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Portage Learning BIO171 Exam 1.Questions With Answers Tested And Verified Exam Solutions G, Exams of Biology

A series of biology exam questions and answers covering topics such as amino acids, nucleic acids, cells, enzymes, metabolism, photosynthesis, and microscopy. The questions are multiple-choice and true/false, and the answers are provided. likely intended for students studying biology at the university level.

Typology: Exams

2022/2023

Available from 11/05/2022

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How many different types of amino acids are available from which to make proteins? 20

  1. Define an essential amino acid. An essential amino acid cannot be produced by the human body and as such must be take in from the environment through alternative sources (i.e) food.

Portage Learning BIO171 Exam 1.Questions

With Answers Tested And Verified Exam

Solutions GRADED A+

True or False: A virus is considered a microorganism. False. Viruses are not living and as such are not considered microorganisms. Viruses can, however, be classified as microbes, a more general term that includes microorganisms and viruses.

  1. What is the smallest biological unit of life? A cell.
  2. At a generalized level, all cells are comprised of what? Macromolecules* *A student may also answer: Proteins, Lipids, Nucleic acids and Polysaccharides but they must answer with all four to be fully correct.

Exam Page 3

  1. What are the two major types of nucleic acids and their roles?

DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid): Contains the genetic material as well as heredity characteristics

found in living organisms. RNA (ribonucleic acid): its role is for decoding the sequence of

heredity information found in DNA

  1. What are the two major types of nucleic acids and their roles? There are two major types of nucleic acids: DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) and RNA (ribonucleic acid). Nucleic acids are chemical molecules that carry genetic information Answer Key
  1. Complete the following RNA strand and indicate how many bonds are formed for each complementary pair: 3’ GGUCAUCG 5’ 5’ CC AGC 3’ 3’ GGUCAUCG 5’ 5’ CCAGUAGC 3’ There are 2 bonds formed between A and U, and 3 bonds between G and C.
  2. The plasma membrane (select all that are true): A. Only restricts movement of materials into the cell B. Is often a bilayer comprised of lipids C. Cannot prevent essential nutrients from escaping D. Contains hydrophobic tails pointing inward B and D
  3. Carbon, Hydrogen and Oxygen atoms come together to form what primary macromolecule? Give an example. Polysaccharides. Glucose, sucrose and cellulose are all acceptable answers. the cell. DNA contains a vast amount of hereditary information and is responsible for the inheritable characteristics of living organisms. RNA is responsible for deciphering the hereditary information in DNA and using it to synthesize proteins. Exam Page 4 Answer Key Exam Page 5 Answer Key Exam Page 6 Answer Key
  4. True of False: Eukaryotic cells do not have a nucleus
  1. Which of the following microorganisms are considered to be Eukarya? Select all that apply. A. Animalia B. Plantae C. Fungi D. Protista A,B,C,D
  2. True of False: All multicellular microorganisms classified as Animalia are heterotropic. True
  3. Microorganisms classified as Plantae obtain most of their energy by converting energy into energy. False. Eukaryotic cells do have a nucleus (prokaryotic cells do not).
  4. True or False: Prokaryotic cells can be subdivided into Bacteria and Archaea. True
  5. Describe the 4 basic bacterial morphologies. Coccus (round/spherical), bacillus (rod), vibrio (curved rod) or spirillum (spiral/corkscrew).
  6. True or False: Archaea, a eukaryotic class of microorganisms, are capable of surviving harsh environments. False. Archaea are prokaryotic bacteria capable of surviving harsh environments. Exam Page 7 Answer Key Exam Page 8 Answer Key
  1. Cell walls are found in which of the following (select all that apply): A. Plants B. Fungi C. Bacteria D. Mammalian cells E. Algae A, B, C, E
  2. The function of the ribosome is (select all that apply): A. Lipid synthesis B. Protein synthesis C. To produce energy (ATP) D. Protein modification and distribution E. Waste disposal via hydrolytic enzymes B. Ribosomes are located in the cytoplasm of prokaryotic cells and in the ER of eukaryotic cells.
    1. A defining characteristic of fungi is the presence of chitin in the cell walls. Which of following also contain chitin? Select all that apply. A. Mushrooms B. Bacteria C. Yeast D. Molds A, C and D all contain chitin.
    2. True or False: A defining characteristic of Protista is the inability of colonies to form tissue layers. Exam Page 9 Answer Key Exam Page 10 Answer Key
  1. Identify the following cellular components by matching the number with the description. A. Cell wall B. Lysosome C. Centriole D. Rough endoplasmic reticulum E. Plasma membrane F. Nucleus G. Golgi apparatus 1 F 2 B

