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What factor determines whether humans are capable of digesting a polysaccharide?
Carbohydrate monomers (monosaccharides) can be joined together with either alpha or beta linkages. Humans have the enzymes necessary in order to break down alpha linkages, but not beta linkages. Cellulose is a polysaccharide in which the monomers joined together by beta linkages, so humans cannot digest cellulose. Some bacterial species are capable of cleaving these linkages and have developed symbiotic or mutualistic relationships with animals. These bacterial species inhabit the mammalian digestive tract, cleaving beta linkages and gaining protection from the outside environment.
The size and branching pattern of a carbohydrate do not affect its ability to be digested.
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Which polysaccharide is the primary form of energy storage in plants?
The two most common polysaccharides found in plant cells are starch and cellulose. Starch is the primary source of energy storage, while cellulose is used to construct the plant's cell walls.
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What is the difference between the alpha and beta forms of a monosaccharide?
When a monosaccharide becomes cyclic in form, the anomeric carbon can have its hydroxyl group pointing in the same direction as the methoxy group, or oriented in the opposite direction. This orientation determines whether the sugar is considered alpha or beta.
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Two monosaccharides can be linked together to form a disaccharide. This linkage is known as a __________ bond.
Carbohydrates are linked together to form disaccharides and other polysaccharides through glycosidic linkages. A glycosidic linkage is one in where two sugar molecules are bridged by an oxygen atom. Peptide linkages are found between amino acids and phosphodiester bonds are found between nucleic acid monomers. Ionic bonds involve the complete transfer of one or more electrons from one species to another. Hydrogen bonds are weak intermolecular and intramolecular forces that contribute to the stability of many substances such as liquid water.
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Glycogen and starch are polysaccharides connected through __________ linkages, and cellulose is connected via __________ linkages.
Glycogen and starch molecules are connected by alpha linkages. Glycogen and starch can be digested by humans because we have an enzyme capable of separating these linkages to produce monosaccharides. Cellulose on the other hand is connected through beta linkages. These beta linkages allow for the polysaccharide to form straight chains which can serve structural purposes such as plant cell walls. Cellulose, however, cannot be digested by humans because we do not have enzymes capable of severing these linkages.
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Which of the following requires a carrier protein in order to be transported through the bloodstream?
Blood is an aqueous solution and will easily dissolve polar, hydrophilic molecules. Nonpolar molecules, however, do not easily exist in this solution and require a bound polar group, such as a carrier protein, to exist in equilibrium.
Proteins, carbohydrates, and nucleic acids all contain polar groups, allowing them to dissolve in the blood. Lipids, however, are nonpolar and require transport proteins. Steroids are a class of lipids and will require protein assistance for transport in the blood.
Sucrose is a carbohydrate, glycine is a polar amino acid, and ATP is a polar nucleic acid derivative.
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Which of the following molecules is amphipathic?
Amphipathic molecules contain both polar and nonpolar regions, making them an extremely diverse class with an array of functions. For example, bile is an amphipathic molecule whose nonpolar region interacts with fats and whose polar region interacts with the aqueous environment of the small intestine.
Most lipids are entirely nonpolar and hydrophobic. Phospholipids, however, are formed from a glycerol molecule bound to two hydrophobic fatty acid tails and a hydrophilic phosphate head. This structure allows phospholipids amphipathic properties. Most notably, phospholipids are able to interact with the aqueous environments in the cell cytosol and extracellular environment, while maintaining the hydrophobic region of the cell membrane that acts as a semipermeable barrier.
Triglycerides are considered nonpolar. Glutamate is an acidic amino acid with highly polar properties. Maltose is a six-carbon sugar (carbohydrate) and is highly polar.
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Which of the following lipid classifications has the primary purpose of storing energy for the body?
Lipids have a variety of functions in the human body, one of which is the storage of energy for later use. This function is accomplished by triglycerides (also called triacylglycerols), which belong to the class of glycerolipids.
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Fatty acids can vary in length. Which of the following fatty acids chains cannot not be synthesized in the human body?
Fatty acids synthesized in the human body always have an even number of carbon atoms usually between 12 and 28. Odd-numbered fatty acid chains will occasionally be found in plants and marine animals.
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A phospholipid contains which of the following components?
I. Fatty acids
II. Phosphate
III. Sulfate
IV. Glycerol
A phospholipid is made up of two fatty acids and a phosphate group with an R-group attached to a glycerol backbone. The phosphate group allows for one end of the molecule to be polar while the fatty acids allow for the other part to be nonpolar. Phospholipids are a major component of the bilayered cellular membrane
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Pick the reason that is least likely to explain why two purines will never be seen attached to each other in a DNA helix.
DNA strands are composed of millions of nucleotides. As a result, it would be virtually impossible to find a single strand that did not have all four nucleotides.
Nucleotides combine in purine-pyrimidine pairs due to the sterically appropriate fit of the bases, as well as the preferred combination of hydrogen bonds between the two nucleotides. As a result, two purines would not be seen combined. This is due to both being too large when together, and the incorrect hydrigen bonding between their functional groups.
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Which of the following is not true of nucleic acids?
DNA and RNA share very similar structures, with two primary differences: DNA lacks a hydroxide group on the 2' carbon of the ribose sugar and RNA uses uracil in place of thymine.
Both DNA and RNA have phosphate groups attached to the 5' carbon of the sugar, which can be joined to the 3' carbon of an adjacent nucleotide by a phosphodiester bond. As a result, both RNA and DNA are read in the 5'-to-3' direction.
Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and guanosine triphosphate (GTP) are derived from adenine and guanine, two of the fundamental nitrogenous bases in nucleic acids, making them nucleic acid derivatives.
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What is the main difference between DNA nucleotides and RNA nucleotides?
The correct answer is that RNA nucleotides have two hydroxide groups on the sugar, whereas DNA nucleotides have only one hydroxide group. RNA uses uracil in place of thymine; not DNA. Both DNA and RNA have five-carbon sugars and are bound together along the backbone by phosphodiester bonds. Though base pairing is more common in DNA (double-stranded RNA is less common), both utilize hydrogen bonding.
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Which of the following are components of a nucleotide?
I. Nitrogenous base
II. Glucose sugar
III. Ribose sugar
IV. Three sulfates
V. Three phosphates
A nucleotide consists of a nitrogenous base (adenine, guanine, cytosine, thymine, or uracil), a pentose sugar (either ribose or deoxyribose), and three phosphates. These nucleotide monomers can be strung together via phosphodiester linkages to form a polynucleotide. This polynucleotide can base pair with another polynucleotide through hydrogen bonding to form double-stranded DNA.
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