All AP Biology Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #45 : Cellular Communications And Junctions
Beta cells in the pancreas secrete insulin, a hormone, that enters the bloodstream. This is an example of which type of signaling?
Direct
Autocrine
Paracrine
Endocrine
Endocrine
Endocrine signals are signals from cells that move using the bloodstream to signal to distant cells, paracrine signals are signals used to communicate between cells in close proximity, autocrine signals are signals that are received by the same cell in which the signal originated, and direct signaling occurs across gap junctions through the movement of small molecules (such as Calcium ions). Beta cell in the pancreas produce insulin, a hormone, which is secreted into the bloodstream.
Example Question #1 : Understand Types Of Signaling, Receptors, And Signaling Molecules
Which type of ligand is water soluble, and thus unable to enter a cell?
steroid hormones
Nitric oxide
Small, hydrophobic ligands
Water-soluble ligands
Water-soluble ligands
The membrane of the cell is a phospholipid bilayer, which allows hydrophobic molecules to diffuse through it. Small, hydrophobic ligands are able to diffuse through the plasma membrane. Nitric oxide is lipophilic, readily dissolving in lipids, and can diffuse across the plasma membrane. Steroid hormones are hydrophobic, and can thus diffuse across the plasma membrane. Water-soluble ligands cannot diffuse across the plasma membrane to enter a cell.
Example Question #121 : Cellular Respiration
During pyruvate decarboxylation reaction, pyruvate is converted to _______________ compound, through a reaction called ______________ .
acetyl CoA; reductive decarboxylation
ATP; decomposition
NADH; oxidative decarboxylation
acetyl CoA; oxidative decarboxylation
acetyl CoA; oxidative decarboxylation
Pyruvate decarboxylation is an oxidative decarboxylation reaction, or an oxidation reaction where a carboxylate group is removed. This reaction converts pyruvate which was produced through glycolysis to acetyl CoA to be used in the Citric Acid Cycle.
Example Question #121 : Cellular Respiration
Which enzyme complex catalyzes the pyruvate decarboxylation reaction?
pyruvate oxidase
acetyl dehydrogenase
pyruvate dehydrogenase complex
pyruvate reductase
pyruvate dehydrogenase complex
The pyruvate dehydrogenase complex is an enzyme complex that consists of 3 enzymes, which work together to catalyze the pyruvate decarboxylation reaction, where pyruvate is converted to acetyl CoA.
Example Question #123 : Cellular Respiration
Where does the pyruvate decarboxylation reaction occur?
Cytosol
Cristae
Outer mitochondrial membrane
Mitochondrial matrix
Mitochondrial matrix
Pyruvate decarboxylation occurs in the mitochondrial matrix. The acetyl CoA produced from the pyruvate decarboxylation reaction will undergo the Citric Acid cycle also in the mitochondrial matrix.
Example Question #124 : Cellular Respiration
For each glucose molecule that undergoes glycolysis, how many acetyl CoA molecules are produced at the end of pyruvate decarboxylation?
2
1
4
32
2
During glycolysis, for each molecule of glucose, two molecules of pyruvate are produced ( glucose+ NAD+ + 2 ADP + 2Pi-> 2 pyruvate+ 2 ATP + 2NADH+. These 2 molecules of pyruvate then undergo the pyruvate decarboxylation reaction: 2(pyruvate+ CoA-SH+ NAD+ -> NADH+ CO2+ acetyl CoA).
Example Question #122 : Cellular Respiration
During the pyruvate decarboxylation reaction, acetyl CoA is produced through which type of bond linking an acetyl group to coenzyme A?
hydrogen bond
thioester bond
acetylase bond
ionic bond
thioester bond
During the pyruvate decarboxylation reaction , a thioester bond links the acetyl group of pyruvate with coenzyme A to produce acetyl CoA.
Example Question #126 : Cellular Respiration
Which is not a product of pyruvate decarboxylation reaction?
acetyl
The pyruvate decarboxylation reaction is pyruvate+ CoA-SH+ NAD+ -> NADH+ CO2+ acetyl CoA.
Example Question #1 : Understand Functions Of Organelles In The Cell
Skin can be stretched and pulled with great force without breaking or tearing. Which cellular junction is most responsible for keeping skin resilient and intact?
Gap junctions
Desmosomes
Intercalated discs
Tight junctions
Desmosomes
Desmosomes are the primary junction that helps keep tissues that are under a lot of stress, like skin, intact. Although tight junctions typically accompany desmosomes, their primary function is to prevent substances from passing between cells. Gap junctions are used for communication between cells, and intercalated discs are only found in cardiac muscle tissue.
Example Question #2 : Understand Functions Of Organelles In The Cell
Which cellular structure is least likely to bear a membrane protein that moves hydrogen ions out of the organelle?
Lysosome
Chloroplast
Golgi body
Mitochondria
Nucleus
Lysosome
The lysosome is an organelle that is used to digest broken cellular machinery or foreign particles. It maintains an acidic environment inside by pumping hydrogen ions in, not out. This environment helps denature the things it needs to digest, and is the most effective pH for the digestive enzymes that are inside.
The other structures do not maintain acidic environments, and would need the capability of removing protons.