BioSc221/325 Exam 2 Name ______________________________ Multiple choice. (1 point each) Choose the one best answer to each of the following questions. ____ How does fermentation of glucose differ from the oxidation of glucose? A. B. C. D. E. Fermentation of glucose is anaerobic; oxidation of glucose is aerobic or anaerobic Fermentation produces less ATP per glucose molecule than oxidation does Glucose is fermented by a different metabolic pathway than when it is oxidized by respiration all of the above none of the above ____ What is the fate of pyruvate in a microbe that uses respiration? A. B. C. D. E. It is reduced to lactic acid. It is oxidized to lactic acid. It is oxidized in the Krebs cycle. It is reduced in the Krebs cycle. It is catabolized in glycolysis. ____ If an organism is inefficient at generating ATP, it probably A. B. C. D. E. possesses a Krebs cycle grows rapidly uses a variety of mechanisms to generate ATP maintains huge reserves of ATP does not use aerobic respiration ____ What happens to ATP synthesis if the electron transport chain is stopped by addition of an inhibitor? A. B. C. D. E. ATP synthesis would stop due to a buildup of excess protons outside the cell. ATP synthesis will speed up due the excess buildup of protons outside the cell. ATP synthesis will stop due to the lack of protons outside the cell. ATP synthesis will stop due to excess buildup of protons inside the cell. None of the above ____ Which of the following is not an end product of fermentation? A. B. C. D. E. lactic acid acetic acid propionic acid pyruvic acid ethanol ____ The conversion of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) to pyruvic acid A. B. C. D. releases CO2 involves the conversion of ADP to ATP involves electron transport phosphorylation none of the above ____ Which of the following is the best definition of fermentation? A. B. C. D. E. The production of ethanol from glucose The oxidation of a carbohydrate with organic molecules serving as final electron acceptors The reduction of glucose to pyruvate The complete catabolism of glucose to CO2 and H2O The production of ATP from glucose ____ The primary purpose of catabolism is A. B. C. D. E. generation of ADP biosynthesis generation of ATP degradation of organic molecules oxidation of NADH to NAD+ ____ What is the biological function of the reaction: pyruvic acid + NADH2 -> lactic acid + NAD+. A. B. C. D. E. reduction of NAD+ oxidation of NADH2 oxidation of pyruvic acid reduction of pyruvic acid formation of lactic acid ____ Why do bacteria need to produce ribulose-5-phosphate via the hexose monophosphate shunt? A. B. C. D. to replenish 6-phosphogluconate to produce 2-keto-3-deoxy-6-phosphogluconate (KDPG ) to produce pentose sugars for nucleotide synthesis to fix CO2 ____ What can anoxygenic phototrophs use as an electron source? A. B. C. D. E. water oxygen sulfide nitrate CO2 ____ The photosynthetic bacteria best suited for growth in the lower areas of a pond are the A. B. C. D. E. cyanobacteriu heliobacteria purple sulfur bacteria green sulfur bacteria purple nonsulfur bacteria ____ Which of the following major types of phototrophs carry out oxygenic photosynthesis? A. B. C. D. E. purple bacteria green sulfur bacteria green nonsulfur bacteria Heliobacterium cyanobacteria ____ In a stratified habitat like a mat or a stagnant pond, which group of phototrophs would be in the deepest layer? A. B. C. D. E. Purple sulfur bacteria Green sulfur bacteria Green nonsulfur bacteria Heliobacteria Cyanobacteria ____ Carotenoids function in which part of the photosynthetic apparatus? A. B. C. D. Light harvesting center (antenna) Reaction center Electron transport chain None of the above ____ How many molecules of ATP can potentially result from the reaction: pyruvic acid + NADH 2 -> lactic acid + NAD+? A. 0 B. 1 C. 2 D. 3 E. 38 ____ The cyanobacteria can fix gaseous nitrogen in structures termed A. B. C. D. hormogonia akinetes cyanophycin heterocysts ____ Some cyanobacteria, such as Synechococcus do not produce specialized structures to protect their nitrogenase so to avoid harming nitrogenase they A. B. C. D. fixi nitrogen at night live in areas where there is low light intensity consume the oxygen as soon as it is produced form communities that keep out oxygen ____ In microorganisms that can synthesize all their cellular components, there is a central core of metabolic pathways consisting of A. B. C. D. E. glycolysis tricarboxylic acid cycle hexose monophosphate shunt all of the above none of the above ____ The most metabolically versatile of the photosynthetic bacteria is A. B. C. D. green sulfur purple sulfur purple nonsulfur cyanobacteria ____ The major role of the tricarboxylic acid cycle in an autotroph or anaerobe is to provide A. B. C. D. precursor metabolites energy energy and precursors none of the above ____ An anapleurotic reaction is a