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Test your basic knowledge |
MCAT Prep Biology
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
mcat
,
science
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. The third phase of meiosis II. During anaphase II the sister chromatids are finally spearated at their centromeres and puled to opposite sides of teh cell. Note that anaphase II is identical to mitotic anaphase - excep the number of chromosmes was re
Vagina
Thrombus
Humoral immunity
Anaphase II
2. A life cycle of animal viruses in which the mature viral particles bud from the host cell - acquiring an envelope (a coating of lipid bilayer) in the process.
Vas deferens
Motor end plate
Genotype
Productive cycle
3. A specific DNA nucleotide sequence where transcriptional regulatory proteins can bind.
Sudoriferous gland
Menstruation
urfactant
Operator
4. Molecules made from monosaccharides that serve as the primary source of cellular energy -. Carbohydrates can also act as cell surface markers (good thing to remember).
Carbohydrates
Epinephrine
Aminoacyl tRNA
Smooth muscle
5. Steroid hormones secreted from the adrenal cortex. The two major classes are teh mineralocorticoids and glucocorticoids. Aldosterone is the principal mineralocorticoid - and cortisol is the principal glucorcorticoid.
5' cap
Na+/K+ ATPase
Saltatory conduction
Corticosteroids
6. One of the four basic tissue types in the body (epithelial - connective - muscle - and nervous). Connective tissue is a supportive tissue consisting of a relatively few cells scattered among a great deal of extracellular material (matrix) - and inclu
Histones
Auditory tube
Connective tissue
Medium
7. An integral membrane proteint hat binds extracellular signaling molecules - suchas hormones and peptides.
Cell surface receptor
Chymotrypsin
Gap junction
Corpus luteum
8. The burrowing of a blastocyst (a developing embryo) into the endometrium of the uterus - typically occuring about a week after fertilizaiton.
Gastrin
Respiratory acidosis
Pharynx
Implantation
9. A substance secreted by embryonic testes that causes the regression of the Mullerian ducts.
Mullerian inhibiting factor (MIF)
Fast block to polyspermy
Growth hormone
Ejection fraction
10. Proteins that bind to and stabilize the signle strands of DNA exposed when helicase unwinds the double helix in preparation for replication.
End plate potential
Endometrial cycle
Single strand binding proteins
Symporter
11. A receptor that responds to light
Photoreceptor
Chymotrypsin
Formed elements
Atrioventricular bundle (AV) bundle
12. Chemoreceptors in the upper nasal cavity that respond to odo chemicals.
Auxotroph
Gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH
Sex- linked rait
Olfactory receptors
13. One of the four basic tissue types in the body (epithelial - connective - muscle - and nervous). Epithelial tissue is a lining and covering tissue (e.g. skin - the lining of the stomach and intestines - the lining of the urinary tract - etc. ) or a g
Hemophilia
Polysaccharides
Gene
Epithelial tissue
14. The entropy (disorder) of the universe (or system) tends to increase.
Nucleoside
Ceruminous gland
Second Law of Thermodynamics
Collagen
15. Cytoskeletal filaments with a diameter in between that of the microtubule and the microfilament. Intermediate filaments are composed of many different proteins and tend to play structural roles in cells.
Intermediate filaments
Ejaculation
Yolk sac
Log phase
16. Plasma with the clotting factors removed. Serum is often used in diagnostic tests because it does not clot.
Spermatogenesis
Serum
Smooth Endoplasmic Reticulum
Cytosine
17. Amino - acyl tRNA site; the site on a ribosome where a new amino acid is added to a growing peptide.
Adenine
Enzyme
A site
Divergent evolution
18. Strong contractions of the uterus (stimulated by oxytoncin) that force a baby out of the mother's baby during childbirth. Labor contractions are part of a positive feedback cycle - during which the baby's head stretches the cervix - which stimulates
Stroke volume
Labor contractions
Leak channel
Mitochondrion
19. Muscle tissue that is attached to the bones. SKeletal muscle is striated multinucleate - and under voluntary control.
Lagging strand
Oxaloacetate
Smooth Endoplasmic Reticulum
Skeletal muscle
20. The tubes that carry urine from the kindeys to the bladder.
Endospore
Chromosome
Ureters
5' cap
21. The 28 days of the menstrual cycle as they apply to the events in the uterus. The endometrial cycle is also known as the uterine cycle - and has the three subphases: menstruation - the proliferative phase - and the secretory phase.
Secondary immune response
Atrioventricular valves
Phospholipid
Endometrial cycle
22. A small cell with extremely little cytoplasm that results from the unequal cytoplasmic divsion of the primary (produces the first polar body) and the secondary (produces the second polary body) oocytes during meiosis (oogenesis). The polar bodies deg
Power stroke
Heterochromatin
Polar body
Tendon
23. A type of lymphocyte that can recognize (bind to) an antigen adn secrete an antibody specific for that antigen. When activated by binding an antigen - B cells mature into plasma cells (that secreted antibody) and memory cells (that patrol the body fo
Liver
Single strand binding proteins
B cell
Coronary vessels
24. The shaft of a long bone. The diaphysis is hollow and is made entirely from compact bone.
Diaphysis
Aldosterone
rRNA
Envelope
25. A bundle of skeletal muscle cells. Fascicles group together to form skeletal muscles.
Postganglionic neuron
Catabolism
Fascicle
Smooth muscle
26. The layer of ciliated - mucus - covered cells in the respiratory tract.The cilia continually beat - sweeping contaminated mucus upward toward the pharynx.
