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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. An organism that will use oxygen (aerobic metabolism) if it is available - and that can ferment (anaerobic metabolism) if it is not.
Facultative anaerobe
Bone marrow
Fast block to polyspermy
Hydroxyapatite
2. The ball of capillaries at the beginning of the nephron where blood filtration takes place.
Pulmonary vein
Cerebral cortex
Canaliculus
Glomerulus
3. Large conglomerations of proteins - fats - and cholesterol that transport lipids in the bloodstream. (chylomicrons are a type of lipoprotein).
Umbilical cord
Lipoprotein
Menopause
Inner cell mass
4. A waste product of protein dbreakdown - produced by the liver and relased into the bloodstream to be eliminated by the kidney.
Total lung capacity
Tropomyosin
Second messenger
Urea
5. The duplication of DNA
Replication
Efferent neuron
Nuclear envelope
Thymus
6. A ductless gland that secretes a hormone into the blood
Endospore
Fascicle
Endocrine gland
Pleiotropic gene
7. A haploid but immature cell resulting from the second meiotic division f spermatogenesis. Spermatids undergo significant physical changes to become mature sperm (spermatozoa).
Spermatid
Erythropoietin
Secondary oocyte
Osmotic pressure
8. A gene that has effects on several different characteristics.
Diffusion
Noncompetitive inhibitor
Pleiotropic gene
Lymph node
9. A group of three enzymes that decarboxylates pyruvate - creating an acetyl group and carbon dioxide. The acetyl group is then attached to coenzyme A to produce acetyl - CoA - a substrate in the Krebs cycle. In the process - NAD+ is reduced to NADH. T
Pyruvate dehydrogenase complex
Convergent evolution
Guanine
Sex- linked rait
10. The period of exponential growth of bacterial population.
Log phase
Loop of Henle
G- protein linked receptor
Ovulation
11. Fingerlike projection of the uterin (fallopian) tubes that drape over the ovary.
Myofiber
Catabolism
Inspiration
Fimbriae
12. The contribution of an individual gas to the total ppressure of a mixture of gases. Partial pressures are used to describe the amounts of the various gases carried in the bloodstream.
Partial pressure
Elastin
Cofactor
Keratin
13. The 3D site of an enzyme where substrates (reactants) bind and a chemical reaction is facilitated.
Telophase I
Ventricle
Active site
Mucocilliary escalator
14. The layer of connective tissue directly under the mucosa of an open body cavity.
Submucosa
Cones
Gray matter
Ciliary muscles
15. To attach oxygen - to remove hydrogen - or to remove electrons from a molecule.
Oxidation
Phototroph
Secondary sex characteristics
Anticodon
16. The force required to resist the movement of water by osmosis. Osmotic pressure is essentialy a measure of the concentration of a solution. A solution that is hyighly concnetrated has a strong tendency to draw water into itself - so the pressure requ
Nociceptors
Osmotic pressure
rRNA
Tetanus
17. Plasma with the clotting factors removed. Serum is often used in diagnostic tests because it does not clot.
Fluid mosaic model
Codominance
Exotoxin
Serum
18. The space between the inner and outer cell membranes in Gram - negative bactera. The peptidoglycan cell wall is found in the periplasmic space - and this space sometimes contains enzymes to degrade antibiotics.
Genome
Periplasmic space
Purine bases
Flagella
19. The cells of the distal tubule at the juxtaglomerular apparatus. They are receptors that monitor filtrate osmolarity as a means of regulatin filtration rate. If a drop is osmolarity is sensed - the macula densa dilates the afferent arteriole (to incr
Epididymis
Fibrinogen
Mesoderm
Macula densa
20. Excitatory postsynaptic potential; a slight depolarization of a postsynaptic cell - bringing the membrane potential of that cell closer to the threshold for an action potential.
Auxotroph
Pepsin
EPSP
Enterogasterone
21. The band of the sarcomere that extends the full length of the thick filament. The A band includes regions of thick and thin filament overlap - as well as a region of thick filament only. A bands alternate with I bands to give skeletal and cardiac mus
Accessory glands
A band
Golgi apparatus
hick filament
22. An organism (such as a fungus) that feeds of dead plants and animals.
Saprophyte
Adipocyte
Telophase
Genome
23. An enzyme that polymerizes a strand of DNA by reading an RNA template (an RNA dependent DNa polymerase); used by retrovirus in order to integrate their genome with the host cell genome.
Peripheral resistance
Reverse transcriptase
Connective tissue
T tubules
24. A hormone tha tcontrols the release of another hormone.
Allosteric regulation
Adenine
Tropic hormone
Nucleolus
25. The mechanism that ensures tehat skeletal muscle contraction does not occur without neural stimulation (excitation). A trest - cytosolic [Calcium] is low - and the troponin - tropomyosin complex covers the myosin - binding sites on actin. When the mu
Sarcoplasmic reticulum
Cytosine
Excitation - contraction coupling
Lymphatic system
26. The portion of the digestive tract that stores and grinds food. Limited digestion occurs in the somach - and it has the lowest pH in the body (1-2).
