Multiple Choice Identify the
choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.
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1.
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What is the term for metabolic pathways that
release stored energy by breaking down complex molecules?
a. | anabolic pathways | b. | catabolic pathways | c. | fermentation
pathways | d. | thermodynamic pathways | e. | bioenergetic pathways |
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2.
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The molecule that functions as the reducing agent
(electron donor) in a redox or oxidation-reduction reaction
a. | gains electrons and gains
energy. | b. | loses electrons and loses
energy. | c. | gains electrons and loses
energy. | d. | loses electrons and gains
energy. | e. | neither gains nor loses electrons, but gains or loses
energy. |
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3.
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When electrons move closer to a more
electronegative atom, what happens?
a. | Energy is released. | b. | Energy is consumed. | c. | The more
electronegative atom is reduced. | d. | The more
electronegative atom is oxidized. | e. | A and C are
correct. |
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4.
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Why does the oxidation of organic compounds by
molecular oxygen to produce and water release free energy?
a. | The covalent bonds in organic molecules are higher
energy bonds than those in water and carbon dioxide. | b. | Electrons are being moved from atoms that have a lower affinity for electrons
(such as C) to atoms with a higher affinity for electrons (such as O). | c. | The oxidation of organic compounds can be used to make
ATP. | d. | The electrons have a higher potential energy when
associated with water and than they do in organic
compounds. | e. | The covalent bond
in is unstable and easily broken by electrons
from organic molecules. |
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5.
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Which of the following statements describes the
results of this reaction?

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6.
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When a glucose molecule loses a hydrogen atom as
the result of an oxidation-reduction reaction, the molecule becomes
a. | dehydrogenated. | b. | hydrogenated. | c. | oxidized. | d. | reduced. | e. | an oxidizing
agent. |
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7.
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When a molecule of NAD
(nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) gains a hydrogen atom (not a hydrogen ion) the molecule
becomes
a. | hydrogenated. | b. | oxidized. | c. | reduced. | d. | redoxed. | e. | a reducing
agent. |
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8.
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Which of the following statements describes NAD ?
a. | NAD is reduced to NADH during
both glycolysis and the citric acid cycle. | b. | NAD
has more chemical energy than NADH. | c. | NAD
is reduced by the action of hydrogenases. | d. | NAD
can donate electrons for use in oxidative phosphorylation. | e. | In the absence of NAD , glycolysis can still
function. |
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9.
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Where does glycolysis takes place?
a. | mitochondrial matrix | b. | mitochondrial outer membrane | c. | mitochondrial inner membrane | d. | mitochondrial intermembrane space | e. | cytosol |
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10.
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The ATP made during glycolysis is generated
by
a. | substrate-level
phosphorylation. | b. | electron
transport. | c. | photophosphorylation. | d. | chemiosmosis. | e. | oxidation of NADH
to NAD . |
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11.
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The oxygen consumed during cellular respiration is
involved directly in which process or event?
a. | glycolysis | b. | accepting electrons at the end of the electron transport
chain | c. | the citric acid cycle | d. | the oxidation of pyruvate to acetyl CoA | e. | the phosphorylation of ADP to form ATP |
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12.
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Which process in eukaryotic cells will proceed
normally whether oxygen (O2) is present or absent?
a. | electron transport | b. | glycolysis | c. | the citric acid
cycle | d. | oxidative phosphorylation | e. | chemiosmosis |
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13.
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An electron loses potential energy when
it
a. | shifts to a less electronegative
atom. | b. | shifts to a more electronegative
atom. | c. | increases its kinetic energy. | d. | increases its activity as an oxidizing agent. | e. | attaches itself to NAD . |
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14.
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Why are carbohydrates and fats considered high
energy foods?
a. | They have a lot of oxygen
atoms. | b. | They have no nitrogen in their
makeup. | c. | They can have very long carbon
skeletons. | d. | They have a lot of
electrons associated with hydrogen. | e. | They are easily
reduced. |
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15.
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Substrate-level phosphorylation accounts for
approximately what percentage of the ATP formed during glycolysis?
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16.
