Bio 1st Exam
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120 questions
🇬🇧 | 🇬🇧 |
What are atoms composed of? | Protons, neutrons, and electrons |
The number of protons gives the | Atomic number |
The number of protons + neutrons + electrons | Atomic mass |
Orbital occurs in a series called | Electron shells or energy levels |
What holds the atoms of a molecule together? | Covalent bond |
Why do molecules form? | Because they can share, lose or gain electrons resulting in atoms bonded together |
What is covalent bond? | Atoms share one or more pairs of electrons |
What is an ionic bond? | When one atom is more electronegative than the other then a complete transfer of electrons occurs; electrical attrition of (+) and (-) |
What is ion | Electrically charged particles when atoms lose or gain electrons |
Cations | Positive; when ions lost an electron |
Anion | Negative; when ions gain an electron |
What is hydrogen bond? | Attraction between the partial (-) of one molecule and the partial (+) of hydrogen end of another molecule |
What is can der waals forces? | Attractions between nonpolar molecules that are close together |
List these from the weakest to strongest: van der waals, hydrogen, covalent, and ionic bond | Van der waals, hydrogen, ionic and covalent bond |
Isotopes differ in the number of | Mass and atomic number |
What is a polar covalent bond? | When one electrons are drawn to one nucleus more than to the other because one atom is more electronegative |
What are the major classes of molecules in living organisms | Protein, lipid, carbohydrates, nucleic acid |
Polymer: Protein , what is the monomer | Combinations of 20 amino acids |
Polymer: Carbohydrates, what is the monomer | Sugar monomers (monosaccharides) |
Polymer: nucleic acids, what is the monomer? | 4 kinds of nucleotide monomers |
Polymer: lipids, what is the monomer? | Non-covalent forces maintain interactions between lipid monomers |
Functions of proteins include: | Antibodies, storage proteins, structural proteins, transport proteins |
The terminal- SH group of cysteine can react with another cysteine side chain to form a | Disulfide bridge |
What is the primary structure of a protein and what bond | Is the sequence of amino acids and covalent |
What is the secondary structure of protein and what bond | Alpha helix + beta pleated sheet and hydrogen bond |
What is the alpha helix in secondary structure? | Right handed coil resulting from hydrogen bonding between N-H groups on one amino acid and C=O groups on another |
What is the beta pleated sheet in secondar structure? | Two or more polypeptide chains are aligned; hydrogen form between the chains |
What is the tertiary structure of protein and its bond? | Folding results in a macromolecule with specific 3-D shape + determined by interactions of R-groups and disulfide bridge (covalent bond), hydrogen, hydrophobic, van der waals, and ionic bond |
What is the quaternary structure of proteins and what bond? | Results from the interaction of subunits and hydrophobic, van der waals, ionic and hydrogen bond |
What results in sickle-cell disease? | From a single amino acid substitution in the protein hemoglobin, a blood disorder; a change in primary structure |
What is carbohydrates known for? | Source and transport of stored energy |
One simple sugar is call | Monosaccharide |
Three to 20 monosaccharides is call | Oligosaccharide |
Hundreds or thousands of monosaccharides are call | Polysaccharides: starch, glycogen and cellulose |
Monosaccharides bind together to form disaccharides in _____ reactions to form ________ linkages | Dehydration and glycosidic |
What include other functional groups? | Oligosaccharides |
Storage of glucose in animals | Glycogen |
What does lipid consist of ? | Fats, oils, phospholipids, and sterols |
Fats and oils store | Energy |
Structural role in cell membranes | Phospholipids |
Capture light energy in plants | Carotenoids and chlorophylls |
Fats and oils are composed of ________ and ________ called | Fatty acids and glycerols call triglycerides |
3-OH group (an alcohol) | Glycerol |
Carboxyl bond with hydroxyls of glycerol in an | Ester linkage |
Saturated fatty acids | No double bonds between carbons, saturated with H atoms |
Unsaturated fatty acids | Some double bonds in carbon chain; kinks |
Which is solid at room temperature? | Saturated |
What is the process called of converting unsaturated fats into saturated fats by adding hydrogen | Hydrogenation |
What results in vegetable oils that are unsaturated fats with trans double bonds? | Partial hydrogenation |
Fatty acids are _______ they have ________ chemical properties with hydrophilic one side and hydrophobic on the other end | Amphipathic, opposing |
2 fatty acids bound to glycerol | Phospholipids |
Why are cells so small? | Surface-to-volume ratio |
The bigger a cell is, the less _________ | Surface area |
What are the three domains? | Bacteria, archaea, and eukaryota |
What is the two types of cells? | Prokaryotic and eukaryotic |
Bacteria and archaea are | Prokaryotic |
Basic features of ALL cells (both Prokaryotes and Eukaryotes) are | Plasma cell membrane, semifluid substance (cytosol), chromosome, and ribosomes |
Prokaryotic cell differ from eukaryotes by | Having no nucleus, have DNA in an unbound region call nucleoid, no organelles |
Eukaryotic cells differ from prokaryotes by | Having DNA in a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles |
Where are ribosomes found? | Rough ER and free floating cytoplasm |
Where are ribosomes made? | Nucleolus |
The shape of the nucleus is maintained b the | Nuclear lamina (composed of proteins) |
DNA is organized into discrete units called | Chromosomes |
What does the cytoskeleton do? | Maintains cell shape in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes and made of protein |
What are the three components of cytoskeleton? | Microfilaments, intermediate filaments, and microtubules |
Microfilaments are | Muscle contraction, cell division and maintaining cell shape; made from protein actin |
Intermediate filaments are | Tough protein anchoring cell structures in place like nucleus, ; forms nuclear lamina |
Microtublues are | Framework for motor proteins, form rigid internal skeleton, made from protein tubulin; flagella + cilia |
Network of interconnected membranes in the cytoplasm; has large surface area | Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) |