True or False: As movement requires energy, metabolism can be defined as a controlled set of biochemical reactions that occur in only motile organisms in order to maintain life. False. Metabolism occurs in all living organisms, not just those that move.

  1. True or False: Enzymes slow down chemical reactions to conserve energy. False. Enzyme catalyze (speed up) chemical reactions.
  2. What is a cofactor? And give a general example. A cofactor is a small chemical component that assists an enzyme during the catalysis
  3. Define anabolism. Anabolism is the process of building up or biosynthesis of macromolecules from small molecular units into much larger complexes.
  4. In order to convert proteins into amino acids which metabolic process would be active? Catabolism would be active as proteins are made up of amino acids. Therefore the process described (proteins into amino acids) is the breakdown, or catabolism of protein.

3 E

4 G

5 D

EXAM MODULE

Answer Key

Exam Page 3

Answer Key

  1. Describe the energy transfer process relative to both ATP and ADP.
  1. The catabolism of a single molecule of glucose goes through what 3 distinct transitions? The breakdown of glucose goes through (1) Glycolysis then (2) Fermentation or Respiration and finally through (3) the electron transport chain (ETC).
  2. What is the most energetic transition in the catabolism of glucose? The electron transport chain yields 34 ATP while both glycolysis and fermentation (or respiration) each yield only 2 ATP.
  3. Identify the reactants of the following chemical equation: Glucose + 2NAD+ → 2 NADH + 2 ATP has the energy (phosphate group) to donate while ADP can accept energy in the form of a phosphate group. Thus, ATP can be reduced (ATP →ADP + Pi) while ADP can be built into ATP (ADP + Pi →ATP).
    1. An organism that derives its energy (generates ATP) from photons of light is called a ? Phototrophic microorganism. An organism that derives its energy by removing electrons from elemental sulfur would be classified as a? Lithotroph
    2. A reactive intermediate would be present in which phosphorylation process? A. Photophosphorylation B. Substrate-level phosphorylation C. Oxidative phosphorylation B. The chemical compound losing the phosphate group is referred to as the phosphorylated reactive intermediate. Exam Page 4 Answer Key
  1. What is the primary byproduct of the TCA cycle? Select all that apply. A. NAD+ B. FAD C. NADH D. FADH 2 C and D. The TCA cycle produces an abundance of reduced electron carriers (NADH and FADH 2 ).
  2. True or False. The reactants of the TCA cycle directly enter and fuel the electron transport system. False. The products of the TCA cycle (reduced electron carriers) enter and drive the production of ATP via the electron transport system.
  3. In the absence of glucose, which of the following can be used as alternative energy sources? Select all that apply. A. Lactose B. Nucleic acids C. Carbohydrates D. Lipids A, C, D can all be used as alternative energy sources. The reactants are to the left of the arrow: Glucose and 2NAD+
    1. The presence of what molecule ‘signals’ to the cell that glycolysis is about to start? Glucose-6-phosphate (G6P)
    2. True or False: In the absence of oxygen fermentation produces 2 ATP. False. Fermentation only reduces NADH back to NAD+ Exam Page 5 Answer Key Exam Page 6 Answer Key
  1. True or False. Plants, algae and bacteria all contain chloroplasts. False. Chloroplasts are specific to algae and plants only.
  2. The process of carbon fixation begins with which of the following reactants: select all that apply. A. ATP B. Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate C. CO 2 D. NADPH E. H 2 O A, C, D, and E. Carbon fixation uses the ATP/NADPH produced during light reactions to convert CO2 and H2O into useful sources of energy (carbohydrates).
  3. What is one of the main functions of light reactions? Similar to the electron transport chain, one of its main functions is to generate a proton concentration gradient to generate ATP.
    1. For the catabolism of proteins and lipids, which of the following enzymes are used? Select all that apply. A. Ligases B. Proteases C. Transferases D. Lipases B and D. Proteases breakdown proteins while lipases breakdown lipids.
    2. True or False. The β-oxidation pathway catabolizes the fatty acid chains of lipids. True Exam Page 7 Answer Key Exam Page 8 Answer Key
  1. How many turns (or repititions) of the Calvin Cycle are required to generate one molecule of glucose? Six.
  2. Complete the following equation by placing the appropriate numbers where indicated. CO 2 + ATP + NADPH + H 20 → C 6 H 12 O 6 + ADP + NADP+ 6 CO 2 + 18 ATP + 12 NADPH + 12 H 20 → C 6 H 12 O 6 + 18 ADP + 12 NADP+
  3. Match the following reactions to its corresponding enzyme: A + B → A-B A-B → A + B
  4. A- + B →A + B-
  5. Ab + C → A + Cb A- Lyases B- Transferases C- Oxioreductaces D- Hydrolases E- Ligases F- Isomerases 1E 1. A + B → A-B 2A 2. A-B → A + B Ligases Lyases
  6. True or False: Dark reactions can occur in the presence or absence of light. True. The term ‘dark reactions’ (also known as the Calvin Cycle) simply denotes the second stage in photosynthesis—dark reactions do not actually require darkness in order to occur. Exam Page 9 Answer Key Exam Page 10 Answer Key