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During glycolysis, when glucose is catabolized to
pyruvate, most of the energy of glucose is
a. | transferred to ADP, forming
ATP. | b. | transferred directly to ATP. | c. | retained in the pyruvate. | d. | stored in the NADH produced. | e. | used to phosphorylate fructose to form
fructose-6-phosphate. |
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17.
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In addition to ATP, what are the end products of
glycolysis?
a. | and  | b. |
and pyruvate | c. | NADH and
pyruvate | d. | and
NADH | e. | , ,
and citrate |
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18.
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The free energy for the oxidation of glucose to
and water is -686 kcal/mole and the free
energy for the reduction of NAD+ to NADH is +53 kcal/mole. Why are only two molecules of NADH formed
during glycolysis when it appears that as many as a dozen could be formed?
a. | Most of the free energy available from the oxidation of
glucose is used in the production of ATP in glycolysis. | b. | Glycolysis is a very inefficient reaction, with much of the energy of glucose
released as heat. | c. | Most of the free
energy available from the oxidation of glucose remains in pyruvate, one of the products of
glycolysis. | d. | There is no or water produced as products of glycolysis. | e. | Glycolysis consists of many enzymatic reactions, each of which extracts some
energy from the glucose molecule. |
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19.
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Starting with one molecule of glucose, the
"net" products of glycolysis are
a. | 2 NAD , 2 H ,
2 pyruvate, 2 ATP, and 2 . | b. | 2 NADH, 2 H , 2 pyruvate, 2 ATP, and 2 . | c. | 2 ,
2 pyruvate, 4 ATP, and 2 . | d. | 6 , 6 , 2 ATP, and 2
pyruvate. | e. | 6 , 6 , 36 ATP, and 2 citrate. |
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20.
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In glycolysis, for each molecule of glucose
oxidized to pyruvate
a. | 2 molecules of ATP are used and 2 molecules of ATP are
produced. | b. | 2 molecules of ATP are used and 4 molecules of ATP are
produced. | c. | 4 molecules of ATP are used and 2 molecules of ATP are
produced. | d. | 2 molecules of ATP are used and 6 molecules of ATP are
produced. | e. | 6 molecules of ATP are used and 6 molecules of ATP are
produced. |
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21.
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A molecule that is phosphorylated
a. | has been reduced as a result of a redox reaction
involving the loss of an inorganic phosphate. | b. | has a decreased
chemical reactivity; it is less likely to provide energy for cellular
work. | c. | has been oxidized as a result of a redox reaction
involving the gain of an inorganic phosphate. | d. | has an increased
chemical reactivity; it is primed to do cellular work. | e. | has less energy than before its phosphorylation and therefore less energy for
cellular work. |
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22.
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Which kind of metabolic poison would most directly
interfere with glycolysis?
a. | an agent that reacts with oxygen and depletes its
concentration in the cell | b. | an agent that
binds to pyruvate and inactivates it | c. | an agent that
closely mimics the structure of glucose but is not metabolized | d. | an agent that reacts with NADH and oxidizes it to NAD | e. | an agent that
blocks the passage of electrons along the electron transport
chain |
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23.
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Why is glycolysis described as having an investment
phase and a payoff phase?
a. | It both splits molecules and assembles
molecules. | b. | It attaches and
detaches phosphate groups. | c. | It uses glucose
and generates pyruvate. | d. | It shifts
molecules from cytosol to mitochondrion. | e. | It uses stored ATP
and then forms a net increase in ATP. |
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Use the following information to answer the next
questions.
In the presence of oxygen, the three-carbon compound pyruvate can be
catabolized in the citric acid cycle. First, however, the pyruvate 1) loses a carbon, which is given
off as a molecule of , 2) is oxidized to form a two-carbon
compound called acetate, and 3) is bonded to coenzyme A.
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24.
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These three steps result in the formation
of
a. | acetyl CoA, , and
ATP. | b. | acetyl CoA, , and . | c. | acetyl CoA, FAD,
, and . | d. | acetyl CoA, NADH,
H , and . | e. | acetyl CoA,
NAD , ATP, and . |
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25.
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Why is coenzyme A, a sulfur containing molecule
derived from a B vitamin, added?
a. | because sulfur is needed for the molecule to enter the
mitochondrion | b. | in order to
utilize this portion of a B vitamin which would otherwise be a waste product from another
pathway | c. | to provide a relatively unstable molecule whose acetyl
portion can readily bind to oxaloacetate | d. | because it drives
the reaction that regenerates NAD | e. | in order to remove one molecule of  |
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26.
