NSG 532 Unit 1 Exam Test Questions and Answers Graded A 2024
3 views 0 purchase
Course
NSG 532 Unit 1
Institution
NSG 532 Unit 1
4 Part Definition of Physiology -Answer- Study of bodily functions in a healthy organism
Intermolecular interactions and communications w/in an organism and with its internal/external environment
Mutual relationships between an organism and its microbiome
Homeostatic processes
Is physio...
NSG 532 Unit 1 Exam Test Questions
and Answers Graded A 2024
4 Part Definition of Physiology -Answer- ✔Study of bodily functions in a healthy
organism
Intermolecular interactions and communications w/in an organism and with its
internal/external environment
Mutual relationships between an organism and its microbiome
Homeostatic processes
Is physiology focused more on organic compounds or inorganic compounds? -Answer-
✔Organic
Homeostasis definition -Answer- ✔Variables are regulated so that internal conditions
(including microbiome composition and diversity) remain stable and relatively constant
What 3 characteristics do all living beings share? -Answer- ✔A source of life information
(DNA/RNA)
Cellular organelles to process info into structural and functional proteins
Cellular organelles to generate energy
What is the difference between genotype and phenotype? -Answer- ✔Genotype - the
actual information printed in the DNA
Phenotype - how the information is physically expressed
Diversity begins with the variations among genotype information
What is the beginning of the life energy process? -Answer- ✔The sun provides solar
energy
What do plants do with inorganic compounds CO2, H2O, and sunlight? -Answer-
✔Combine to produce organic compounds and oxygen using photosynthesis
What is the byproduct of the use of oxygen to breakdown organic compounds? -
Answer- ✔ATP - aerobic respiration
NSG 532 Unit 1
,NSG 532 Unit 1
What is the difference between autotrophs and heterotrophs? -Answer- ✔Autotrophs
can convert inorganic compounds into organic compounds - only plants able to do this
Heterotrophs must consume organic compounds such as plants or animals that eat
plants to create ATP
What are the four most important biomolecules? -Answer- ✔DNA
RNA
Proteins
ATP
Of DNA, RNA, Proteins, and ATP which are information and which are energy? -
Answer- ✔DNA, RNA, Proteins - Information
ATP - Energy
What is the difference between aerobic respiration and anaerobic respiration?
Which is more common in humans? -Answer- ✔Aerobic - w/the use of oxygen
Anaerobic - w/o the use of oxygen
99% of human energy production is aerobic
How many ATP does the process of glycolysis create? -Answer- ✔2 ATP molecules
What organelle does the krebs cycle take place in? -Answer- ✔Mitochondria
How many ATP does the Krebs cycle produce? -Answer- ✔2 ATP
How many ATP does the Electron Transport Chain produce? -Answer- ✔34 ATP
How many ATP total are produced with the breakdown of organic compounds in aerobic
cellular respiration? -Answer- ✔38 ATP
What element is needed for the electron transport chain to work properly? -Answer-
✔Oxygen
What purpose does oxygen serve in aerobic cellular respiration? -Answer- ✔Oxygen
increases the efficiency of ATP production
How many ATP does anaerobic cellular respiration create? What are other byproducts?
-Answer- ✔2 ATP
Byproducts are 2 molecules of lactate
NSG 532 Unit 1
,NSG 532 Unit 1
What type of cells use lactic acid fermentation anaerobic respiration? -Answer- ✔Some
bacteria, liver cells, muscle cells
What are two types of anaerobic cellular respiration? -Answer- ✔Lactic Acid
Fermentation
Alcoholic Fermentation
What type of organisms use alcoholic fermentation? -Answer- ✔Yeast and some
bacteria
Explain the name behind Adenosine Triphosphate -Answer- ✔Adenine + Ribose =
Adenosine
3 Phosphate = Triphosphate
Moving from ATP to ADP to AMP is creating or using energy? -Answer- ✔Using energy
Moving from AMP to ADP to ATP is creating or using energy? -Answer- ✔Creating
energy
What is the difference between dephosphorylation and phosphorylation?
Which uses energy and which stores energy? -Answer- ✔Dephosphorylation is the
removal of a phosphate group from a molecule of ATP. This is using energy.
Phosphorylation is the addition of a phosphate group from a molecule of ATP. This is
storage/creation of energy.
What does the free phosphate created by dephosphorylation do? -Answer- ✔Activates
inactive molecules elsewhere
Which enzyme is responsible for phosyphorylation? -Answer- ✔ATP Synthase
Which enzyme is responsible for dephosphorylation? -Answer- ✔ATPase
What is NAD? -Answer- ✔Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide
An electron carrier
What is NAD important for? -Answer- ✔Carries hydrogen to create energy.
Called NADH when carrying hydrogen
What is FAD? -Answer- ✔Flavin Adenine Dinucleotide
An electron carrier
NSG 532 Unit 1
, NSG 532 Unit 1
What is FAD important for? -Answer- ✔Carrying hydrogen for energy creation
Called FADH when carrying hydrogen
What vitamin is important for the creation of FAD and NAD? -Answer- ✔Vitamin B
What occurs in the outer membrane of the mitochondria? -Answer- ✔Transport
What occurs in the inner membrane of the mitochondria? -Answer- ✔Electron Transport
Chain and ATP Synthase
What occurs in the intermembrane space of the mitochondria? -Answer- ✔H+ gradients
What occurs in the matrix of the mitochondria? -Answer- ✔Krebs cycle
What type of "machine" is the mitochondria in cells? -Answer- ✔An ATP generating
machine
How does the H+ gradient work? -Answer- ✔Creates a high concentration of hydrogen
ions in the intermembrane space.
The high gradient of ions drives H+ back through the ATP synthase found in the inner
membrane.
ATP synthase becomes activated and synthesizes ATP from ADP
Define an Exergonic reaction -Answer- ✔Any reaction that produces ATP
In an exergonic reaction will the stored ATP level be higher in the reactants or the
products? -Answer- ✔The reactants --stored ATP.
What are four common exergonic reactions? -Answer- ✔Carbohydrates into glucose
Proteins into amino acids
Lipids into fatty acids
Nucleic acids into nucleotides
What are the reactants called in exergonic reactions? -Answer- ✔Bio-Polymers
What are the products called in exergonic reactions? -Answer- ✔Bio-Monomers
What is an endergonic reaction? -Answer- ✔A reaction that utilizes/consumes ATP
Is the level of stored ATP higher in the reactants or products of an endergonic reaction?
-Answer- ✔The products
NSG 532 Unit 1
The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:
Guaranteed quality through customer reviews
Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.
Quick and easy check-out
You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.
Focus on what matters
Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!
Frequently asked questions
What do I get when I buy this document?
You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.
Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?
Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.
Who am I buying these notes from?
Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller PossibleA. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.
Will I be stuck with a subscription?
No, you only buy these notes for $15.49. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.