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Return to Biochemistry: The Molecular Basis of Life, Seventh International Edition Student Resources
Chapter 14 Review Quizzes
Nitrogen Metabolism I: Synthesis
Quiz Content
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In nature, every conceivable source of nourishment is used by some living thing. Vegetarian animals pick foods which contribute a balanced diet of the essential amino acids by selecting appropriate vegetable materials (a combination of grain and legumes, such as corn and beans in Mexico, or rice and lentils in India). Human hair actually contains all the essential amino acids. Assuming that they wanted to, why can't vegans consume their own hair to recycle the essential amino acids?
It's against their religion; there are strict prohibitions in the Bible and Koran against consuming any portion of the human body
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Hair is too valuable for other purposes
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It's bad luck to eat hair
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Humans lack enzymes needed to hydrolyze the peptide bonds present in hair
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Hair contains toxic amounts of sulfur-containing amino acids
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Glutamate and α-ketoglutaric acid, as well as oxaloacetic acid and aspartic acid, are especially important in carbohydrate metabolism because:
They are all acidic
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They are especially high-energy compounds
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They are essential amino acids
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They are especially large molecules
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They allow a way to add intermediate molecules to the TCA cycle
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Acids taste sour, and bases taste bitter. In nature, we find a number of acidic substances in food which contribute to taste qualities. We also find among our foods and drugs some bitter-tasting natural substances which rarely are consumed. Which of the following fits that category?
Sodium hydroxide
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Alkaloids
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Limestone
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Potassium hydroxide
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Neurotoxins
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Tyrosine is a non-essential amino acid because we can synthesize it from:
Tryptophan
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Phenylalanine
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Arginine
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Benzene
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Phenol
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As recently as 1990, thirty percent of children living in some zip code areas of major cities had blood lead levels in excess of 10 μg/dL. Some neurologists equate one microgram of lead per deciliter with the loss of one IQ point. The major action of lead as an inhibitor of heme synthesis is to:
Bind to and precipitate protein
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Bind to sulfhydryl groups
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Kill kidney cells
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Produce a blue line at the base of the teeth
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Deposit at the epiphyseal plates of bone, forming a line visible with X-ray
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Amino acids act both as acids and bases. Each carboxylic acid functional group has a pK below 7, and each amine group has a pK greater than 7. If you treated one mole of glutamic acid with one mole of sodium hydroxide, you would form this substance commonly used as a meat tenderizer:
Monosodium glutamate
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The hydrochloride salt of glutamic acid
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Soy sauce
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Disodium glutamate
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Glutamine chloride
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S-Adenosylmethionine is used in synthetic reactions to:
Provide sulfur for synthetic reactions
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Accept methyl groups for catabolism
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Provide methyl groups for synthesis reactions
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Carry alcohol groups during oxidation reactions
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Provide a pleasant molecule to illustrate the effects of ethanol metabolism
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Parkinson's disease appears to result in lower than normal levels of the neurotransmitter dopamine in the substantia nigra portion of the brain. Why couldn't this be treated by intravenous injection of dopamine?
Dopamine is a dangerous poison
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Injections of dopamine would overstimulate the system
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Dopamine is too polar to cross the membranes of the blood-brain barrier
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Dopamine is too expensive
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Dopamine can't be synthesized outside the body and must be produced endogenously
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Hydrolysis of a nucleotide results in release of:
A purine or pyrimidine base and a sugar such as ribose or deoxyribose
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Glucose, ribose, and deoxyribose
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Phosphoric acid and glucose
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Heterocyclic nitrogen bases and phosphate
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A purine or pyrimidine base, a pentose sugar, and a phosphate molecule or ion
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Serotonin is an important neurotransmitter which fosters sleep, calmness, and non-aggression. Levels of serotonin can be increased slightly by consumption of foods containing:
Phenylalanine
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Tyrosine
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Proline
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Tryptophan
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Histidine
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Although most plants and some bacteria can synthesize all the amino acids, we need not obtain all our essential amino acids from plants. Another source might be:
Herbivorous animals
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Carnivorous plants
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Mineral supplements
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Sea water
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Mineral water
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Ten of the amino acids are considered to be essential; the others are not. What makes an amino acid essential?