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How does pyruvate enter the
mitochondrion?
a. | active transport | b. | diffusion | c. | facilitated
diffusion | d. | through a channel | e. | through a pore |
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27.
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Which of the following intermediary metabolites
enters the citric acid cycle and is formed, in part, by the removal of a carbon ( )
from one molecule of pyruvate?
a. | lactate | b. | glyceraldehydes-3-phosphate | c. | oxaloacetate | d. | acetyl
CoA | e. | citrate |
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28.
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During cellular respiration, acetyl CoA accumulates
in which location?
a. | cytosol | b. | mitochondrial outer membrane | c. | mitochondrial inner membrane | d. | mitochondrial intermembrane space | e. | mitochondrial matrix |
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29.
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How many carbon atoms are fed into the citric acid
cycle as a result of the oxidation of one molecule of pyruvate?
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Refer to Figure 9.2, showing the citric acid
cycle, as a guide to answer the following questions.

Figure 9.2
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30.
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Starting with one molecule of isocitrate and ending
with fumarate, what is the maximum number of ATP molecules that could be made through substrate-level
phosphorylation?
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31.
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Carbon skeletons for amino acid biosynthesis are
supplied by intermediates of the citric acid cycle. Which intermediate would supply the carbon
skeleton for synthesis of a five-carbon amino acid?
a. | succinate | b. | malate | c. | citrate | d. | á-ketoglutarate | e. | isocitrate |
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32.
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How many molecules of carbon dioxide ( ) would be produced by five turns of the citric acid cycle?
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33.
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How many reduced dinucleotides would be produced
with four turns of the citric acid cycle?
a. | 1 and 4
NADH | b. | 2 and 8
NADH | c. | 4 and 12
NADH | d. | 1 FAD and 4 NAD | e. | 4 FAD and 12 NAD |
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34.
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Starting with citrate, which of the following
combinations of products would result from three turns of the citric acid cycle?
a. | 1 ATP, 2 , 3 NADH, and 1  | b. | 2 ATP, 2 , 1 NADH, and 3  | c. | 3 ATP, 3 , 3 NADH, and 3  | d. | 3 ATP, 6 , 9 NADH, and 3  | e. | 38 ATP, 6 , 3 NADH, and 12  |
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35.
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Carbon dioxide ( ) is released
during which of the following stages of cellular respiration?
a. | glycolysis and the oxidation of pyruvate to acetyl
CoA | b. | oxidation of pyruvate to acetyl CoA and the citric acid
cycle | c. | the citric acid cycle and oxidative
phosphorylation | d. | oxidative
phosphorylation and fermentation | e. | fermentation and
glycolysis |
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36.
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For each molecule of glucose that is metabolized by
glycolysis and the citric acid cycle, what is the total number of NADH + molecules
produced?
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37.
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A young animal has never had much energy. He is
brought to a veterinarian for help and is sent to the animal hospital for some tests. There they
discover his mitochondria can use only fatty acids and amino acids for respiration, and his cells
produce more lactate than normal. Of the following, which is the best explanation of his
condition?
a. | His mitochondria lack the transport protein that moves
pyruvate across the outer mitochondrial membrane. | b. | His cells cannot move NADH from glycolysis into the
mitochondria. | c. | His cells contain
something that inhibits oxygen use in his mitochondria. | d. | His cells lack the enzyme in glycolysis that forms
pyruvate. | e. | His cells have a defective electron transport chain, so
glucose goes to lactate instead of to acetyl CoA. |
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38.
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Cellular respiration harvests the most chemical
energy from which of the following?
a. | substrate-level
phosphorylation | b. | chemiosmotic
phosphorylation | c. | converting oxygen
to ATP | d. | transferring electrons from organic molecules to
pyruvate | e. | generating carbon dioxide and oxygen in the electron
transport chain |
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39.
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During aerobic respiration, electrons travel
downhill in which sequence?
a. | food ® citric acid cycle
® ATP ®
NAD+ | b. | food ® NADH ® electron transport chain ®
oxygen | c. | glucose ® pyruvate ® ATP ® oxygen | d. | glucose ® ATP ® electron transport chain ®
NADH | e. | food ® glycolysis ® citric acid cycle ® NADH ® ATP |
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40.
