Cell Biology - SAT Subject Test in Biology

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Question

With regards to mitosis, which checkpoint is considered the most important?

Answer

G1 is considered to be the most important checkpoint in the cell cycle. G1 precedes S and G2, so it decides if the cell is ready to commit the resources to go through the S phase, G2 phase, M phase, and then finally division. S is crucial for the replication of cellular materials and the duplication of DNA, but if the cell cannot pass G1, then it will never reach S phase.

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Question

Which three phases are included in Interphase?

Answer

During interphase, you have G1, or gap 1, in which the cell grows. Then you have S phase, in which the cell synthesizes its DNA. Finally, you have G2, or gap 2, in which the cell continues to grow again.

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Question

During the eukaryotic cell cycle, what is the function of the G2 checkpoint?

Answer

The G2 checkpoint of cell division prevents the cell from entering the mitotic or dividing phase until all chromosomes have accurately been replicated. Other answers: "Prevents sister chromatids from separating before each chromatid is secured to a spindle microtubule" refers to the spindle or M checkpoint. "Initiates the cell division process if conditions are favorable" and "Ensures that the cell has matured to a sufficient state before beginning synthesis" refer to functions of the restrictive or G1 checkpoint. "Ensures that each daughter cell has received the correct number of chromatids after cell division" is incorrect since there is no checkpoint in cell division to error check the results of mitosis.

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Question

The cell is the most basic unit of life in all known organisms. Integral to its function is its ability to maintain intracellular and extracellular boundaries. Maintaining these boundaries is the function of membranes.

Which of the following choices include cells that have both a cell wall and a membrane?

I. Bacterial cells
II. Fungal cells
III. Animal cells

Answer

Plants, bacteria, and fungi have both a membrane as well as a cell wall. On the other hand, animal cells have only a membrane.

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Question

The cell walls of bacteria, plants, and fungi are of varying composition. Plant cells are composed of __________.

Answer

Plant cell walls are made of cellulose, a polysaccharide.

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Question

The cell walls of bacteria, plants, and fungi are of varying composition. Bacterial cells are composed of __________.

Answer

Bacterial cell walls are composed of peptidoglycan, a protein and sugar moiety.

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Question

The cell walls of bacteria, plants, and fungi are of varying composition. Fungi cells are composed of __________.

Answer

Fungal cells have cell walls composed of chitin, a polysaccharide similar in structure to cellulose.

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Question

When cells send a signal, it is often in the form of a secreted molecule. In some cases, a cell will secrete a molecule that binds to a receptor on its own cell surface. What type of signaling is this?

Answer

When a molecule binds to a receptor on a cell surface, it means that a signal has been received by that cell. In this case, the cell that sent the signal is the same cell that is receiving the signal. Autocrine signaling is the term that describes a cell sending a signal to itself ("auto" in this context means self). Exocrine signaling occurs when a substance is secreted through a gland or duct. Endocrine signaling occurs when a substance is secreted into the bloodstream. Paracrine signaling occurs when a cell sends a signal to nearby cells (often to change the behavior or properties of those cells).

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Question

All of following are true of cellular respiration EXCEPT __________.

Answer

Cellular respiration is NOTan anaerobic process. It is exactly the opposite! Cellular respiration uses oxygen as its final electron acceptor making it an aerobic process. Anaerobic process do not use oxygen.

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Question

For each molecule of glucose, how many ATP are produced by the Citric Acid Cycle?

Answer

Each molecule of glucose produces 2 pyruvate molecules. Each of these pyruvate molecules go through the citric acid cycle and produce 1 ATP each, resulting in 2 ATP total.

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Question

How many ATP molecules are produced per glucose molecule in anaerobic respiration?

Answer

Anaerobic respiration takes place when oxygen is low, such as when lactic acid fermentation takes place in human muscle tissue. This can be painful and cause some of the cramps experienced during intense exercise. Anaerobic respiration is much less efficient at producing ATP than aerobic respiration; it only produces 2 ATP per glucose molecule vs. 36 net ATP in aerobic respiration.

