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Test your basic knowledge |
MCAT Biology 3
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 second major group of prokaryotes that have very strong cell walls and are photosynthetic
Bacteria
Chaperone proteins
Hypercholesterolemia
Actin - microtubules - intermediate filaments
2. Anchor epithelial cells to a basement membrane
Hemidesmosomes
Denaturation
Pinocytosis
Glycoproteins
3. Not soluble in water - the more unsaturated the lower the MP - energy rich (more than twice that of carbohydrates) - animals produce saturated while most plants produce unsaturated
Joule <--> Calorie (conversion)
Fat (characteristics)
Anchoring junction
Rossman fold
4. Archaebacteria that live in very salty environments - such as the Dead Sea
Extreme halophiles
Quaternary level of protein structure
Glycolipids
C - H - O - N - S
5. Laid down when a plant cell is still growing; composed of chitin in fungi and cellulose in plants and protists
Chaperone proteins
Primary cell wall
Peptidoglycan
Rossman fold
6. The region surrounding a pair of centrioles
Centrosome
C - H - O - N - S
Beta barrel
Gap junction
7. Responsible for moving organelles within a cell - also facilitate cell movement
Microtubules
Amylose
DNA (location)
Kinesin
8. A cellular structure that aids in the assembly of microtubules; lacking in cells of plants and fungi
Cenriole
Proteoglycans
Gram positive bacteria
Miller - Urey experiment
9. A sticky substance that acts as a glue between the primary cell walls of plant cells
Pyrimidines (characteristics)
Middle lamella
Phosphdiester bond
Gram positive bacteria
10. A type of intermediate filament found in epithelial cells
Antiport
Amino acid (composition)
Differences between RNA and DNA
Keratin
11. Consist of a central carbon bound to an amino group - a carboxylic acid - a hydrogen atom - and an R group
Glycolipids
Anchoring junction
Penicillin (mechanism of action)
Amino acid (composition)
12. 1. All organisms are composed of one or more cells 2. Cells are the smallest living things - the basic units of organization of all organmisms 3. Cells arise only by division of a previously existing cell
Purines (identify)
Nonpolar amino acids
Cell Theory
Anchoring junction
13. A special motor protien that moves along the microtubule toward its positive end; in most cells this movement is from the center to the periphery - in the axon it is anterograde transport
Bacteriorhodopsin
Polar uncharged amino acids
Kinesin
Domains
14. A cluster in the nucleus of ribosomal RNA genes - ribosomal proteins - and the RNAs they produce: it is the site of mass ribosome production
Anchoring junction
Clathrin
Differences between RNA and DNA
Nucleolus
15. A structure that some fully expanded plant cells produce; provides very strong structural support
Extreme thermophiles
Tight junctions
Secondary cell wall
Nucleotide (composition)
16. The sugar in RNA contains an extra hydroxyl group and RNA uses uracil instead of thymine
Cenriole
Amylose
Cytoplasm
Differences between RNA and DNA
17. The final folded shape of a globular protein -- positions folds nonpolar side groups within the interior
Cenriole
Spectrin
Beta barrel
Tertiaty level of protein structure
18. The exact sequence of amino acids specified by DNA
Tertiaty level of protein structure
Dehydration synthesis
Glycolipids
Primary level of protein structure
19. 5- carbon sugar - adenine - and a tri - phosphate group
Secondary level of protein structure
ATP (composition)
Primary level of protein structure
Dehydration synthesis
20. Glycoprotein that attaches the ECM to the plasma membrane
Kinesin
Fibronectin
Antiport
Primary level of protein structure
21. Components of cytoskeleton
Cellulose
Clathrin
Actin - microtubules - intermediate filaments
Major categories of macromolecules
22. Transmembrane proteins that play an important role in cell - cell adhesion; their function is dependent upon calcium; vertebrate migration of neurons is affected by which type of this protein is expressed on the cell's plasma membrane
Pyrimidines (characteristics)
Bacteriorhodopsin
Cadherin
Purines (identify)
23. Cytosine - Uracile - Thymine
Beta glucose ring
Chaperone proteins
Pyrimidines (identify)
Kinesin
24. A special motor protein that moves along the microtubule toward the negative end; responsible for rentrograde axoplasmic transport