. A micrometer is defined as A. 10 - B. 10 - C.10- D. 10 - 12 B. A micrometer is one-millionth of a meter.

  1. True or False: A nanometer is longer than a micrometer.
  2. Resolution and contrast are two critical factors that influence your ability to see an object. Explain each. Resolution refers to the distance between two objects at which the objects still can be seen as separate. Poor or low resolution means two (or more) objects may appear as one. Contrast is the difference in light absorbance between two objects. Poor contrast gives a high background and makes the visualization of multiple objects difficult. For instance, trying to identify 2 dark colored objects at night (low light = low contrast) versus the same 2 objects in the middle of a sunny afternoon (bright light against 2 dark objects = high
  3. Assuming a constant (non-adjustable) light source power, identify the part of the microscope you would adjust to limit the amount of light entering the microscope. 3C 3. A—^ + B → A + B—^ Oxioreductaces 4B 4. Ab + C → A + Cb Transferases EXAM MODULE 3 Exam Page 2 Answer Key Exam Page 3 Answer Key
  1. True or False: A cell that is adherent, flat (thin) and unstained is easily identified using bright field microscopy. False. Adherent, flat cells are almost invisible due to the limits on both resolution and contrast.
  2. Which of the following could be seen clearly by the unaided eye? Select all that apply. A. Bacteria with diameter of 24 μm B. Protozoa with diameter of 150 μm C. Virus with a diameter of 0.2 μm D. Skin cell with diameter of 1500 μm B and D. The unaided eye can, on average, clearly resolve objects > 100 μm
  3. Label the following unmarked microscope components (numbered arrows) by matching it with the components provided (letters). Select all that apply. A. Objective B. Condenser C. Iris diaphragm D. Eye piece C. The iris controls the amount of light that passes through the sample and into the objective lens. Thus, it can be adjusted (opened or closed) to alter the amount of light.
    1. What is the total magnification (relative to your eye) of a sample imaged with a 60x objective and a 10x eyepiece? Show your math. 60 x 10 = 600x magnification Exam Page 4 Answer Key Exam Page 5 Answer Key

A. Stage B. Fine Adjustment Knob C. Iris Diaphragm D. Neck E. Condenser Lens F. Eyepiece G. Objective H. Base I. Coaxial Controls 1F 2D

