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Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Gluconeogenesis
Which of the following is an example of futile cycling?
Glycolysis and ketogenesis occurring simultaneously.
Glycolysis and beta oxidation occurring simultaneously.
Glycolysis and the Krebs cycle occurring simultaneously.
Glycolysis and gluconeogenesis occurring simultaneously.
Glycolysis and oxidative phosphorylation occurring simultaneously.
Glycolysis and gluconeogenesis occurring simultaneously.
Futile cycling occurs when two metabolic processes occur in opposite directions, and thus result in no net change. This is very wasteful, and not ideal. The only example of the answer choices of metabolic processes occurring in opposite directions is glycolysis and gluconeogenesis occurring simultaneously. Other possible examples could include: glycogenesis and glycogenolysis, beta-oxidation and fatty acid synthesis, etc.
Example Question #6 : Gluconeogenesis
Which of the following is not true about the gluconeogenesis pathway's role in organismal homeostasis?
Gluconeogenesis is a pathway for cells to create glucose from various precursors when glucose itself is unavailable
Pyruvate and glycerol can be substrates for conversion to glucose in gluconeogenesis
Gluconeogenesis is primarily restricted to the liver and kidneys in mammalian species
Gluconeogenesis will typically remain quiescent if the cell has an overabundance of energy from other pathways
Gluconeogenesis occurs when an organism consumes abnormally high amounts of carbohydrates and fatty acids
Gluconeogenesis occurs when an organism consumes abnormally high amounts of carbohydrates and fatty acids
Gluconeogenesis occurs in times of starvation, fasting, and low access to sources of glucose. This is the cells way of creating its own precursor when none is available, albeit at a high energetic cost (one cycle of gluconeogenesis can cost 6 ATP). Thus, it is untrue that gluconeogenesis occurs during high consumption of carbohydrates and fatty acids. Each other selection is true regarding gluconeogenesis.
Example Question #1 : Other Gluconeogenesis Concepts
During anaerobic conditions, lactate travels from the muscle to the liver via the bloodstream.
What is lactic acid converted into when it reaches the liver before it returns back to the muscle?
Glucose
Glycogen
Glucagon
Acetyl-CoA
Citrate
Glucose
The Cori cycle comes into play during anaerobic conditions; where lactate from glycolysis travels from the muscle to the liver to be converted into glucose via gluconeogenesis. The glucose is then sent back to the muscle to be used for energy. Note that some of the lactate that is converted into glucose can be stored as glycogen in the liver, but glycogen is not transported from the liver to the skeletal muscle.
Example Question #1 : Fermentation And Anaerobic Respiration
Which of the following best describes how fermentation of pyruvate to lactic acid facilitates the production of ATP in the absence of oxygen?
It removes pyruvate, shifting the equilibrium favorably toward the forward reactions of glycolysis
It provides NADH for continued glycolysis
It lowers the pH of the cytosol, increasing the efficiency of ATP synthase
It provides lactic acid, which can phosphorylate ADP via substrate-level phosphorylation
It provides for continued glycolysis
It provides for continued glycolysis
In the absence of oxygen, oxidative phosphorylation cannot be used to produce ATP, so glycolysis becomes the primary source of ATP for the cell. The importance of lactic acid fermentation is that it replenishes cellular for the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase reaction, which precedes the ATP-producing steps. Without lactic acid fermentation, concentrations would become too low for the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase reaction to occur, and the ATP-producing steps would not continue to be reached.
Example Question #1 : Lactic Acid Fermentation
Which of the following is the correct pairing between the initial reactant and major product of a type of fermentation?
Glucose; carbon dioxide
Ethanol; lactate
Acetate; ethylene glycol
Glucose; lactate
Lactate; glucose
Glucose; lactate
When glucose is fermented, it forms the product lactate. Lactate can then continue on to be fermented to acetate. However, the other answer choices do not represent the correct direction from reactant to product in fermentation. In some organisms, ethanol and carbon dioxide may be produced via fermentation, but carbon dioxide is a byproduct, not a major product in these organisms.
Example Question #1 : Lactic Acid Fermentation
What is the primary function of fermentation?