Major categories of macromolecules
Dynein
Cenriole
Desmosomes
25. A hydrocarbon chain that terminates with a carboxyl group.
Hemidesmosomes
Extracellular matrix
Disaccharide
Fatty acid
26. A semi - fluid matrix that fills the interior of the cell
Phospholipid (composition)
Dehydration synthesis
Amino acid (composition)
Cytoplasm
27. Chlorophyll containing bacteria that played an important role in increasing the concentration of oxygen
Collagen
Hydrocarbons
Cyanobacteria
Domains
28. A type of anchoring junction that connects the cytoskeletons of adjacent cells
Phospholipid (composition)
Motifs
Extracellular matrix
Desmosomes
29. A combination of secondary structure bonding that forms characteristic patterns within protein strucure - such as the alpha - helix and the beta - pleated sheet
Motifs
Pyrimidines (identify)
Actin - microtubules - intermediate filaments
Phosphdiester bond
30. Destroys gram - positive bacteria by interfering with peptidoglycan's ability to cross - link the peptides which hold together the carbohydrates that make up the cell wall; water floods bacterial cell and causes it to burst
Cadherin
Penicillin (mechanism of action)
Peptide bond
Anchoring junction
31. Gram positive bacteria have a think - single - layered cell wall that retains the dye used in Gram - staining. Penicillin only works on gram - positive bacteria.
Gram positive bacteria
Cenriole
Starch
Central vacuole
32. Glycerol attached to a phosphate group and two fatty acid chains
Pyrimidines (identify)
Cyanobacteria
Phospholipid (composition)
Extreme thermophiles
33. The manner in which all macromolecules are assembled -- water is a product of the reaction
Tertiaty level of protein structure
Middle lamella
xtrusion
Dehydration synthesis
34. A form of endocytosis where an animal cell engulfs liquid matter
Nonpolar amino acids
xtrusion
Pinocytosis
Cytoskeleton
35. A carrier protein that simultaneously moves one molecule in as it moves another out
First law of thermodynamics
Intermediate filaments
Antiport
Fibronectin
36. (CH2O)n - n = number of carbon atoms
xtrusion
Beta glucose ring
Carbohydrates (empirical formula)
Flagellum
37. Proteins with short chains of sugars attached to them; in eukaryotic cells they are important membrane proteins that allow cell - cell recognition and interaction
Actin - microtubules - intermediate filaments
Pinocytosis
Glycoproteins
Anchoring junction
38. Glycoproteins that forms a complex web that forms a protective layer of the surface of animal cells
Bacteria
Gram positive bacteria
Proteoglycans
Plastids
39. Methane - producing archaebacteria - one of the most primitive archaebacteria that are alive today
Methanogens
Actin (functions in cytoskeleton)
Actin - microtubules - intermediate filaments
Amylose
40. Energy cannot be created or destroyed
Rossman fold
Integrins
First law of thermodynamics
Plasmodesmata
41. Proteins that are anchored in and pass through the plasma membrane; attached to the cytoskeleton on the interior and to the ECM on the exterior
Centrosome
Phospholipid (composition)
Integrins
Secondary level of protein structure
42. 5 carbon sugar (ribose or deoxyribose) bound to a phosphate and a nitrogenous base
Spectrin
Nucleotide (composition)
Major categories of macromolecules
Cell Theory
43. 1 joule = 0.239 calories
Disaccharide
Starch
Joule <--> Calorie (conversion)
Beta barrel
44. A glucose ring formed with the hydroxyl group in the same plane as the methanol group
Chitin
Bacteria
Beta glucose ring
Penicillin (mechanism of action)
45. Large (relative to pyrimidines) double ringed molecules that are found in both DNA and RNA
Secondary level of protein structure
Cadherin
Integrins
Purines (characteristics)
46. The matrix of glycoproteins that animal cells deposit outside the plasma membrane which provide support - strength - and resilience
Prokaryote
Transport disaccharides (reasoning)
Extracellular matrix
Gap junction
47. Mechanically attach the cytoskeleton of a cell to the cytoskeletons of other cells or to the extracellular matrix. Common in tissues experiencing mechanical stress - eg muscle and skin epithelium
Anchoring junction
Microtubules
Archaebacteria
Fat (composition)
48. A network of integrins that connects the actin filaments of one cell with those of neighboring cells or with the extra cellular matrix
5 classes of amino acids
Pyrimidines (identify)
ATP (composition)
Adherins junctions
49. Cholesterol receptors lack tails and cannot be taken up by cells; stays in the bloodstream and coats arteries
Hypercholesterolemia
Secondary cell wall
First law of thermodynamics
Pinocytosis
50. A glucose ring formed with the hydroxyl group in the opposite plane of the methanol group
Beta barrel
Alpha glucose ring
Prokaryote
Starch