The amino acid must be obtained by prescription only
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The amino acid has a higher molecular weight than glycine or alanine
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The amino acid can not enter cells alone and must be taken in by active transport
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The amino acid can not be synthesized in the body and must be consumed
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The amino acid must be purchased at a nutrition center
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Porphyria is a blood disorder usually caused by overproduction of heme. Which amino acid joins with succinyl-CoA to form the starting material for synthesis of heme?
Glycine
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Alanine
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Tyrosine
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Tryptophan
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Proline
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The brain protects itself against toxic ammonia by converting the ammonia to:
Alanine
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Protein
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Urea
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Uric acid
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Glutamine
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Nitrogen passes from form to form and from one organism to another, moving from the atmosphere into life forms and eventually passing back into the atmosphere or into minerals as plants and animals die, and then back again into living things. This movement of nitrogen through living and non-living stages is referred to as:
Passive transport
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Amino acid metabolism, including synthesis and degradation
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The nitrogen cycle
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Solid state synthesis and degradation
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The cycle of life
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Transamination of amino acids results in products called:
β-ketothiolates
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α-keto acids
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Branched chain amino acids
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Amino acids having an alcohol functional group at the second carbon
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High-powered sport cars produced by the Pontiac Company
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A person is in nitrogen balance if the amount of nitrogen consumed in food as proteins or amino acids equals that excreted. We are said to be in positive nitrogen balance if we take in more than is excreted, and in negative balance if we excrete more than we consume. A person who had suffered kidney damage and was found to have high levels of protein in his or her urine would probably be in:
Positive nitrogen balance
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Nitrogen balance
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Negative nitrogen balance
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Nitrogen imbalance due to the nitrogen breathed in
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Indeterminate nitrogen balance due to the nitrogen breathed in and out
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Fertilizer contains nitrogen, potassium, and phosphorus in proportions necessary to promote plant growth. The phosphorus is usually in the form of phosphates, and the nitrogen is usually either in the form of nitrates or ammonium compounds. Why must nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium be added yearly to soil?
Plants remove 100% of these materials from soil each year, so they must be replaced
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Many of these substances are soluble in water and leach from the soil, so must be replaced
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These substances are volatile and evaporate from the soil
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Nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium interact with other substances and are locked into insoluble compounds
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Nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium are consumed by microorganisms and formed into insoluble compounds
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Some atmospheric nitrogen may be converted by lightning to soluble compounds usable to plants, but much is fixed by bacteria living in nodules on the roots of typical plants. Which of the following would harbor nitrogen-fixing bacteria?
Corn
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Soybeans
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Oats
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Wheat
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Strawberries
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We need daily supplies of many vitamins, including folic acid. For what purpose or purposes do we need folic acid?
To carry one-carbon fragments during metabolism
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To carry sulfhydryl groups during metabolism
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To carry alcohol groups during oxidation reactions
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To replenish intermediates of the TCA cycle
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To modify the inner mitochondrial membrane
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One person in eighty carries a recessive gene for phenylketonuria, an inherited error of metabolism resulting from inability to convert phenylalanine to tyrosine. A mating of two carriers for phenylketonuria should result in 25% normal, non-carrier offspring, 50% carriers, and 25% homozygous phenylketonurics. If identified at birth, phenylketonurics can be placed on a special diet which helps prevent neurological damage. Following several years on the diet, the nervous system of the child usually develops well enough to tolerate a normal diet. Which of the following would be most likely components of the special diet?
Lower amounts of phenylalanine and higher amounts of tyrosine than usual
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Lower amounts of tyrosine and higher amounts of phenylalanine than usual
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Lower amounts of phenylalanine and higher amounts of tryptophan than usual
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Lower amounts of tryptophan and higher amounts of tyrosine than usual
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Lower amounts of tryptophan and higher amounts of proline than usual
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ã-Aminobutyric acid (GABA) is an anxiolytic neurotransmitter; if we have sufficient quantities in the brain, we aren't so uptight on the day of organic chemistry exams. The same protein molecule affected by binding GABA is believed to have a receptor site for benzodiazepines and another for ethanol, making a combination of benzodiazepine and alcohol deadly. GABA affects a membrane channel allowing passage of:
Sugar
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Acid
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Alcohol
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Chloride ion
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Aromatic amino acids and their metabolites
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