All GRE Subject Test: Biology Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Musculoskeletal System
Which structure releases calcium ions prior to muscle contraction?
T-tubule
Sarcoplasmic reticulum
Myosin
Sarcolemma
Sarcoplasmic reticulum
Before muscle contraction can take place, tropomyosin must be removed from the active site on actin, so that myosin heads can attach. Calcium ions are responsible for attaching to troponin, which will then pull tropomyosin away from the active sites. These calcium ions are stored in the sarcoplasmic reticulum until an action potential stimulates their release.
T-tubules serve to conduct the action potential to the interior of the muscle fiber, allowing for coordinated contraction of sarcomeres throughout the fiber. The sarcolemma is simply the cell membrane of the muscle fiber. Myosin is the filament responsible for binding actin, but does not directly interact with calcium.
Example Question #2 : Musculoskeletal System
Which bone cell is responsible for resorbing bone matrix?
Osteoclast
Osteogenic cell
Osteocyte
Osteoblast
Osteoclast
Bone tissue is formed by four bone cell types. Osteogenic cells are the progenitor stem cells that differentiate into osteoblasts. Osteoblasts are responsible for creating bone matrix by depositing hydroxyapatite crystal. They will eventually become encapsulated by the bone matrix, and differentiate into osteocytes. Osteocytes are primarily involved in communication and nutrient transfer within the bond matrix. Osteoclasts perform the opposite action osteoblasts and resorb the bone matrix. This process increases mineral concentrations in the blood.
Example Question #3 : Musculoskeletal System
Which of the following is true concerning all muscle types?
All muscle appears striated under a microscope
Mitosis does not take place in muscle cells
All muscle fibers are composed of sarcomeres
All muscle types are uninucleated
Mitosis does not take place in muscle cells
Muscle cells are considered quiescent, and are incapable of mitosis. Instead, muscle mass will increase by hypertrophy (cell growth without division). In the event of damage, muscle satellite cells will differentiate into new myocytes, but the mature myocytes will not divide.
Only skeletal muscle and cardiac muscle contain organized sarcomeres, leading to their striated appearance. Smooth muscle does not contain sarcomeres and does not appear striated. Instead, actin and myosin align in multiple directions, allowing non-linear contraction in smooth muscle. Smooth muscle and cardiac muscle are generally uninucleated, but skeletal muscle cells contain numerous nuclei.
Example Question #4 : Musculoskeletal System
Which of the following muscle types can be consciously controlled?
Skeletal muscle
Smooth muscle
Cardiac muscle
All of these
Skeletal muscle
There are three main divisions of muscle tissue. Of these three, only skeletal muscle can be consciously controlled. Smooth muscle and cardiac muscle are under the control of the autonomic nervous system.
Skeletal muscle is used in locomotion and conscious actions, such as eye movements or forced respiration. Smooth muscle is used in vasodilation and vasoconstriction, and surrounds most organs in the body. Smooth muscle is responsible for unconscious diaphragm contractions, stomach contractions, and other visceral activity. Cardiac muscle is only found in the heart and is capable of independent, spontaneous contraction without nervous intervention.
Example Question #5 : Musculoskeletal System
What is a hydrostatic skeleton?
A system of fluid-filled, rigid vessels which use water pressure to support organisms living in moist environments
A flexible support structure consisting of a coelom surrounded by muscles
A specialized exoskeleton in marine organisms which is stiff yet flexible enough to allow an organism to survive underwater at high pressures
A support system consisting of porous bones with the cavities filled with fluid in order to increase density
An organ such as the tongue in mammals, composed mainly of muscle but relying on the fact that water is nearly incompressible for motion
A flexible support structure consisting of a coelom surrounded by muscles
The hydrostatic skeleton is a fluid-filled coelom surrounded by but not made chiefly of muscles in soft bodied, aquatic organisms such as echinoderms.
Example Question #1 : Musculoskeletal System
Skeletal muscle fibers are made up of white and red fibers. White fibers are considered fast-twitch and red fibers are considered slow-twitch.
Which of these statements INCORRECTLY describes a difference between white and red fibers?
Red fibers have more mitochondria than white fibers
White fibers utilize aerobic respiration more than red fibers
White fibers have less myoglobin than red fibers
White fibers fatigue more quickly than red fibers
White fibers utilize aerobic respiration more than red fibers
White fibers have less myoglobin than red fibers. White fibers have less mitochondria than red fibers. White fibers fatigue more quickly than red fibers.
White fibers primarily use anaerobic respiration (red primarily uses aerobic). Remember that red fibers are active over long periods of sustained stress, while white fibers are more explosive. Red fibers require oxygen from respiration and myoglobin to maintain activity.
Example Question #7 : Musculoskeletal System
Influx of which ion through the T-tubules will cause calcium release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum?
Sodium
Potassium
Chloride
Calcium
Calcium
When acetylcholine binds to its receptors at the neuromuscular junction, it stimulates an initial influx of sodium ions that cause a localized depolarization of the muscle cell. This depolarization causes voltage-gated calcium channels to open within the T-tubules, carrying the signal into the cell interior. Proteins in the wall of the T-tubules directly interact with the internal sarcoplasmic reticulum, stimulating the organelle to release intracellular calcium. This release liberates myosin-binding sites on actin, allowing contraction to occur.
Sodium ions, potassium ions, and chloride ions play important roles in maintaining membrane potential at the neuromuscular junction, but the T-tubules rely heavily on calcium to interact with the sarcoplasmic reticulum.
Example Question #8 : Musculoskeletal System
The triceps brachii extends the arm, while the biceps brachii flexes the arm. How is the biceps brachii related to the triceps brachii?
They are synergists
They are agonists
It is a fixator of the triceps brachii
They are antagonists
They are antagonists
Since the triceps and biceps produce opposing motions in the arm, they can be considered antagonists of one another. An antagonist will stretch, while the agonist contracts, and vice versa. Extensors, such as the triceps brachii, will act as antagonists of flexors, such as the biceps brachii.
A synergist assists the agonist by stabilizing the origin bone.
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