  1. For each of the following questions select from the list below the single best answer: Phase-Contrast Dark Field Fluorescenc e Confocal This type of microscope is best suited for visualizing GFP, RFP and YFP proteins. Fluorescence
  2. This type of microscope can provide detailed images of live cells without staining. Phase-Contrast
  3. This type of microscope is used to greatly increase the contrast between samples and background by reflecting light off of the specimen. Dark Field
  4. This type of microscope is capable of capturing images in multiple focal planes, rendering a specimen in 3D Confocal

3B

4G

5A

6H

Exam Page 6 Answer Key Exam Page 7 Answer Key

  1. Gram-Positive cells appear in color due to a peptidoglycan layer in the cell wall. Purple; Thick
  2. Gram-Negative cells appear in color due to a peptidoglycan layer in the cell wall.
  3. True or False: The distinguishing characteristic of Gram-Negative bacteria is the presence of LPS in the outer membrane.
    1. Identify what type of electron microscope was used to capture the following image and explain you The above image is captured via a Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM). Even at 20nm resolution (inset image), subcell Exam Page 8 Answer Key Exam Page 9 Answer Key
  1. You want to observe the size and shape of a cell. What is the easiest staining technique that you could perform? Name at least one dye you would use during this process. Simple stain. You could use any of the following: methylene blue, crystal violet, safranin or fuschin.
  2. You suspect a patient may have TB. Once a sample has been obtained it is sent off to the lab for an acid-fast stain. If the patient were infected with TB, describe what you would expect to see on the stained slide. You would expect to see red cells (TB+) on a blue background (TB negative).
  3. True or False: If a patient is suspected of having malaria, a Giemsa stain would be an appropriate differential test to perform. True. Giemsa stains are often used in the clinical setting to aid in the diagnosis of blood True or False: Growth media is best suited for distinguishing between two similar species of bacteria. False. Growth media is designed to simply support (and not restrict) microbial growth.
  4. A researcher is asked to determine which of two vials contains E coli and which contains Salmonella. Knowing both are Gram-Negative while only one of them is capable of fermenting lactose, which type of media would be best suited: True.
    1. True or False: If you wish to study the motility of an organism you cannot heat fix, but you can chemically fix the specimen. False. Both heat and chemical fixation strategies will kill the cell, making motility observations impossible. Exam Page 10 Answer Key EXAM MODULE 4
  1. True or False: LB agar is classified as a selective, non-differential media. False. LB agar is the most basic type of agar and like LB media supports the growth of virtually all microbes without restriction.
  2. What is agar used for in microbiology? Agar is used to create a solid, smooth surface on which microbes can grow.
  3. Match the following hemolytic class with its description of activity. A. Growth media B. Differential media C. Selective media D. Selective and Differential media B. Differential media distinguishes between two, often related, microbes.
    1. What are the requirements of a fastidious microbe? A fastidious microbe is an organism with complex growth requirements such that if absent it will not grow. Enriched medias thus contain these specific and essential nutrients required for the growth of a particular subset of microorganisms. Exam Page 2 Answer Key Exam Page 3 Answer Key
  4. Alpha hemolysis B A. No hemolytic activity
  5. Beta hemolysis C B. Incomplete hemolytic activity
  1. Columbia CNA agar is most closely related to which media: A. Trypticase Soy Agar B. MacConkey Agar C. Blood agar D. EMB agar C. CNA agar is similar to BAP as it is also enriched with blood and allows for differentiation based on hemolytic patterns.
  2. True or False: Chocolate agar gets its brown color from cocoa to produce an enriched media. False. Chocolate (cocoa) is never added to the media. The name is derived simply based on the color that actually comes from the presence of ‘cooked’ (lysed) red blood cells in the media.