reaction that A. B. C. D. is used to ferment amino acids produces multiple fermentation products replenishes key intermediates of the TCA cycle fixes carbon dioxide ____ Based on the precursor metabolites used for their synthesis, how many families or amino acids are there? A. 2 B. 4 C. 6 D. 8 E. 10 ____ In some cultures cyanobacteria are used as a high protein food source. These generally belong to the genus A. B. C. D. Spirulina Anabaena Rhodococcus Nobody would be foolish enough to eat cyanobacteria ____ A common compound in CO2 fixation and glucose catabolism that is a precursor metabolite (where the two pathways meet) is A. B. C. D. phosphoglyceric acid glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate pyruvic acid phosphoenolpyruvate ____ An organism was isolated that could utilize gaseous nitrogen (N2) as sole source of nitrogen for growth. It would be safe to assume that this isolate is a A. B. C. D. E. bacterium fungus plant virus any of the above ____ Chaperones are proteins that A. B. C. D. activate other proteins prevent incorrect secondary or tertiary structure formation prevent incorrect tertiary or quaternary structure formation form in cells as needed to modify proteins ____ The role of the signal peptide is to A. B. C. D. E. indicate terminal amino acid sequences place secretory proteins into the cell membrane modify functions of secretory proteins provide sites for chaperone proteins ____ An enzyme complex found in both anoxygenic photophosphorylation and electron transport phosphorylation is A. B. C. D. reaction center bc1 complex special pair bacteriopheophytin ____ Which of the following is not a negative impact of cyanobacteria in the environment? A. B. C. D. “Blooms” in fresh water Produce toxins Production of geosmin Production of scytonemin Short answer. (variable points) (1) Bacteriochlorophylls can be found with very diverse absorbance spectra. What advantage does this provide for the phototroph? (1) Fermentative organisms rarely use the Entner-Doudorof pathway to produce pyruvate from glucose. Why? (1) Anoxygenic photophosphorylation is also called cyclic photophosphorylation. Since the electrons can be recycled, why do these organisms need an electron donor? (4) The cartoon below depicts a standard electron transport chain from NADH/H + to O2. How many coupling sites (locations where protons are translocated) are present in this electron transport chain? Indicate the location of each coupling site with an arrow and an H+ (2) In the TCA cycle, one other hydrogen carrier is used in addition to NADH. Electrons from this molecule (FADH) follow nearly the same pathway to oxygen but only yield 2 ATP. Now that you know how electron transport is coupled to ATP synthesis, predict the reason why only 2 ATP may arise for FADH oxidation. (1) Give one reason why an organism would want to hydrolyze a molecule of ATP to make the ATP synthase enzyme to run “backwards”. (3) Here are several electron carriers found in an electron transport chain and their respective redox potentials. Draw an electron transport chain with the electron carriers in the correct order. Cytochrome c (+300mV), Quinone (+60mV), Ferrodoxin (-200mV), Iron-Sulfur center (-100 mV), Cytochrome b (+100 mV) Electron donor → Electron → acceptor Short Essay Questions. Please answer 3 of the following 4 short essay questions (6 points each - 6 bonus points possible for answering all 4 questions) What are some basic differences and similarities between fermentation and respiration using glucose as the carbon and energy source? In the first section of this class we discussed stromatolites which are fossilized microbial mat communities. The microbial mats consisted of layers of different prokaryotic phototrophs. Based on what you have learned about the properties of the different kinds of phototrophs in this section of the course, explain the basis for this layering phenomenon and the types of organisms you would expect to find in the different layers. It has been assumed for many years that plants account for most of the “fixed” carbon on earth. However, microbes are being discovered in significant quantities in environments such as the open ocean and in subsurface areas and it is now becoming clear that microbes account for most of the “fixed” carbon on earth. Consequently, we have also discovered that microbes have evolved several mechanisms for “fixing” carbon dioxide. Briefly discuss three mechanisms of carbon dioxide fixation found in microbes. Approximately 20% of bacterial proteins are exported to the cytoplasmic membrane and beyond. The translocation of many of these proteins involves a signal peptide. Briefly explain the four different mechanisms by which signal peptide containing proteins can get from the ribosome to the cytoplasmic membrane and beyond. Include any other proteins/protein complexes that may be involved.