Tropomyosin
Axon
Stomach
Facilitated diffusion
27. The first phase of meiosis I. During prophase I the replicated chromosomes condense - homologous chromsomes pair up - crossing over occurs between homologous chromosomes - the spindle is formed - and the nuclear envelope breaks apart into vesicles. P
Prophase I
Homeostasis
RNA dependent RNA polymerase
Analogous structures
28. A type of lymphocyte. The major subtypes of T cells are the helper T cells (CD4) and the killer T cells (CD8 - or cytotoxic T cells). Helper T cells secrete chemicals that help killer Ts and B cells proliferate. Killer T cells destroy abnormal self -
Channel protein
Accessory organs
T cell
Umbilical cord
29. The darkly pigmented middle layer of the eyeball - found between teh sclera (outer layer) and the retina (inner layer).
Vestibular glands
Choroid
Second Law of Thermodynamics
Spermatogonium
30. An organelle surrounded by a double=membrane (two lipid bilayers) where ATP production takes place. The interior (matrix) is where PDC and the Krebs cycle occur - and the inner membrane contains the enzymes of the electron trasport chain and ATP synt
Larynx
Bicarbonate
Testcross
Mitochondrion
31. Connective tissue with large amounts of either collagen fibers (making them strong) or elastic fibers - or both. Dense tissues are typically strong (e.g. bone - cartilage - tendons - etc.)
Exocytosis
Prosthetic group
Splicing
Dense connective tissue
32. Very small tube or channel - such as is found between lacunae (connecting them together) in compact bone.
Actin
Canaliculus
Reduction
Prophase II
33. 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.
Allele
Productive cycle
Ligament
Retinal
34. The largest bundle of white matter (axons) connecting th two cerebral hemispheres.
Point mutation
Prosthetic group
Corpus callosum
Diffusion
35. The movement of teh membrane potential of a cell away from rest potential in a more positive direction.
Leading strand
Primary spermatocytes
Guanine
Depolarization
36. The monomer of a carbohydrate. Monosaccharides have the general chemical formula CnH2nOn - and common monosaccharides include glucose - fructose - galactose - and ribose.
Artery
Monosaccharide
Elastin
Cartilage
37. An integral membrane protein that undergoes a conformational change to move a molecule from one side of the membrane to another. See also 'uniporter' - 'antiporter' - and 'symporter'.
Carrier protein
Urethra
Telophase II
Accessory organs
38. Active transport that relies directly on the hydrolysis of ATP.
Reduction
Primary active transport
Bipolar neuron
P site
39. A four - carbon molecule that binds with the two - carbon acetyl unit of acetyl - CoA to form citric acid in the first step of the Krebs cycle.
Obligate aerobe
Oxaloacetate
Golgi apparatus
Heterotroph
40. A projection of the cell body of a neuron that recieves a nerve impulse form a different neuron and send the impulse to the cell body. Neurons can have one or several dendrites!
Hair cells
Facultative anaerobe
Dendrite
Photoreceptor
41. Having the ability to become anything; a zygote is totipotent.
Epinephrine
Secretion
Amylase
Totipotent
42. The region of teh brain that coordinates and smooth skeletal muscle activity.
Cerebellum
Lower esophageal sphincter
Thyroxine
Periplasmic space
43. A eukaryotic organelle filled with digestive enzymes (acid hydrolases) that is involved in digestion of macromolecules such as worng organelles or material ingested by phagocytosis.
Lysosome
Cerebrospinal fluid
hick filament
Central canal
44. The blood vessel that carries deoxygenated from the right ventricle of the heart to the lungs.
Pulmonary artery
Tidal volume
Oogonium
Bicarbonate
45. Anterior pituitary gland
Postganglionic neuron
Mitosis
Adenohypophis
Autonomic nervous system (ANS)
46. The subdivision of the nervous system consisting of the brain and spinal cord.
Prostate
Thrombus
Central Nervous System
Primase
47. Lacking a blood supply; cartialge is an example of this
Motor unit recruitment
Avascular
Wolffian ducts
Myosin
48. The perio dof tim ein a woman's life when ovulation and menstruation cease. Menopause typically begins in the late 40s.
Acetylcholinesterase (AChE)
Menopause
Pepsin
Transcription
49. A sensory receptor that responds to hcanges in pressure; for example - there are baroreceptors in the carotid arteries and the aortic ach that monitor blood pressure.
Repolarization
Cervix
Baroreceptor
Dynein
50. The sequence of nucleotides on a chromosome that activates RNA polymerase so that transcription can take place. The promoter is found upstream of the start site - the location where transcription actually takes place.
Atrioventricular (AV) node
Semen
Promoter
Effector organ