Cell Biology (BIOS2101)
Geology, Mining and Environmental Science - GENV
Semester: First Semester
Level: 200
Year: 2013
BIOS 2101: Cell Biology by Dr Salah A. Martin
Chapter 0: REVISION QUESTIONS (2013-2014 Academic year)
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(N/B These revision Questions for chapter 0-Chemistry of life will be available and
accessible in this website only till Monday the 11
th
of November 2013.)
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(1) The large diversity of shapes of biological molecules is possible because of the extensive presence of
___.
(a) carbon (b) oxygen (c) hydrogen (d) nitrogen (e) sulfur.
(2) Variations in the properties of different organic molecules are most closely associated with ____.
(a) the number of carbon atoms comprising the molecule’s skeleton (b) the presence or absence of double
bonds (c) the presence or absence of functional groups (d) the orientation of carbon skeleton, as either
ringed or linear (e) the number of carbon atoms present.
(3) Dehydration synthesis is the process in which ____
(a) water molecules are attracted to each other. (b) water molecules are used as a source of raw material to
break down polymers to monomers. (c) water molecules are formed in the formation of polymers from
monomers (d) water molecules are attracted to each other and water molecules formed in the formation of
polymers from monomers (e) None of these choices is correct.
(4) What is the main sugar used by cells for energy?
(a) any polysaccharide (b) aspartame (c) sucrose (d) glucose (e) saccharin
(5) Glucose plus fructose forms a disaccharide called ___
(a) maltose (b) sucrose (c) starch (d) amino acid (e) cellulose
(6) Plant cell walls consist mainly of ___.
(a) chitin (b) cellulose (c) peptidoglycan (d) chlorophyll (e) none of the above
(7) The characteristic that all lipids have in common is that ___
(a) they are all made of fatty acids and glycerol (b) they all contain nitrogen (c) none of them is very high
in energy content (d) they are all acidic when mixed with water (e) none of them dissolve in water.
(8) In some places, a polypeptide may coil in a helix or fold back on itself as a pleated sheet. This is called
___ and the coils or folds are held in place by ___.
(a) tertiary structure, ..covalent bonds (b) primary structure, ..hydrogen bonds (c) secondary structure,
..peptide bonds (d) tertiary structure, ..covalent bonds (e) secondary structure, ..hydrogen bonds.
(9) A shortage of phosphorus in the soil would make it especially difficult for a plant to manufacture ___ (a)
cellulose (b) proteins (c) DNA (d) fatty acids (e) sucrose
(10) The building blocks of nucleic acid molecules is called ___
(a) polysaccharides (b) amino acids (c) fatty acids (d) nucleotides (e) DNA and RNA
(11) Glycogen is ___
(a) the form in which plants store sugars (b) a polysaccharide found in animals (c) a polysaccharide found
in plant cell walls (d) a transport protein that carries oxygen (e) a source of saturated fat.
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(12) Which of these is a source of lactose?
(a) sugar beets (b) milk (c) potatoes (d) sugar cane (e) starch
(13) Which of these is a polysaccharide?
(a) sucrose (b) glucose (c) galactose (d) lactose (e) cellulose
(14) __ is the most abundant organic compound on earth
(a) Glucose (b) cellulose (c) lactose (d) starch (e) Glycogen
(15) Which of these does NOT contain a structural protein?
(a) muscles (b) tendons (c) ovalbumin (d) spider silk (e) ligaments
(16) Proteins are polymers of ___
(a)CH
2
O units (b) nucleotides (c) amino acids (d) hydrocarbons (e) glycerol
(17) What type of bond joins the monomers in a protein’s primary structure? (a) ionic (b) hydrophobic (c)
peptide (d) S—S (e) hydrogen
(18) The secondary structure of a protein results from ___
(a) hydrogen bonds (b) ionic bonds (c) hydrophobic interactions (d) peptide bonds (e) bonds between
sulfur atoms
(19) Tertiary structure is not directly dependent on ___.
(a) hydrophobic interactions (b) peptide bonds (c) hydrogen bonds (d) ionic bonds (e) bonds between
sulphur atoms
(20) The two strands of a DNA double helix are held together by ___ that form between pairs of nitrogenous
bases.
(a) hydrogen bonds (b) ionic bonds (c) hydrophobic interactions (d) S-S bonds (e) covalent bonds
(21) A nucleotide is consist of a(n)__
(a) phosphate group, nitrogen-containing base and a hydrocarbon (b) phosphate group, a nitrogen-
containing base and a five-carbon sugar (c) glycerol, nitrogen-containing base and a five-carbon sugar (d)
amino group, a nitrogen-containing base and a five-carbon sugar (e) sulfhydryl group, a nitrogen-containing
base and a five-carbon sugar.
(22) Which of these is an amino group?
(a) R-COOH (b) R-COH (c) R-OH (d) R-NH
2
(e) R-PO
4
.
(23) Choose the pair of terms that completes this sentence: Hydroxyl group is to ___ as ___ is to amino
group.
(a) carbonyl …carboxyl (b) amino acids …fatty acid (c) carbon …nitrogen (d) sugar …sugar (e) alcohol
…amino.