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Where are the proteins of the electron transport
chain located?
a. | cytosol | b. | mitochondrial outer membrane | c. | mitochondrial inner membrane | d. | mitochondrial intermembrane space | e. | mitochondrial matrix |
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41.
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Which of the following describes the sequence of
electron carriers in the electron transport chain, starting with the least
electronegative?
a. | ubiquinone (Q), cytochromes (Cyt), FMN,
Fe•S | b. | cytochromes (Cyt),
FMN, ubiquinone, Fe•S | c. | Fe•S, FMN,
cytochromes (Cyt), ubiquinone | d. | FMN, Fe•S,
ubiquinone, cytochromes (Cyt) | e. | cytochromes (Cyt),
Fe•S, ubiquinone, FMN |
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42.
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During aerobic respiration, which of the following
directly donates electrons to the electron transport chain at the lowest energy level?
a. | NAD | b. | NADH | c. | ATP | d. | ADP +  | e. |  |
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43.
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The primary role of oxygen in cellular respiration
is to
a. | yield energy in the form of ATP as it is passed down the
respiratory chain. | b. | act as an acceptor
for electrons and hydrogen, forming water. | c. | combine with
carbon, forming . | d. | combine with lactate, forming pyruvate. | e. | catalyze the reactions of glycolysis. |
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44.
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Inside an active mitochondrion, most electrons
follow which pathway?
a. | glycolysis ® NADH ® oxidative phosphorylation ® ATP ® oxygen | b. | citric acid cycle
® ® electron
transport chain ® ATP | c. | electron transport chain ® citric acid cycle
® ATP ®
oxygen | d. | pyruvate ® citric acid
cycle ® ATP ® NADH ® oxygen | e. | citric acid cycle
® NADH ® electron transport chain
® oxygen |
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45.
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During oxidative phosphorylation,
is formed. Where does the oxygen for the synthesis of the water come from?
a. | carbon dioxide ( ) | b. | glucose ( ) | c. | molecular oxygen
( ) | d. | pyruvate ( -) | e. | lactate ( -) |
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46.
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In chemiosmotic phosphorylation, what is the most
direct source of energy that is used to convert ADP + to ATP?
a. | energy released as electrons flow through the electron
transport system | b. | energy released
from substrate-level phosphorylation | c. | energy released
from ATP synthase pumping hydrogen ions from the mitochondrial matrix | d. | energy released from movement of protons through ATP
synthase | e. | No external source of energy is required because the
reaction is exergonic. |
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47.
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Energy released by the electron transport chain is
used to pump H+ ions into which location?
a. | cytosol | b. | mitochondrial outer membrane | c. | mitochondrial inner membrane | d. | mitochondrial intermembrane space | e. | mitochondrial matrix |
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48.
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The direct energy source that drives ATP synthesis
during respiratory oxidative phosphorylation is
a. | oxidation of glucose to and
water. | b. | the thermodynamically favorable flow of electrons from
NADH to the mitochondrial electron transport carriers. | c. | the final transfer of electrons to oxygen. | d. | the difference in H concentrations on opposite sides of the inner
mitochondrial membrane. | e. | the
thermodynamically favorable transfer of phosphate from glycolysis and the citric acid cycle
intermediate molecules of ADP. |
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49.
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When hydrogen ions are pumped from the
mitochondrial matrix across the inner membrane and into the intermembrane space, the result is
the
a. | formation of ATP. | b. | reduction of NAD . | c. | restoration of the Na /K balance
across the membrane. | d. | creation of a
proton gradient. | e. | lowering of pH in
the mitochondrial matrix. |
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50.
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Where is ATP synthase located in the
mitochondrion?
a. | cytosol | b. | electron transport chain | c. | outer
membrane | d. | inner membrane | e. | mitochondrial matrix |
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51.
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It is possible to prepare vesicles from portions of
the inner membrane of the mitochondrial components. Which one of the following processes could still
be carried on by this isolated inner membrane?
a. | the citric acid cycle | b. | oxidative phosphorylation | c. | glycolysis and fermentation | d. | reduction of NAD | e. | both the citric acid cycle and oxidative
phosphorylation |
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52.
