This site is 100% ad supported. Please add an exception to adblock for this site.

Biology Chp. 5

Terms

undefined, object
copy deck
What is the 1st Law of Thermodynamics?
any isolated system has a finite amt. of energy that cannot be added to or lost
What is the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics?
the entropy (disorder) of the universe is ever-increasing
Compare exergonic and endergonic reactions & give an example of each.
Exergonic reactions show a net ENERGY RELEASE, while endergonic reactions require ENERGY INPUT. Ex. of EXERgonic: aerobic respiration Ex. of ENDERgonic: photosynthetic reactions
What is the change of ADP to ATP called and why?
Phosphate-group transfers are known as phosphorylations.
Define reactant
starting substance in any metabolic reaction
Define intermediate
substance formed during a reaction sequence
What are cofactors and what do they do?
metal ions & coenzymes that move funct. groups, atoms, and electrons. Ex. NAD+
What is chemical equilibrium?
reaction rate is about the same in both directions
What is a redox reaction?
electron transfers that cells use to gain energy
What happens to a molecule when it is oxidized? Reduced?
One molecule gives up electrons (is oxidized) and another is reduced when it gains them.
What is a metabolic pathway?
enzyme-mediated sequences of reactions
What are the 2 types of metabolic pathways? Give ex.
1. Biosynthetic/anabolic: req. energy inputs ex. assembly of glucose, starch, proteins 2. Degradative/catabolic: exergonic, can break down molecules to smaller, lower energy products ~ ex. aerobic respiration
When chemical bonds are broken in a reaction, ____ is released or absorbed.
energy
What is a catalyst?
Substance that speeds up a chemical reaction
True/Fale: Enzymes are proteins
True
A biological catalyst is an ___.
enzyme
the substance that an enzyme works on is called the ____
substrate
Complete. Enzyme ~ Substrate lactase ~ ____ maltase ~ ____ protease ~ ____ lipase ~ ____
lactose maltose protein lipids
most enzymes end in -__
-ase
where do the substrate bind to the enzyme?
on the active site
the active site and the enzyme have ____ shapes
complementary
The Lock and Key Model compares the ____ to a key and the ____ to a lock.
enzyme to a key substrate to a lock
What does the Lock and Key model tell you about enzymes?
~ specific b/c of their shape ~ can be reused ~ specific for one substrate
What does the Induced Fit model state?
~ the enzyme and the substrate may not fit perfectly ~ the strain on the molecules may speed up the reaction
What factors affect an enzymes ability to work? What happens to the enzymes?
~ pH ~ temperature They get denatured (change shape)
What are coenzymes?
class of organic compounds (more complicated than cofactors), can be modified during reactions
Are polar molecules attracted to or not attracted to water?
polar molecules are attracted to water
which substances can easily pass through cell membranes? Give 4 ex
oxygen, carbon dioxide, small molecules, nonpolar molecules, water
which substances cannot easily pass through the membrane? 4 ex
large molecules, polar molecules, glucose, and ions
How can molecules that do not easily pass through the lipid bilayer get through the membrane?
- with the help of proteins
diffusion ~ the random movement of molecules from ___ to ___ concentration
high to low
diffusion is a type of (passive/active) transport
passive
Name 3 factors that affect the rate of diffusion
1. temp. 2. size of molecule 3. pressure 4. steepness of concentration gradient
the concentration of water is influenced by concentration of ___
solutes
Define hypertonic, hypotonic, and isotonic
hypertonic = higher solution outside the cell hypotonic = lower solution outside the cell isotonic = equal
What is facilitated diffusion? What substance is necessary for it to happen?
diffusion with the help of proteins ~ glucose is needed to help move protein through channels
What are the two types of endo and exocytosis?
1. phagocytosis - large solid 2. pinocytosis - liquid droplet
What happens in endocytosis?
cell brings molecule into itself using vacuoles
What happens in exocytosis?
vessicle moves toward c.m., fuses w/ cell membrane, bursts & releases contents
Where does the energy to change ADP to ATP come from?
glucose
What is the cause of diffusion and osmosis?
the concentration gradient
What substances regulate metabolic pathways? Give some examples of metabolic pathways.
enzymes & cofactors regulate them ex. photosynthesis, cellular respiration
How are substances moved thru membranes against the concentration gradient?
Active transport using ATP and protein pumps
What substances move by simple diffusion? Which move by facilitated diffusion?
simple: oxygen, carbon dioxide facilitated: glucose
Explain how a molecule can "carry" energy
ATP ~ bonds between phosphates

Deck Info

45

deepsy52

permalink