Hematopoiesis
H zone
Mucocilliary escalator
Matrix
27. The process of breaking down large molecules into smaller precursors - e.g. digesion of starch into glucose.
NADH
Rectum
Catabolism
Neuralation
28. A portion of DNA that codes for some product - usually a protein - including all regulatory sequences. Some genes code for rRNA and tRNA - which are not translated.
Seminiferous tubules
Dense connective tissue
Gene
Clathrin
29. An organism that relies on a chemical source of energy (such as ATP) instead of light (which phototrophs).
Chemotroph
Proteins
Excitation - contraction coupling
Larynx
30. An organism that can survive in the presence of oxygen (oxygen is not toxic) - but that does not use oxygen during metabolism (anaerobic metabolism only).
Antagonist
Tolerant anaerobe
Ectoderm
Thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH)
31. The bond formed between the carboxyl group of one amino acid and the amino group of another.
Rough endoplasmic reticulum
Edema
Peptide bond
Sarcomere
32. An inactive precursor of an enzyme - activated by various methods (acid hydrolysis - cleavage by another enzyme - etc.)
Zymogen
hnRNA
Gene pool
Brush border enzymes
33. A systme of ductless glands taht secrete chemical messengers (into) the blood - has to be into the blood.
Cell surface receptor
Endocrine system
Epiphysis
Ovary
34. The tube that connects the middle ear acity with the pharynx; also known as the Eustachian tube. Its fucntion is to equalize midle ear pressure with atmospheric pressure so that pressure on boths sides of the tympanic membrane is the same.
Acinar cells
Ectoderm
Oxytocin
Auditory tube
35. A contractile protein. In skeletal and cardiac muscle - actin polymerizes (along with other proteins) to form the thin filaments. Actin is involved in many contractile activities - such as cyotkinesis - pseudopod formation - and muscle contraction.
Diploid organism
Second messenger
Replication bubbles
Actin
36. Muscles that help focus light on teh retin by controlling the curvature of the lens of the eye.
Actin
Pupil
Ciliary muscles
Organ of Corti
37. A globular protein that ssociated with tropomyosin as part of the thin filament of the sarcomere. Troponin binds Ca2+ - which causes the conformaiton change in tropomyosin required to expose the myosin - binding sites on actin and initiate muscle con
Thecal cells
Feedback inhibition
Dermis
Troponin
38. A chemical derived from vitamin A found in the pigment proteins of the rod photoreceptors of the retina. Retinal changes conformation when it absorbs light - triggering a series of reactions that ultimately result in an action potential being sent to
Secretin
Pyrimidine bases
Retinal
Adrenal medulla
39. A hole in the center of the iris of the eye that allows light to enter the eyeball. The diameter of pupil is controlled by the iris in response to the brightness of the light.
Sarcoplasmic reticulum
Organ of Corti
Tendon
Pupil
40. An enzyme that cuts one or both strands of DNa to relieve the excess tension caused by the unwinding of the helix by helicase during replication.
Microfilament
Stomach
Topoisomerase
Ion channel
41. Earlier embryonic ducts that can develop into femal internal genitalia in the absence of testosteron.
Cervix
Mullerian ducts
Retina
Gram - positive bacteria
42. Three loop - like structures in the inner ear that contain sensory receptors to monitor balance.
Nucleosome
Semicircular canals
Ciliary muscles
Fimbriae
43. One of the main pancreatic proteases; it is activated (from chymotrypsinogen) by trypsin.
S phase
Chymotrypsin
Action potential
Neuralation
44. A gene appearing in a single copy in diploid organisms - e.g. X- linked genes in human males.
Hemizygous gene
Telophase II
Alveoli
Hypothalamic - pituitary portal system
45. An organism that has only a single copy of its genome in each of its cells. Haploid organisms possess no homolous chromosomes.
Haploid organism
Tight junction
Saltatory conduction
Coccus
46. The portion of the diencephalon involved in maintaining body homeostasis. the hypothalamus also controls the release of hormones from the pituitary gland.
Hypothalamus
Lipid
Hypothalamic - pituitary portal system
Restriction endonuclease
47. The inner region of an organ - e.g. - the renal medulla - the ovarian medulla - and the adrenal medulla - etc.
Silent mutation
Neurotransmitter
Medulla
5' cap
48. An organism that requires the aid of a host organism to survive - and that harms the host in the process.
Golgi apparatus
Gonadotropins
Parasite
Plasmid
49. A protein found in the plasma membrane of all cells in the body that uses the energy of an ATP (hydrolyzes ATP) to move three Na+ ions out of the cell and two K+ ions into the cell - thus establishing concentrations gradients for these ions across th
Na+/K+ ATPase
Spirochete
Transmembrane domain
Cortisol
50. The step in the sliding filament theory during which yosin undergoes a conformaitonal change to its low energy state - in the process dragging the thin filaments (and the attached Z lines) toward the center fo the sarcomere. NOte that power stroke re
FSH
Secondary sex characteristics
Tympanic membrane
Power stroke