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Each time a molecule of glucose ( )
is completely oxidized via aerobic respiration, how many oxygen molecules ( )
are required?
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53.
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Which of the following produces the most ATP when
glucose ( ) is completely oxidized to carbon dioxide
( ) and water?
a. | glycolysis | b. | fermentation | c. | oxidation of
pyruvate to acetyl CoA | d. | citric acid
cycle | e. | oxidative phosphorylation
(chemiosmosis) |
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54.
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Approximately how many molecules of ATP are
produced from the complete oxidation of two molecules of glucose ( ) in cellular
respiration?
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55.
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Assume a mitochondrion contains 58 NADH and 19 . If each of the 77 dinucleotides were used, approximately how many ATP molecules could be
generated as a result of oxidative phosphorylation (chemiosmosis)?
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56.
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Approximately what percentage of the energy of
glucose ( ) is transferred to storage in ATP as a result
of the complete oxidation of glucose to and water in cellular
respiration?
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57.
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Recall that the complete oxidation of a mole of
glucose releases 686 kcal of energy (ÄG = -686 kcal/mol). The phosphorylation of ADP to
form ATP stores approximately 7.3 kcal per mole of ATP. What is the approximate efficiency of
cellular respiration for a "mutant" organism that produces only 29 moles of ATP for every
mole of glucose oxidized, rather than the usual 36-38 moles of ATP?
a. | 0.4% | b. | 25% | c. | 30% | d. | 40% | e. | 60% |
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58.
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What is proton-motive force?
a. | the force required to remove an electron from
hydrogen | b. | the transmembrane proton concentration
gradient | c. | movement of hydrogen into the intermembrane
space | d. | movement of hydrogen into the
mitochondrion | e. | the addition of
hydrogen to NAD |
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59.
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In liver cells, the inner mitochondrial membranes
are about 5 X the area of the outer mitochondrial membranes, and about 17 X that of the cell's
plasma membrane. What purpose must this serve?
a. | It allows for increased rate of
glycolysis. | b. | It allows for
increased rate of the citric acid cycle. | c. | It increases the
surface for oxidative phosphoryation. | d. | It increases the
surface for substrate-level phosphorylation. | e. | It allows the
liver cell to have fewer mitochondria. |
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Use the following to answer the following
questions.
Exposing inner mitochondrial membranes to ultrasonic vibrations will disrupt
the membranes. However, the fragments will reseal "inside out." These little vesicles that
result can still transfer electrons from NADH to oxygen and synthesize ATP. If the membranes are
agitated still further however, the ability to synthesize ATP is lost.
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60.
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After the first disruption, when electron transfer
and ATP synthesize still occur, what must be present?
a. | all of the electron transport proteins as well as ATP
synthase | b. | all of the electron transport system and the ability to
add CoA to acetyl groups | c. | the ATP synthase
system is sufficient | d. | the electron
transport system is sufficient | e. | plasma membranes
like those bacteria use for respiration |
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61.
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After the second agitation of the membrane
vesicles, what must be lost from the membrane?
a. | the ability of NADH to transfer electrons to the first
acceptor in the electron transport chain | b. | the prosthetic
groups like heme from the transport system | c. | cytochromes | d. | ATP synthase, in
whole or in part | e. | the contact
required between inner and outer membrane surfaces |
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62.
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It should be possible to reconstitute the abilities
of the vesicles if which of the following is added?
a. | cytochromes | b. | extra NADH | c. | a second membrane
surface | d. | more electrons | e. | intact ATP synthase |
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Figure
9.3
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63.
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The accompanying figure shows the electron
transport chain. Which of the following is the combination of substances that is initially added to
the chain?
a. | oxygen, carbon dioxide, and
water | b. | NAD , FAD, and
electrons | c. | NADH, , and
protons | d. | NADH, , and
electrons | e. | Oxygen and
electrons |
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64.
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Which of the following most accurately describes
what is happening along this chain?
a. | Chemiosmosis is coupled with electron
transfer. | b. | Each electron carrier alternates between being reduced
and being oxidized. | c. | ATP is generated
at each step. | d. | Energy of the
electrons increases at each step. | e. | Molecules in the
chain give up some of their potential energy. |
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65.
