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Return to Biochemistry: The Molecular Basis of Life, Seventh International Edition Student Resources
Chapter 15 Review Quizzes
Nitrogen Metabolism II: Degradation
Quiz Content
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What types of molecules serve as the starting materials for synthesis of uric acid?
Carbohydrate
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Amino acids
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Pyrimidine bases
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Complex lipids such as lecithin and cholesterol
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Purine bases
correct
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Frogs begin life as tadpoles and then mature into four-legged creatures capable of moving on land. As they grow, their nitrogen metabolism:
Starts as ammonotelic and becomes ureotelic
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Starts as ureotelic and becomes ammonotelic
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Starts as uricotelic and becomes ammonotelic
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Starts as uricotelic and becomes ureotelic
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Starts as ureotelic and becomes uricotelic
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Maple syrup urine disease results from an inborn error of metabolism of certain types of amino acids. Which ones?
Phenylalanine and tyrosine
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Leucine, isoleucine, and valine
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Serine and threonine
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Any acidic amino acids
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Cysteine and methionine
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Biochemists consider animals to be wasteful of nitrogen. Metabolism of nitrogen in animals differs from metabolism in plants in this way:
Nitrogen metabolism proceeds as anabolism and catabolism at the same time in plants, but nitrogen anabolism does not occur in animals until they die
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Nitrogen metabolism proceeds as anabolism and catabolism at the same time in animals, but nitrogen catabolism does not occur in plants until they die
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Nitrogen metabolism proceeds as anabolism and catabolism at the same time in chlorophyll, but nitrogen anabolism does not occur in animals until they die
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Nitrogen metabolism proceeds as anabolism and catabolism at the same time in plants, but nitrogen catabolism does not occur in plants until they die
correct
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Plants excrete nitrogen as nitrous oxide
correct
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In order to relieve depression, psychiatrists may attempt to prevent destruction or reuptake of neurotransmitters. Monoamine oxidase affects levels of tyramine, a neurotransmitter which also acts as a hypertensive agent in brain. In order to avoid vascular accidents in the brain, persons who are prescribed MAO are advised to avoid old wines, hard cheeses, and pickled foods which may contain tyramine. Monoamine oxidase relieves depression by:
Blocking reuptake of monoamine neurotransmitters
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Blocking degradation of monoamine neurotransmitters
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Enhancing transport of catecholamine neurotransmitters
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Blocking degradation of catecholamines
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Decreasing reuptake of catecholamines
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Catabolism of amino acids usually follows one of two paths, depending upon the types of degradation products they form. Amino acids are said to be:
Ketogenic or glucogenic
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Ammonotelic or uricotelic
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Uricotelic or hyperglycogenic
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Phototropic or phototaxic
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Photogenic or hyperallergenic
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A number of toxins such as those found in puffer fish or the Red Tide organisms interfere with metabolism of acetylcholine. Directly after the firing of a synapse in voluntary muscle, acetylcholine is destroyed by:
Acetylcholine transferase
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Cholinesterase
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Glucose-6-phosphate hydrolase
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Phosphofructokinase
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Phospholipase A
correct
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Ubiquinated proteins are transferred to large proteolytic machines for cleavage to smaller fragments. The proteolytic machine is known as a:
Proteasome
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Nucleosome
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Peroxisome
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Ubiquitosome
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Red zone
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One type of protein which you would expect to have a relatively short half-life would be:
Scleroproteins in hair
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Enzymes
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Membrane proteins
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Hooves
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Antibodies
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Metabolism of fats and carbohydrates differs from nitrogen metabolism in that:
Nitrogen can be stored, fat and carbohydrate can't
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Fat can be stored, nitrogen and carbohydrate can't
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Fats and carbohydrate can be stored, nitrogen can't
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Carbohydrate can be stored, nitrogen and fat can't
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Nitrogen and fat can be stored, but carbohydrates can't
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Urea is synthesized in:
Adipocytes
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Erythrocytes
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Hepatocytes
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Websites
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Astrocytes
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One amino acid which is non-essential for humans is not only essential for cats, but is the most common amino acid found in white blood cells. Which one?
Glycine
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Phenylalanine
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β-alanine
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Histidine
correct
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Taurine
correct
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Degradation of proteins is facilitated by a process known as:
Ubiquination
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Peroxidization
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Polymerization
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Esterification
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Calcification
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The major defect in patients suffering myasthenia gravis is:
A shortage of neurotransmitter molecules
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A surplus of serotonin
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A greater amount of acetylcholine than normal
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Increased reuptake of neurotransmitter molecules in general
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Destruction of acetylcholine receptors
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In hyperammonemia, excess ammonia builds up in blood and threatens brain tissue. Hyperammonemia may be treated by intravenous administration of arginine glutamate. The arginine stimulates the ornithine cycle, converting ammonia to urea, and the glutamate helps by:
Taking urea away
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Trapping ammonia by forming glutamine
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Causing increased excretion of glutamic acid oxidase
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Changing the pH of brain tissue
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Decreasing protein synthesis
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Destruction of protein by bacteria converts most of the nitrogen into ammonia or nitrate, which may be used by other organisms. Under some circumstances, the end product of degradation of proteins to nitrogen products may result in a substance which is very difficult for other organisms to metabolize. What substance might this be?
Carbon
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Atmospheric hydrogen
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Nitrogen molecules
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Atmospheric oxygen
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Chlorophyll
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Most molecules in the body are formed and destroyed at controlled rates. One of the fates of aging hemoglobin is formation for excretion of 250-400 mg daily of this pigment:
Porphyrin
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Bilirubin
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Hemoglobin
correct
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Ferritin
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Cytochrome
correct
incorrect
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The initial step in cellular catabolism of amino acids is usually:
Loss of the acid functional group
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Conversion of the acid group to an aldehyde group
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Conversion of the acid group to an alcohol group
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Esterification of the acid group with an alcohol
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Deamination, or elimination of the nitrogen
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Sedentary persons who consume rich diets sometimes suffer gout, a condition which may cause toes to swell and joints to become painful due to an accumulation of:
Glucose
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Glycogen
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Fatty tissue
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Acetylcholine
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Uric acid
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Native American trackers were famous for their skill at following minute clues to track persons or animals through grasslands, forests, and across deserts. One of the clues used by these trackers was the feces deposited by animals or humans. In addition to predicting the species (it was always nice to know whether one were tracking a human or a grizzly), the trackers could predict the time when the feces were deposited by the temperature and color. A good candidate for the orange compound in feces which darkens on exposure to air is:
Biliverdin
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Bilirubin
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Hemoglobin
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Verdi
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Cytochrome
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Unlike many physiological substances, metabolism of ammonia is under very strict control because:
Ammonia is relatively insoluble in water
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Ammonia is a flammable gas
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Ammonia reacts readily with acids and could cause acidosis
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Ammonia is very toxic
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Ammonia could be consumed by intestinal bacteria if they were not held in check
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Blood capillaries are fragile and may break upon impact (such as a slap in the kisser), allowing components of blood to spill into the interstitial spaces, where they degrade slowly. The resulting "black" eye might be due to a greenish pigment called:
Biliverdin
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Bilirubin
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Hemoglobin
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Verdi
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Cytochrome
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Degradation of ketogenic amino acids results in two-carbon fragments which may be formed into ketone bodies or fatty acids, or oxidized to carbon dioxide and water by:
Glycolysis
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The dark cycle
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The pentose phosphate pathway
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Gluconeogenesis
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The TCA cycle
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