(24) What is the process by which cells link monomers together to form polymers?
(a) dehydration synthesis (b) hydrolysis (c) monometization (d) protein formation (e) coiling.
(25) The four main categories of macromolecules in a cell are ___
(a) proteins, DNA, RNA and steroids (b) monosaccharides, lipids, polysaccharides and proteins (c)
proteins, nuclei acids, carbohydrates and lipids (d) nucleic acids, carbohydrates, monosacharides, and
proteins (e) RNA, DNA, proteins, and carbohydrates.
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(26) Sugars are mainly used by our bodies
(a) for membrane construction (b)as fuel (c) as structural molecules such as, hair and finger nails (d) for
building the genetic material (e) for lipid storage.
(27) One characteristic shared by sucrose and maltose is ___
(a) they are polysaccharides (b) they are all monosaccharides (c) they are all disaccharides (d) they contain
fructose (e0 they are all indigestible by humans
(28) Cellulose is a ___ made of many ___.
(a) polypeptide …monomers (b) carbohydrate …fatty acids (c) polymer …glucose molecules (d) protein
…amino acids (e) lipid …triglycerides.
(29) In what polysaccharide form do plants store sugar to be available later for energy?
(a) glycogen (b) cellulose (c) starch (d) protein (e) fatty acids
(30) The complex carbohydrate that you are most likely to have eaten recently is ___
(a) chitin (b) starch (c) glucose (d) lactose (e) ribose
(31) A polysaccharide that we use for storing energy in our muscles and livers is ___
(a) glucose (b) glycogen (c) starch (d) chitin (e) cellulose
(32) A glucose molecule is to starch as ____
(a) a steroid is to a lipid (b) a protein is to an amino acid (c) a nucleic acid is to a polypeptide (d) a
nucleotide is to a nucleic acid (e) an amino acid is to a nuclei acid.
(33) Cholesterol belongs to which class of molecules?
(a) protein (b) amino acids (c) lipids (d) carbohydrates (e) nucleic acid
(34) Protein molecules are polymers of ___.
(a) DNA molecules (b) chromosomes (c) ribosomes (d) amino acid molecules (e) photosynthetic
molecules
(35) Which of the following do nucleic acids and proteins have in common?
(a) they are both made of amino acids. (b) their structure contain sugars (c) they are hydrophobic (d) They
are large polymers. (e) they each consist of four basic kinds and of subunits.
(36) To what does the term “polypeptide” specifically refer?
(a) organic molecules linked by dehydration synthesis (b) organic monomers covalently bonded (c) amino
acids linked by hydrolysis (d) carbohydrates with a hydrogen bond holding them together (e) none of the
above.
(37) A peptide bond binds___
(a) oxygen to hydrogen in a molecule of water (b) sodium to chloride in salt (c) amino acids together in
proteins (d) is a bond between two monosaccharides (e) none of the above
(38) Which of the following would probably NOT affected when a protein is denatured? (a) primary
structure (b) secondary structure (c) hydrogen bonds (d) tertiary structure (e) All of the above must be
affected for the protein to be denatured.
(39) Enzyme molecules require a specific shape to perform their catalytic function. Which of the following
might alter the protein shape?
(a) denaturing the protein (b) making changes to the concentration of salt in the environment (c) heating
the protein (d) making changes to the pH of the environment (e) all of the above
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(40) The “primary structure” of a protein refers to ___
(a) the alpha helix or pleated sheets (b) the side groups of the amino acids (c) coiling due to hydrogen
bonding between amino acids (d) the interactions among two or more polypeptides (e) the number and
sequence of amino acids.
(41) The alpha helix and pleated sheet represent which level of proteins structure?
(a) primary structure (b) secondary structure (c) tertiary structure (d) quaternary structure (e) pentiary
structure.
(42) The overall three-dimensional shape of a polypeptide is called the ___
(a) double helix (b) primary structure (c) secondary structure (d) tertiary structure (e) quaternary structure.
(43) How does a protein’s quaternary structure differ from other levels of protein structure?
(a) it involves two or more polypeptide chains. (b) it takes the form of an alpha helix. (c) it is described by
the sequence of amino acids in a polypeptide chain. (d) it depends on interactions among a polypeptide side
groups (e) it takes the form of a pleated sheet.
(44) Based on the way nitrogen bases pair, you would expect the percentage of __ to be equal to the
percentage of ___
(a) A…T (b) A..G (c) T…G (d) A…C (e) I…
(45) How does DNA differ from RNA?
(a) DNA consists of two strands in a double helix (b) DNA is larger. (c) One of their nitrogen-containing
bases is different (d) They contain different sugars. (e) All of the above are differences.
(46) A nucleotide is made of which of the following chemical components?
(a) a nitrogen-containing base, an amino acid, and a 5-carbon sugar (b) a nitrogen-containing base, an
amino acid, and a phosphate group (c) a nitrogen-containing base, a phosphate group and a sugar (d) a
nitrogen-containing base, a fatty acid, and an amino acid (e) glycerol and fatty acids.
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END
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