Nitrogen 1 Flashcards
<p>What is nitrogen metabolism also known as?</p>
<p>Amino acid metabolism</p>
<p>What kinds of molecules contain nitrogen?</p>
<p>Amino acids and nucleotides</p>
<p>Where do we get our nitrogen from?</p>
<p>Our diet, not the air</p>
<p>What are the 2 stages of the nitrogen cycle in organmisms?</p>
<p>Assimilation</p>
<p>Degradation</p>
<p>Why is nitrogen very unreactive?</p>
<p>Nitrogen is bonded to another nitrogen with a triple bond</p>
<p>What are 3 things that supply the massive amound of energy required to breakdown nitrogen?</p>
<p>Lighting</p>
<p>450oC at 200atp with an iron catalyst</p>
<p>Bacteria</p>
<p>What does bacteria perform to breakdown nitrogen?</p>
<p>Nitrogen fixation</p>
What does nitrogen fixation look like?
any natural or industrial process that causes free nitrogen
<p>What is nitrogen inactivated by?</p>
<p>O2</p>
<p>How does bacteria get around O2deactivating N2?</p>
<p>Live anaerobically</p>
<p>Uncouple mitochondria to burn all O2in a cell</p>
What does the process of nitrogen after it is fixed look like?
Fixation converts nitrogen in the atmosphere into forms that plants can absorb through their root systems. A small amount of nitrogen can be fixed when lightning provides the energy needed for N2 to react with oxygen, producing nitrogen oxide, NO, and nitrogen dioxide, NO2.
<p>What does the flow of N2from NH4+to other biomolecules occur through?</p>
<p>Glutamate</p>
<p>How does glutamate pass on the nitrogen?</p>
<p>By interconverting into other molecules</p>
<p>What are the 4 amino acids in much higher concentrations in cells compared to others?</p>
<p>Alanine</p>
<p>Glutamine</p>
<p>Glutamate</p>
<p>Asparate</p>
<p>What do most organisms do because they cannot fix N2?</p>
<p>Conserve it by transamination</p>