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The parts of the figure labeled with Roman numerals
symbolize what concept?
a. | different inner mitochondrial
membranes | b. | different mitochondria functioning
together | c. | molecules with different attached metal
ions | d. | carbohydrate framework holding the molecules in
place | e. | multimeric groups of proteins in 4
complexes |
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66.
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What happens at the end of the chain?
a. | The 2 original electrons combine with NAD . | b. | The 2 original
electrons combine with oxygen. | c. | 4 electrons
combine with oxygen and protons. | d. | 4 electrons
combine with hydrogen and oxygen atoms. | e. | 1 electron
combines with oxygen and hydrogen. |
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67.
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Which of the following couples chemiosmosis to
energy storage?
a. | NADH | b. |  | c. | cytochromes | d. | electron
transport | e. | ATP synthase |
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68.
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Which of the following describes
ubiquinone?
a. | a protein in the electron transport
chain | b. | a small hydrophobic coenzyme | c. | a substrate for synthesis of FADH | d. | a vitamin needed for efficient glycolysis | e. | an essential amino acid |
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69.
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Which of the following normally occurs whether or
not oxygen ( ) is present?
a. | glycolysis | b. | fermentation | c. | oxidation of
pyruvate to acetyl CoA | d. | citric acid
cycle | e. | oxidative phosphorylation
(chemiosmosis) |
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70.
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Which of the following occurs in the cytosol of a
eukaryotic cell?
a. | glycolysis and fermentation | b. | fermentation and chemiosmosis | c. | oxidation of pyruvate to acetyl CoA | d. | citric acid cycle | e. | oxidative
phosphorylation |
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71.
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Which metabolic pathway is common to both cellular
respiration and fermentation?
a. | the oxidation of pyruvate to acetyl
CoA | b. | the citric acid cycle | c. | oxidative phosphorylation | d. | glycolysis | e. | chemiosmosis |
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72.
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The ATP made during fermentation is generated by
which of the following?
a. | the electron transport chain | b. | substrate-level phosphorylation | c. | chemiosmosis | d. | oxidative
phosphorylation | e. | aerobic
respiration |
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73.
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In the absence of oxygen, yeast cells can obtain
energy by fermentation, resulting in the production of
a. | ATP, , and ethanol (ethyl
alcohol). | b. | ATP, , and
lactate. | c. | ATP, NADH, and pyruvate. | d. | ATP, pyruvate, and oxygen. | e. | ATP, pyruvate, and acetyl CoA. |
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74.
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In alcohol fermentation, NAD
is regenerated from NADH during which of the following?
a. | reduction of acetaldehyde to ethanol (ethyl
alcohol) | b. | oxidation of pyruvate to acetyl
CoA | c. | reduction of pyruvate to form
lactate | d. | oxidation of NAD in the
citric acid cycle | e. | phosphorylation of
ADP to form ATP |
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75.
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One function of both alcohol fermentation and
lactic acid fermentation is to
a. | reduce NAD to
NADH. | b. | reduce FAD to . | c. | oxidize NADH to
NAD . | d. | reduce to FAD . | e. | none of the
above |
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76.
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An organism is discovered that consumes a
considerable amount of sugar, yet does not gain much weight when denied air. Curiously, the
consumption of sugar increases as air is removed from the organism's environment, but the
organism seems to thrive even in the absence of air. When returned to normal air, the organism does
fine. Which of the following best describes the organism?
a. | It must use a molecule other than oxygen to accept
electrons from the electron transport chain. | b. | It is a normal
eukaryotic organism. | c. | The organism
obviously lacks the citric acid cycle and electron transport chain. | d. | It is an anaerobic organism. | e. | It is a facultative anaerobe. |
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77.
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Glycolysis is thought to be one of the most ancient
of metabolic processes. Which statement supports this idea?
a. | Glycolysis is the most widespread metabolic
pathway. | b. | Glycolysis neither uses nor needs
O2. | c. | Glycolysis is
found in all eukaryotic cells. | d. | The enzymes of
glycolysis are found in the cytosol rather than in a membrane-enclosed
organelle. | e. | Ancient
prokaryotic cells, the most primitive of cells, made extensive use of glycolysis long before oxygen
was present in Earth's atmosphere. |
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78.
