

Hormones that must bind transport protein are what type of hormones?

A

Steroid proteins.

26
Q

If more than one band appear on the SDS-PAGE under reducing conditions this means that?

A

Reducing condition on a SDS-PAGE are used to cleave disulfide bonds.

So if a reducing condition was used and it led to two bands, it means that at least one disufide bond is present and in the protein and the bond(s) hold two separate subunits of different masses.

27
Q

Phosphodiester bonds link?

A

Adjacent nucleotides in DNA.

28
Q

An enzyme is more effectively inhibited by uncompetitive inhibitors when?

A

The substrate and the inhibitor is increased. This is because uncompetitive inhibitors bind to the ES complex so the substrate needs to increase as well to have more ES complexes.

29
Q

A signal sequence domain is required for?

A

Proteins that are directed towards secretory pathways.

30
Q

Gln and Asn are both?

A

glutamine and asparigine are polar aminoacids

31
Q

which method helps separate proteins based on charge?

A

Isoelectric focusing and Ion-exchange chromatography

Isoelectric Focusing separates proteins based on their isoelectric point (the pH at which the net charge of the protein is zero).

Ion exchange chromatography sperates proteins based on their net charge.

32
Q

SDS-PAGE separates proteins based on their? and affinity chromatography separates them on?

A

SDS-PAGE separates proteins based on their mass.

Affinity chromatography separates proteins based on their interactions with specific ligands.

33
Q

During the conversion of alpha-ketoglutarate to axaloacetate in the citric acid cycle how many moleciles of reuced electron carrier are generated?

A

THREE. Tow NADH and one FADH2

34
Q

Glucose-6-phosphate is used in both?

A

Gluconeogenesis and glycogenolysis. It catalyses the final step of both processes.

35
Q

Catalytic efficiency in the absence of Kcat can be calculated by?

A

Vmax/Km

36
Q

which amino acid would interact with D?

A

Arginine

37
Q

Which enzymes are likely used in cDNA cloning? Which one would not?

A

DNA polymerase, DNA ligase, Reverse Transcriptase

RNA polymerase

38
Q

The increase of the Kd by a amino acid substitution results in?

A

decreased stability of the protein. Also changing the an aromatic amino acid like tryptophan (W) for a polar but not aromatic will result in the decreased stability due to the elimation of a pie-stacking interaction with the side chain of W.

39
Q

which compounds are used as starting materials in gluconeogensis?

A

Lactate, oxaloacetate, and α-ketoglutarate.

40
Q

Following glucagon binding to its receptors it results in what? and and it also results in what?

A

following glucagon binding to its receptors it results in activation of its coupled G protein, activates adenylate cyclase and the protein kinase A, and the level of cAMP are all increased.

Activation of the G protein promotes the dissasociation of bound GDP and its exchange for GTP on the alpha subunit.

41
Q

The rate limiting step of in glycogen breakdown (glycogenolysis) is done by?

A

Glycogen phosphorylase.

42
Q

How are glucose polymers in liver (glycogen) formed by glycosidic bonds?

A

The glycosidic bonds between glucose molecules in glycogen are through α(1–>4) linkage linearly and α(1–>6) linkage at branch points

43
Q

Which compounds are gluconeogenic precursors and which is not?

Lactate, Glycerol, oxaloacetate, phosphogluconate

A

Lactate, Glycerol, and oxaloacetate are gluconeogenic precursors.

phosphogluconate is involved in the pentose phosphate pathway and is not a precursor or substrate of gluconeogenesis.

44
Q

A reversible reaction catalyzed in the forward direction by a kinase can be catalyzed in the reverse direction by which type of enzyme?

A

Phosphatase, which removes the phosphate whereas kinases add them.

45
Q

Increased activity of succinyl-CoA synthase will most likely result in?

A

Decreased levesl of succynil-CoA given that this is the substrate. It will also result in greater level of the reaction products which are succinate and GTP.

46
Q

The pentose pathway results in the generation of between other compounds?

A

NADPH, which is utilized in reductive reactions.

47
Q

The Vmax of a reaction is altered by which inhibitors?

A

Noncompetitive, uncompetitive, and mixed.

And not by the competitive inhibitor.

48
Q

Define mixed inhibitors.

A

is called “mixed” because it can be seen as a conceptual “mixture” of competitive inhibition, in which the inhibitor can only bind the enzyme if the substrate has not already bound, and uncompetitive inhibition, in which the inhibitor can only bind the enzyme if the substrate has already bound.

49
Q

Mixed inhibitors effect on Km and Vmax?

A

Always decreases Vmax and may increase or decrease Km.

50
Q

lipoic acid is a cofactor for the enzyme? which catalyses the conversion of?

A

acid is a cofactor for the enzyme pyruvate dehydrogenase and it catayses the conversion of pyruvate to acetyl_CoA

51
Q

For any given gene, the template strand is complementary to?

A

The coding strand and the mRNA.

52
Q

Southern blotting is used for?

A

It is used to detect a particular sequence in a sample of DNA. Not useful for analyzing gene expression.