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Florida National University The Role of ATP in the Sodium Potassium Pump MCQs

 


  1. Question 1

    0.25 Points____ are loosely associated with the phospholipid bilayer, whereas ____ are tightly bound to it.


  2. Question 2

    0.25 PointsWhat method does a human white blood cell employ to engulf a bacterial cell?


  3. Question 3

    0.25 PointsWhat happens during the cotransport of glucose and sodium ions?


  4. Question 4

    0.25 PointsThe role of ATP in the sodium-potassium pump is to:


  5. Question 5

    0.25 PointsWhat is required for facilitated diffusion to take place?


  6. Question 6

    0.25 PointsIn the accompanying figure, what is the form of cellular junction?


  7. Question 7

    0.25 PointsHow are integral proteins unique in cell membranes?


  8. Question 8

    0.25 PointsPlasmodesmata of plant cells are functionally equivalent to the ____ of animal cells.


  9. Question 9

    0.25 PointsProteins that are destined to become associated with the inner surface of the plasma membrane are:


  10. Question 10

    0.25 PointsWhat type of cellular junction cements cells together that use cadherins as a belt around each cell?


  11. Question 11

    0.25 PointsFigure 5-3
    In the accompanying figure, what is the role of the structures between the membranes?


  12. Question 12

    0.25 PointsThe term “fluid mosaic model” refers to the:


  13. Question 13

    0.25 PointsFigure 5-1

    Refer to the accompanying figure. Which best describes what is happening to the red blood cells in Figure A?


  14. Question 14

    0.25 PointsSince sodium-potassium pumps transport sodium ions out of a cell and potassium ions into a cell, what type of carrier proteins are they?


  15. Question 15

    0.25 PointsA patient who has had a severe hemorrhage accidentally receives a large transfusion of distilled water directly into a major blood vessel. What effect will this have on the patient?


  16. Question 16

    0.25 PointsIn cells that are constantly involved in secretion, an equivalent amount of membrane must be returned to the interior of the cell for each vesicle that fuses with the plasma membrane; if this does not occur, then what would happen?


  17. Question 17

    0.25 PointsDuring phagocytosis, what may fuse with the vacuole to further degrade the ingested material?


  18. Question 18

    0.25 PointsWhat process halts the net movement of water from a hypotonic solution into a plant’s cells and often provides the structural support to many plants?


  19. Question 19

    0.25 PointsAlthough glucose molecules constantly diffuse into a red blood cell along their concentration gradient, equilibrium is never reached and a steep concentration gradient is continually maintained. What causes this?


  20. Question 20

    0.25 PointsWhat facilitate the rapid transport of water through the plasma membrane?


  21. Question 21

    0.25 PointsWhat is the passive movement of water along a concentration gradient?


  22. Question 22

    0.25 PointsBiological membranes are one dimensional fluids.__________________


  23. Question 23

    0.25 PointsA wilted flower placed in a vase of water for several hours became stiff and stood erect. When it was placed in a salt solution, it wilted. From this information, we can say that the cells of the flower are:


  24. Question 24

    0.25 PointsFigure 5-2

    What cellular process is represented in the accompanying figure?


  25. Question 25

    0.25 PointsHow do gap junctions differ from desmosomes?


  26. Question 26

    0.25 PointsWhat have studies of glucose transport in liposomes revealed?


  27. Question 27

    0.25 PointsFigure 5-2

    Consider the cellular process illustrated in the accompanying figure. What substance would most likely be used to transport?


  28. Question 28

    0.25 PointsFigure 5-1

    Refer to the accompanying figure. Which best describes the red blood cells in Figure B?


  29. Question 29

    0.25 PointsIn the experiment in which Frye and Edidin fused the plasma membranes of a mouse and a human cell, what happened to the membrane proteins?


  30. Question 30

    0.25 PointsIf phospholipids form a spherical structure when placed in water, then which of the following is the most logical conclusion about those phospholipid molecules?


  31. Question 31

    0.25 PointsCompare and contrast simple diffusion, osmosis, and facilitated diffusion.


  32. Question 32

    0.25 PointsPeripheral proteins are linked to either surface of the plasma membrane by:


  33. Question 33

    0.25 PointsWhat does an ABC transporter use to transport larger ions and molecules across the cell membrane?


  34. Question 34

    0.25 PointsOnce ligand molecules bind to receptors in coated pits of a plasma membrane, the next step of receptor-mediated endocytisis would be:


  35. Question 35

    0.25 PointsIf the concentration of solutes in a cell is less than the concentration of solutes in the surrounding fluid, then the extracellular fluid is said to be:


  36. Question 36

    0.25 PointsA transmembrane protein differs from other membrane proteins because it:


  37. Question 37

    0.25 PointsThe sodium–potassium pump is a carrier protein that maintains a(n) ____ gradient across the plasma membrane.


  38. Question 38

    0.25 PointsHow do the phospholipids in vegetable oil differ from those of animal fat?


  39. Question 39

    0.25 PointsIn a lipid bilayer, __________ fatty acid tails face each other within the bilayer and form a region that excludes water.


  40. Question 40

    0.25 PointsA person has a genetic disease that prevents the phospholipids in the plasma membrane of the white blood cells from freely fusing with the other membranes within the cell. How would this disease affect phagocytosis?

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Details & Information

  • Assessment due date8/1/21, 11:59 PM (EDT)