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Why is glycolysis considered to be one of the first
metabolic pathways to have evolved?
a. | It produces much less ATP than does oxidative
phosphorylation. | b. | It is found in the
cytosol, does not involve oxygen, and is present in most organisms. | c. | It is found in prokaryotic cells but not in eukaryotic
cells. | d. | It relies on chemiosmosis which is a metabolic mechanism
present only in the first cells-prokaryotic cells. | e. | It requires the presence of membrane-enclosed cell organelles found only in
eukaryotic cells. |
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79.
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Muscle cells, when an individual is exercising
heavily and when the muscle becomes oxygen deprived, convert pyruvate to lactate. What happens to the
lactate in skeletal muscle cells?
a. | It is converted to NAD . | b. | It produces and water. | c. | It is taken to the
liver and converted back to pyruvate. | d. | It reduces to FAD . | e. | It is converted to alcohol. |
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80.
|
When muscle cells are oxygen deprived, the heart
still pumps. What must the heart cells be able to do?
a. | derive sufficient energy from
fermentation | b. | continue aerobic
metabolism when skeletal muscle cannot | c. | transform lactate
to pyruvate again | d. | remove lactate
from the blood | e. | remove oxygen from
lactate |
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81.
|
When muscle cells undergo anaerobic respiration,
they become fatigued and painful. This is now known to be caused by
a. | buildup of pyruvate. | b. | buildup of lactate. | c. | increase in sodium
ions. | d. | increase in potassium ions. | e. | increase in ethanol. |
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82.
|
You have a friend who lost 7 kg (about 15 pounds)
of fat on a "low carb" diet. How did the fat leave her body?
a. | It was released as and . | b. | Chemical energy
was converted to heat and then released. | c. | It was converted
to ATP, which weighs much less than fat. | d. | It was broken down
to amino acids and eliminated from the body. | e. | It was converted
to urine and eliminated from the body. |
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83.
|
Phosphofructokinase is an important control enzyme
in the regulation of cellular respiration. Which of the following statements describes a function of
phosphofructokinase?
a. | It is activated by AMP (derived from
ADP). | b. | It is activated by ATP. | c. | It is inhibited by citrate, an intermediate of the citric acid
cycle. | d. | It catalyzes the conversion of fructose-1,6-bisphosphate
to fructose-6-phosphate, an early step of glycolysis. | e. | It is an allosteric enzyme. |
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84.
|
Phosphofructokinase is an allosteric enzyme that
catalyzes the conversion of fructose-6-phosphate to fructose-1,6-bisphosphate, an early step of
glycolysis. In the presence of oxygen, an increase in the amount ATP in a cell would be expected
to
a. | inhibit the enzyme and thus slow the rates of glycolysis
and the citric acid cycle. | b. | activate the
enzyme and thus slow the rates of glycolysis and the citric acid cycle. | c. | inhibit the enzyme and thus increase the rates of glycolysis and the citric
acid cycle. | d. | activate the
enzyme and increase the rates of glycolysis and the citric acid cycle. | e. | inhibit the enzyme and thus increase the rate of glycolysis and the
concentration of citrate. |
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85.
|
Even though plants carry on photosynthesis, plant
cells still use their mitochondria for oxidation of pyruvate. When and where will this
occur?
a. | in photosynthetic cells in the light, while
photosynthesis occurs concurrently | b. | in
non-photosynthesizing cells only | c. | in cells that are
storing glucose only | d. | in
photosynthesizing cells in dark periods and in other tissues all the time | e. | in photosynthesizing cells in the light and in other tissues in the
dark |
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86.
|
In vertebrate animals, brown fat tissue's
color is due to abundant mitochondria. White fat tissue, on the other hand, is specialized for fat
storage and contains relatively few mitochondria. Brown fat cells have a specialized protein that
dissipates the proton-motive force across the mitochondrial membranes. Which of the following might
be the function of the brown fat tissue?
a. | to increase the rate of oxidative phosphorylation from
its few mitochondria | b. | to allow the
animals to regulate their metabolic rate when it is especially hot | c. | to increase the production of ATP synthase | d. | to allow other membranes of the cell to perform mitochondrial
function | e. | to regulate temperature by converting energy from NADH
oxidation to heat |
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87.
