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Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a...

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Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external environments? 1. Phospholipid bilayer 2. Glycocalyx 3. Peripheral proteins 4. Proteoglycans
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Page 1: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability

to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external environments?

1. Phospholipid bilayer

2. Glycocalyx

3. Peripheral proteins

4. Proteoglycans

Page 2: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

Which type of integral protein allows water and small ions to pass through the cell membrane?

1. Receptor proteins

2. Carrier proteins

3. Channel proteins

4. Recognition proteins

Page 3: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

Which statement(s) correctly distinguish between cytoplasm and cytosol?

1. Cytosol has a higher concentration of suspended proteins than cytoplasm.

2. Cytosol is the intracellular fluid and is composed of nutrients, ions, proteins, and wastes and cytoplasm is the term for all material located between the cell membrane and nucleus.

3. Potassium ion concentration is higher in cytoplasm than in cytosol.

4. Cytosol and cytoplasm refer to the same substance.

Page 4: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

What is/are the major difference(s) between cytosol and extracellular fluid?

1. Cytosol has a higher concentration of sodium ions

2. ECF is a transport medium only, whereas cytosol has some carbohydrates and amino acids

3. Cytosol has a higher concentration of potassium ions

4. 2 and 3

Page 5: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

Which of the listed organelles is non-membranous and correctly paired with its

function?

1. Microvilli/movement of materials over cell surface

2. Ribosomes/protein synthesis

3. Mitochondria/produces ATP required by cell

4. Microtubules/increase surface area for absorption

Page 6: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

What does the presence of many mitochondria imply about a cell’s energy

requirements?

1. A high demand for energy

2. A low demand for energy

3. Fluctuating energy needs requiring flexibility

4. Number of mitochondria provides no implication of energy needs

Page 7: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

Certain cells in the ovaries and testes contain large amounts of smooth endoplasmic

reticulum (SER). Why?

1. To produce large amounts of proteins

2. To digest materials quickly

3. To store large amounts of hormones

4. To produce large amounts of steroid hormones

Page 8: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

Cells lining the small intestine have numerous fingerlike projections on their free surface. What are these structures, and what is their function?

1. Microvilli; move substances across cell surface

2. Microvilli; increase cell’s surface area and absorptive ability

3. Cilia; increase cell’s surface area and absorptive ability

4. Cilia; move substances across cell surface

Page 9: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

What is the genetic code?

1. It is the method by which proteins code for amino acids.

2. It is the “language” the cell uses in the form of triplet codons, which specify individual amino acids.

3. It is the portion of DNA that contains instructions for the synthesis of tRNA.

4. It is the strand of DNA containing complementary triplets used for mRNA production.

Page 10: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

What process would be affected by the lack of the enzyme RNA polymerase?

1. Nothing would be affected; DNA polymerase would take over

2. Cell’s ability to duplicate DNA

3. Cell’s ability to translate DNA

4. Cell’s ability to transcribe RNA

Page 11: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

What are two reasons that mRNA transcription so vital?

1. Protein synthesis occurs through transcription/it occurs very quickly

2. DNA cannot leave the nucleus/transcription ensures that mRNA exactly matches the coding strand of the gene

3. It allows formation of chains of amino acids/the same information is presented in a different language

4. None of these is correct

Page 12: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

Define “selectively permeable” as it applies to the cell membrane.

1. It is a membrane through which nothing can pass.

2. It is a membrane that allows the free passage of some molecules, but restricts the passage of others.

3. It is a membrane through which any substance can pass without restriction.

4. It is a membrane that only allows substances through by active transport.

Page 13: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

How would a decrease in the concentration of oxygen in the lungs affect the diffusion of oxygen

into the blood?

1. Decrease in molecule size results in decreased diffusion

2. Decrease in distance results in increased diffusion

3. Increase in electrical forces results in increased diffusion

4. Decrease in gradient size results in decreased speed of diffusion

Page 14: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

What is so special about osmosis, compared with diffusion?

1. Osmosis allows free passage of alcohol, fatty acids, and steroids through the plasma membrane.

2. Osmosis is the movement of water rather than solute.

3. In osmosis, water flows across a membrane toward the solution that has a higher concentration of solutes, because that is where water concentration is lower.

4. 2 and 3 are correct.

Page 15: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

Some Pediatricians recommend the use of a 10% salt solution to relieve congestion for infants

with stuffy noses. What effect would such a solution have on the

cells lining the nasal cavity, and why?

1. Cells will lose water because this is a hypertonic solution.

2. Cells will lose water because this is a hypotonic solution.

3. Cells will gain water because this is a hypertonic solution.

4. Cells will gain water because this is a hypotonic solution.

Page 16: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

All methods of carrier-mediated transport have the following characteristics ___.

1. Concentration gradients, transmembrane potential, and resting potential

2. Specificity, saturation limits, and regulation

3. Endocytosis, exocytosis, and pinocytosis

4. Isotonic, hypertonic, and hypotonic solutions

Page 17: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

Which of the following methods of carrier-mediated transport is paired with its function?

1. Active transport/it is dependent on a concentration gradient

2. Facilitated diffusion/substances are bound to a receptor and passed across the cell membrane by carrier proteins

3. Sodium-potassium pump/moves Na outside the cell and K inside the cell

4. 2 and 3 are correct

Page 18: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

During digestion in the stomach, the concentration of hydrogen ions (H+) rises to

many times that of cells in the stomach. Which transport process must be operating?

1. Facilitated diffusion

2. Osmosis

3. Active transport

4. Endocytosis

Page 19: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

When they encounter bacteria, certain types of white blood cells engulf the bacteria and

bring them into the cell. What is this process called?

1. Pseudocytosis

2. Exocytosis

3. Pinocytosis

4. Phagocytosis

Page 20: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

Each type of cell has a characteristic resting potential. Which is correct?

1. Fat cells (−40 mV)

2. Neurons (−70 mV)

3. Cardiac muscle cells (−90 mV)

4. All of the above are correct

Page 21: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

If the cell membrane were freely permeable to sodium ions (Na+), how would the

transmembrane potential be affected?

1. It would not change

2. It would become more positive

3. It would become more negative

4. It would become unstable

Page 22: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

During the S phase, which of the following occur(s)?

1. DNA polymerase binds to exposed nitrogenous bases

2. DNA replication

3. Synthesis of histone proteins in the nucleus

4. All of the above are correct

Page 23: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

A cell is actively manufacturing enough organelles to serve two functional cells. This cell is probably in which phase of its

life cycle?

1. S

2. G1

3. G2

4. M

Page 24: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

During DNA replication, a nucleotide is deleted from a sequence that normally codes for a

polypeptide. What effect will this deletion have on the amino acid sequence of the

polypeptide?

1. No effect, deletion will be skipped

2. No effect, deletion will be automatically repaired

3. Amino acid sequence will disintegrate

4. Amino acid sequence would be altered

Page 25: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

What would happen if spindle fibers failed to form in a cell during mitosis?

1. Centromeres would not appear

2. Nuclear membrane would not disintegrate

3. Chromosomes would not separate

4. Chromatin would not condense

Page 26: Which component of the cell membrane is primarily responsible for the membrane’s ability to form a physical barrier between the cell’s internal and external.

Which of the following stages of mitosis is correctly paired with the events of that stage?

1. Anaphase/centromeres of chromatid pairs separate and daughter chromosomes are pulled to opposite ends of the cell

2. Prophase/chromatids are aligned along center of the cell

3. Telophase/chromosomes condense and nuclear membrane fragments

4. All of the above are correct


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