Production of lactic acid to be used as a fuel source
Regeneration of
Regeneration of NADH
Production of ethanol to be used as a fuel source
Production of oxygen to be used in aerobic pathways in the future
Regeneration of
NADH is, under aerobic conditions, returned to when it has its electrons taken in the electron transport chain. However, anaerobic conditions disallow this from occurring, and so NADH will build up in the cell. Fermentation is a pathway that allows pyruvate to be converted to either ethanol or lactic acid (depending on the organism) in order to regenerate the supply of .
Example Question #1 : Lactic Acid Fermentation
What is the main goal of fermentation?
To create more
To regenerate
To regenerate ADP
To generate additional oxygen
To produce ATP in higher quantities than from oxidative phosphorylation
To regenerate
Fermentation take place when there is a lack of oxygen in a cell. Without oxygen, the only process that can create ATP from glucose is glycolysis. However, NADH is created during glycolysis, and must be turned back to in order to continue metabolizing glucose with glycolysis. Fermentation, therefore, has the main responsibility of regenerating .
Example Question #281 : Catabolic Pathways And Metabolism
When human muscles are deprived of oxygen, they are unable to fully metabolize glucose via aerobic respiration. Instead, the pyruvate made in glycolysis is reduced to form lactic acid. Which of the following gives the correct reason for why pyruvate needs to be converted into lactic acid?
Because lactic acid is more stable, the muscle cell can store it until a later time when more oxygen is available
The production of lactic acid serves no real purpose
To regenerate
To balance the pH of the cell
To regenerate
As alluded to in the question stem, an abundance of oxygen allows aerobic respiration to proceed. This allows glucose to be oxidized completely to yield a high amount of energy. In contrast, when oxygen is scarce, cells revert to an alternative method of producing energy, but one that is far less efficient. This is known as anaerobic respiration.
Though there are different types of anaerobic respiration, the one relevant to this question is lactic acid fermentation. In this process, the pyruvate coming from glycolysis is converted into lactic acid. When this happens, NADH is also oxidized back into its non-reduced form. This is the reason why fermentation occurs. If all of the cell's NAD were to be in its reduced form, then there's no way that glycolysis could proceed. Since glycolysis doesn't rely on oxygen, this is the only pathway to provide a stable energy source during oxygen deprivation. So in order to regenerate the needed for glycolysis to continue, it needs to donate its electrons onto pyruvate, which produces lactic acid.
Example Question #21 : Alternative Pathways
An olympic sprinter is in the middle of a grueling workout. Which process would you least expect to be occurring in his body?
Gluconeogenesis
Glycolysis
The Cori cycle
Glycogenolysis
Lactic acid fermentation
Gluconeogenesis
Because the sprinter is exercising at a high intensity, his body is metabolizing its fuel under anaerobic conditions. Lactic acid fermentation is the conversion of pyruvate to lactate, and occurs only under anaerobic conditions. Glycolysis always occurs under anaerobic conditions, and glucose needs to be broken down to fuel the sprinter. The Cori cycle is the process that describes anaerobic metabolism on a larger scale (the conversion of glucose to pyruvate, to lactate, and back to glucose). Finally, because the athlete is using up his glucose, glycogenolysis will occur in order to convert some of his stored glucose (glycogen) to blood glucose.
The only answer choice remaining is gluconeogenesis. Gluconeogenesis and glycolysis occurring at the same time would be called a "futile cycle". They are opposing pathways, and if one is occurring, there is no need for the other to occur, that would be wasteful. We already established that glycolysis was occurring, so it is unlikely that gluconeogenesis would also occur.
Example Question #211 : Carbohydrate Metabolism
During lactic acid fermentation, what is the final electron acceptor?
NADH
Ethanol
Pyruvate
Oxygen
Carbon dioxide
Pyruvate
Under normal aerobic conditions, the final electron acceptor at the end of the electron transport chain is oxygen. However, fermentation occurs when there is no oxygen available. Therefore, something else must act as the final electron acceptor. In lactic acid fermentation, NADH is the electron carrier that ultimately carries them to pyruvate. Pyruvate is reduced to lactic acid, and thus, acted as the final electron acceptor.