|
What is the purpose of beta oxidation in
respiration?
a. | oxidation of glucose | b. | oxidation of pyruvate | c. | feedback
regulation | d. | control of ATP
accumulation | e. | breakdown of fatty
acids |
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88.
|
Where do the catabolic products of fatty acid
breakdown enter into the citric acid cycle?
a. | pyruvate | b. | malate or fumarate | c. | acetyl
CoA | d. | á-ketoglutarate | e. | succinyl CoA |
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89.
|
What is the reducing agent in the following
reaction? Pyruvate + NADH + H ® Lactate +
NAD
a. | oxygen | b. | NADH | c. | NAD | d. | lactate | e. | pyruvate |
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90.
|
The immediate energy source that drives ATP
synthesis by ATP synthase during oxidative phosphorylation is
a. | the oxidation of glucose and other organic
compounds. | b. | the flow of
electrons down the electron transport chain. | c. | the affinity of
oxygen for electrons. | d. | the H concentration gradient across the inner mitochondrial
membrane. | e. | the transfer of phosphate to
ADP. |
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91.
|
Which metabolic pathway is common to both
fermentation and cellular respiration of a glucose molecule?
a. | the citric acid cycle | b. | the electron transport chain | c. | glycolysis | d. | synthesis of
acetyl CoA from pyruvate | e. | reduction of
pyruvate to lactate |
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92.
|
In mitochondria, exergonic redox
reactions
a. | are the source of energy driving prokaryotic ATP
synthesis. | b. | are directly
coupled to substrate-level phosphorylation. | c. | provide the energy
that establishes the proton gradient. | d. | reduce carbon
atoms to carbon dioxide. | e. | are coupled via
phosphorylated intermediates to endergonic processes. |
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93.
|
The final electron acceptor of the electron
transport chain that functions in aerobic oxidative phosphorylation is
a. | oxygen. | b. | water. | c. | NAD . | d. | pyruvate. | e. | ADP. |
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94.
|
When electrons flow along the electron transport
chains of mitochondria, which of the following changes occurs?
a. | The pH of the matrix
increases. | b. | ATP synthase pumps
protons by active transport. | c. | The electrons gain
free energy. | d. | The cytochromes
phosphorylate ADP to form ATP. | e. | NAD
is oxidized. |
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95.
|
Cells do not catabolize carbon dioxide
because
a. | its double bonds are too stable to be
broken. | b. | has fewer bonding electrons
than other organic compounds. | c. |
is already completely reduced. | d. |
is already completely oxidized. | e. | the molecule has
too few atoms. |
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96.
|
Which of the following is a true distinction
between fermentation and cellular respiration?
a. | Only respiration oxidizes
glucose. | b. | NADH is oxidized by the electron transport chain in
respiration only. | c. | Fermentation, but
not respiration, is an example of a catabolic pathway. | d. | Substrate-level phosphorylation is unique to
fermentation. | e. | NAD
functions as an oxidizing agent only in respiration. |
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97.
|
Most from catabolism is released
during
a. | glycolysis. | b. | the citric acid cycle. | c. | lactate
fermentation. | d. | electron
transport. | e. | oxidative
phosphorylation. |
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Short Answer
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Refer to Figure 9.1 to answer the following
questions.
Figure 9.1 illustrates some of the steps (reactions) of glycolysis in their
proper sequence. Each step is lettered. Use these letters to answer the questions.

Figure 9.1
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98.
|
Which step shows a split of one molecule into two
smaller molecules?
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99.
|
In which step is an inorganic phosphate added to
the reactant?
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100.
|
In which reaction does an intermediate pathway
become oxidized?
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101.
|
Which step involves an endergonic
reaction?
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102.
|
Which step consists of a phosphorylation reaction
in which ATP is the phosphate source?
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103.
|
The graph here shows the pH difference across the
inner mitochondrial membrane over time in an actively respiring cell. At the time indicated by the
vertical arrow, a metabolic poison is added that specifically and completely inhibits all function of
mitochondrial ATP synthase. Draw what you would expect to see for the rest of the graphed
line.

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