  3. A researcher is studying a strain of E. coli currently growing on a MacConkey plate. However, the researcher can’t remember if E. coli is Gram-Positive or Gram-Negative. Would a Gram stain be necessary to confirm? Why or why not? No. A Gram stain would not be necessary, as only Gram-Negative microbes will grow on MacConkey agar. Thus, E. coli is a Gram-Negative microbe.
  4. In an attempt to detect the presence of the pathogenic strain of E. coli O157:H7, a researcher spread a culture onto a MacConkey agar with failed results. What type of agar should they (correctly) try next? Why? The microbe should be plated on SMAC (Sorbitol-MacConkey agar) as it is specifically formulated to detect O157:H7. Pathogenic E. coli (O157:H7) cannot ferment sorbitol while
  5. Gamma hemolysis A C.^ Complete^ hemolytic^ activity Exam Page 4 Answer Key Exam Page 5 Answer Key
  1. What is the Gram status (Positive or Negative) of microbes growing on Eosin Methylene Blue (EMB) agar plates? Gram-Negative. EMB plates specifically restrict the growth of Gram-Positive bacteria.
  2. Mannitol salt agar will turn what color in the presence of the pathogenic strain Staphylococcus aureus? Yellow. Pathogenic Staph aureus will turn the agar from red to yellow.
  3. What is the process of spreading a bacterial culture onto a petri dish? Plating.
  4. In order to visual individual colonies of bacteria would you culture your sample in a liquid media or on a solid (agar) media? Why? Solid (agar) media. The primary advantage is that cells are held into place. When grown in a nutrient broth, bacterial cells can multiply but are free to move around in solution. When grown on agar within a petri dish the fixed in such as way as to form colonies.
  5. True or False? The visualization of colonies on a petri dish represents bacterial cells that have often multiplied a million times over. True. To form a bacterial colony the initial cell must have multiplied many times over, often greater than a million, in order for the naked eye to resolve it. non-pathogenic E. coli can ferment both soribitol and lactose. Therefore, colonies that ferment (acidic conditions; non-pathogenic) can be differentiated from non- fermenters (neutral to basic conditions; pathogenic). Exam Page 6 Answer Key Exam Page 7 Answer Key Exam Page 8
  1. True or False. The purpose of a quadrant streak is to expand a bacterial population. False. The purpose of the quadrant streak is to generate individual colonies such that a single (pure) bacterial sample can be isolated.
  2. To be considered a ‘pure’ culture, the sample (1) can be traced back to a single cell and (2)? The culture must also be free from external contaminants. Simply put, a pure sample would never contain multiple bacterial species (ie) Strep and Staph.
  3. When performing a quadrant streak, the sample is spread across the plate in such as way as to form what? A dilution gradient is formed. The resulting gradient should always contain within it the growth of individual colonies.
  4. In what phase of a dilution streak would you expect to find the lowest concentration of bacteria, P2 or P4? P4 (Phase 4) would contain the lowest concentration of bacteria. The phases rank (from highest to lowest), P1 > P2 > P3 > P4.
  5. True or False. When performing a dilution streak a new (or sterilized) loop must be used for each phase. True. Failure to do so would prevent the establishment of a dilution gradient, as the same bacterial concentration would be spread across both phase regions.
  6. In order to encourage growth of a slow growing microbe what might a researcher do during a phase dilution streak? A researcher may either (1) opt to perform only a 3-phase dilution streak or (2) pass the loop through the previous phase multiple times (as opposed to only once). Answer Key Exam Page 9 Answer Key
  1. When given an unknown bacterial sample the first step is to expand the current bacterial population. Which form of media best suites this need? Why? A. MSA agar B. LB media C. MacConkey agar D. Columbia CNA agar B. LB media. All other options (A, C and D) are all forms of selective media, meaning they may potentially inhibit the growth of the unknown sample. The culture should be first expanded and then place onto selective/differential agar plates. . Define the concept of universal precautions. Universal precautions means any and all samples, whether known or unknown, are to be treated as potentially hazardous (or pathogenic) materials.
  2. List at least 3 observations a researcher would be sure to note while assessing an unknown microbial sample. A lab researcher would be certain to note:
  3. Size and shape
  4. Any observable motility
  5. Gram status (positive or negative)
  6. The presence of any chemical reactions
    1. True or False. To restrict the growth of a pathogenic microbe a researcher might decrease an incubator from 37°C to 25°C. True. Pathogenic strains of bacteria tend to grow faster than non-pathogenic strains at 37°C, so researchers may set incubators at 25°C to restrict its growth. Exam Page 10 Answer Key EXAM MODULE 5
  1. While observing an unknown sample of limited amounts, a researcher must determine the following observations: (1) the presence of any motility and (2) its Gram status using the same sample—the liquid sample cannot be divided. Which would you determine first and why? You must determine motility before determining the Gram status. Motility requires a wet mount, while Gram staining requires heat fixing the sample. If one were to begin with the Gram stain the heat fixation process would kill the organism, making any observations regarding motility impossible. The correct approach would be to place the liquid culture on a glass slide and determine its motility status. Next, the same liquid culture can be heat fixed and Gram stained.
  2. A facultative anaerobe is a microorganism capable of growth under what conditions? A facultative anaerobe is capable of growth under aerobic (with oxygen) and anaerobic
  3. True or False. The Lancefield groups are used to subdivide antigenic groups of alpha-hemolytic Streptococcus. False. The Lancefield groupings are used to subdivide beta-hemolytic Strep.
  4. The distinctions for Lancefield subgroupings lie in its: (select all that apply) A. Catalase activity B. Carbohydrate composition of antigens C. Hemolytic activity D. All of the above
    1. Changes in color localized to the organism or the surrounding media
    2. Capture (or draw) images of any of the characteristics described above Exam Page 2 Answer Key Exam Page 3 Answer Key
  1. True or False. Under most circumstances, staphylococcus can be found in ~80% of human population where it remains non-symptomatic. False. Staphylococcus in only found (non-symptomatic) in ~30% of the human population.
  2. Define commensal bacteria. The bacterium neither harms nor benefits from the host from which it obtains nutrients.
  3. How can Staphylococcus be differentially tested? Staphylococcus species are capable of growth in the presence of bile salts. B. Carbohydrate composition of antigens present in the cell wall determines the Lancefield groupings (A, B, C, etc). Note, ALL strep under Lancefield groupings are (by definition) catalase negative and beta-hemolytic. Thus, answers A and C cannot be used to subdivide streptococcal species.
    1. Rheumatic fever displays hemolytic activity and occurs when is left untreated. A. Beta; Strep. Pharyngitis B. Gamma; Strep. Septicemia C. Beta; Rheumatic fever D. Alpha; Strep. Pharyngitis A. Strep throat (also known as strep. Pharyngitis) can lead to Rheumatic fever if left untreated and displays beta-hemolytic activity. Exam Page 4 Answer Key Exam Page 5 Answer Key
  4. Match the following symptoms with their respective diseases:
  1. True or False. The causative agent of conjunctivitis can be either bacterial or viral. True. There are bacterial (staph) and viral forms of conjunctivitis, both resulting in the inflammation of the conjunctiva and ‘pink eye.’
  2. True or False. Tuberculosis is best identified by a Gram stain. False. Mycobacterium show poor Gram staining and show be screened via an acid-fast stain.
  3. True or False. You can become infected with TB simply by sharing a drink with someone who is currently infected with TB. False. As per the Center for Disease Control (CDC) guidelines, simply shaking someone's hand, sharing a drink or even kissing cannot spread TB.
  4. Identify the disease based on the following (select all that apply): It is a small, acid-fast rod usually remaining asymptomatic for up to 20 years. It affects the skin, nerves, upper respiratory tract and eyes of infected individuals.
  5. Folliculitis D A. Childhood skin disease near mouth/nose
  6. Scalded-skin syndrome E B. Infection of thin, transparent scleral tissue
  7. Impetigo A C. Infection occurs at time of birth
  8. Conjunctivitis B D. Pus-filled lesions on skin or hair
  9. Ophthalmia Neonatorum C E. Ruptured pustules; treated with Penicillin Exam Page 6 Answer Key