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Question

Which of the following statements about the electron transport chain is true?

Answer

The electron transport chain is found on the inside of the inner mitochondrial membrane. It is not used to transport proteins; instead, it generates ATP to be used as an energy source by the cell. The electron transport chain is found in plants and animals (though the one found in plants operates very differently than the one found in animals). Oxygen is the final electron acceptor, not glucose.

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Question

Which of the following is true of the endoplasmic reticulum?

Answer

The endoplasmic reticulum is made up of membrane-enclosed spaces used for the trafficking of materials that will be secreted from the cell. Therefore it is involved in exocytosis, not endocytosis. The smooth ER is involved in metabolism and lipid synthesis. The rough ER contains ribosomes accounting for its rough appearance and allowing it to be involved in protein synthesis.

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Question

Which of the following statements about the Golgi apparatus are FALSE?

Answer

The Golgi aparatus does not synthesize lipids. Lipids are synthesized in the smooth ER.

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Question

Which of the following accurately describes the rough endoplasmic reticulum and the smooth endoplasmic reticulum?

Answer

The rough endoplasmic reticulum is described as "rough" because it is covered in ribosomes, which look like tiny beads along its surface. The smooth endoplasmic reticulum doesn't have these ribosomes all over its surface, so it appears flat and is described as "smooth" for this reason. The ribosomes function to make proteins.

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Question

Each of the following is a step in mitosis EXCEPT __________.

Answer

There are no homologous pairs in mitosis. Mitosis has sister chromatids that separate and result in two identical daughter cells. Meiosis has homologous pairs because it occurs in sex cells and has one chromosome from the father and the other from the mother. These chromosomes pair up in Metaphase I and then separate in Anaphase I. Mitosis occurs in somatic cells so there is only one chromosome made up of two sister chromatids that separate during Anaphase.

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Question

During which phase of meiosis does crossing over occur?

Answer

Crossing over occurs during Prophase I. During Prophase I, chromatin condenses and homologous chromosomes come together to form a tetrad. At this point, sometimes pieces of the chromatids within the chromosomes break off and exchange DNA. This process is known as "crossing over." This cannot occur in Prophase II because there are no homologous chromosomes in this stage, and therefore there isn't any different DNA to exchange.

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Question

1. Chromosomes begin to condense

2. Centrioles separate and begin to form a mitotic spindle as they move towards opposite sides of the cell

3. The nucleolus breaks down

During which phase of cell division do the given processes occur?

Answer

During prophase, the cell will begin to condense its chromosomes to prepare for separation during anaphase. The pair of centrioles in the cell will also separate and begin to move towards opposite ends of the cell, while remaining attached to each chromosome by a microtubule. These fibers form the mitotic spindle, which organizes and repositions the chromosomes during cell division. During this phase, the nuclear envelope and nucleolus also break down and disappear.

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Question

During which of the following phases of the cell cycle do chromosomes align in the middle of the cell?

Answer

The correct answer is "metaphase." The chromosomes are each attached to spindle fibers at the centromere. When the chromosomes align along the middle of the cell (often called the "metaphase plate"), the cell is in metaphase. Metaphase occurs after prophase (during which the cell grows and replicates its DNA) but before anaphase (when the chromosomes are pulled by spindle fibers to opposite ends of the cell).

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Question

A new organism from Mars has been discovered, and its genome has . Although these organisms are fluorescent green, their cells undergo meiosis and mitosis in the exact same way that human cells do.

After one of these cells undergoes meiosis, how many chromosomes will it have?

Answer

A somatic (body) cell is always diploid, meaning that it has chromosomes. When a cell undergoes meiosis, the number of chromosomes in each daughter cell will be half the number in the original parent cell. Each daughter cell produced from meiosis will be haploid, meaning that it will have chromosomes.

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