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厦门大学细胞生物学课程试卷 ___________学院______系_______年级_______专业 主考老师: 试卷类型: (A 卷) 1. Glossary (20) 1) Lipid raft (4) 2) Proteasome (4) 3) Endomembrane system (4) 4) Anoikis (4) 5) Sorting signals (4) 2、 What roles are cholesterol thought to play in our cell membranes? (8) 3、 Name the various types of coated protein involved in vesicular transport and expain their function respectively. (8) 4、 Describe the fate for an extracellular proteins that have been endocytosed (8) 5、 Summary the way that membrane protein associate with the lipid bilayer.(10) 6、 Identify several functions played by smooth endoplasmic reticulum. (8) 7、 Explain the mechanism of asymmetrical distribution of various phospholipids in the lipid bilayer of a cell.(10) 8、 9、 Explain the physiological importance of Glycosylation (8) Explain the mechanism for sorting lysosomal enzymes during the Vesicular transport. (10) 10、 Describe the roles of the following in vesicular transport: A. SRP B.Signal Sequence C. Bip (10) Answer: 1. Glossary (20) (1) Lipid raft (4) A: Lipid rafts are membrane microdomains that are enriched in cholesterol and glycosphingolipids. They have been implicated in processes as diverse as signal transduction, endocytosis and cholesterol trafficking. (2) Proteasome (4) A: Large protein complex in the cytosol with proteolytic activity that is responsible for degrading proteins that have been marked for destruction by ubiquitylation or by some other means. (3) Endomembrane system (4) A: the structural and functional related intracellular membrane structures, including Endoplasmic reticulum (ER),Golgi complex, lysosome, endosomes, secretory vesicles (4) Anoikis (4) A: a type of apoptosis that results from cell detachment from the extracellular matrix. (5) Sorting signals (4) A: Sorting signals are amino acid sequence that direct their delivery to targeting locations. 2. What roles are cholesterol thought to play in our cell membranes? (8) A: Cholesterol plays a important role in membrane mobility. (1).Interaction with the relatively rigid cholesterol decreases the mobility of hydrocarbon tails of phospholipids. (2) the presence of cholesterol in a phospholipid membrane interferes with close packing of fatty acid tails in the crystalline state, and thus inhibits transition to the crystal state (3) Phospholipid membranes with a high concentration of cholesterol have a fluidity intermediate between the liquid crystal and crystal states. 3. Name the various types of coated protein involved in vesicular transport and expain their function respectively. (8) A: (A) Clathrin-coated vesicles: mediate transport from the Golgi apparatus to lysosome and from the plasma membrane to endosome. (B) COPI-coated vesicles: captures the escaped soluble ER resident proteins and carries them in COPI-coated transport vesicles back to the ER. (C) COPII-coated vesicles: mediate transport from ER to Golgi apparatus 4. Describe the fate for a protein that have been endocytosed (8) A: (1) Recycling: proteins that are specifically retrieved are returned to the same plasma membrane domain from which they came. (2) Transcytosis: proteins that are specifically retrieved are returned to a different domain of the plasma membrane (3) Degradation: proteins that are not specifically retrieved from endosomes are transported to lysosomes, where they are degraded. 5. Summary the way that membrane protein associate with the lipid bilayer. (10) A: Most trans-membrane proteins are thought to extend across the bilayer as (1) a single a helix , (2) as multiple a helices, or (3) as a rolled-upβsheet. Some of these "single-pass" and "multipass" proteins have a covalently attached fatty acid chain inserted in the cytosolic lipid monolayer (1). Other membrane proteins are exposed at only one side of the membrane. (4) Some of these are anchored to the cytosolic surface by an amphipathic a helix that partitions into the cytosolic monolayer of the lipid bilayer through the hydrophobic face of the helix. (5) Others are attached to the bilayer solely by a covalently attached lipid chain either a fatty acid chain or a prenyl group in the cytosolic monolayer or, (6) via an oligosaccharide linker, to phosphatidylinositol in the noncytosolic monolayer. 6. Identify several functions played by smooth endoplasmic reticulum. (8) A: (1) Synthesis of steroids in endocrine cells. (2) Detoxification of organic compounds in liver cells. (3) Sequestration of Ca2+. Ca2+-ATPase 7. Explain the mechanism of asymmetrical distribution of various phospholipids in the lipid bilayer of a cell.(10) A: Asymmetrical distribution of various phospholipids in the lipid bilayer only occurs in plasma membrane. (1) phospholipids synthesis takes place in the cytosolic leaflet of the ER membrane.some of the newly formed phospholipid molecules are transferred from the cytosolic half of the ER bilayer to the lumenal leaflet by a phospholipid translocator called a scramblase. (2) The newly synthesized membrane is transported by vesicles from the ER to plasma membrane. (3) In plasma membrane, phospholipid translocators called flippases use the energy of ATP hydrolysisto flip phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylethanolamine directionally from the extracellular to the cytosolic leaflet. Thus, the plasma membrane has a highly asymmetric distribution of phospholipids. 8. Explain the physiological importance of Glycosylation (8) A: (1) Mark the State of Protein Folding (2) Limit the approach of other macromolecules to the protein surface, more resistant to digestion by proteases. (3) Regulatory roles in signaling through the cell-surface receptor Notch, to allows these cells to respond selectively to activating stimuli. 9. Explain the mechanism for sorting lysosomal enzymes during the Vesicular transport. (10) A: (1)when lysosomal enzymes are transported from ER to cis Golgi network, lysosomal enzymes are covalently modified by phosphorylation to the terminal mannose residue to form mannose 6-phosphate (M6P) marker. Two enzymes act sequentially to catalyze the addition of M6P groups to lysosomal hydrolases. The first is a GlcNAc phosphotransferase that specifically binds the hydrolase and adds GlcNAc-phosphate to one or two of the mannose residues on each oligosaccharide chain .A second enzyme,N-Acetylglucosaminidase, then cleaves off the GlcNAc residue, leaving behind a newly created M6P marker. Since most lysosomal hydrolases contain multiple oligosaccharides, they acquire many M6P residues, providing a high affinity signal for the M6P receptor. (2) the lysosomal enzymes possessing the mannose 6-phophate(M6P) are recognized and captured by M6P receptors in trans golgi network(TGN). (3) the lysosomal enzymes are enclosed in clathrin-coated vesicles and transported to late endosomes in which the M6P receptors are dissociated and the phosphates are removed from the lysosomal enzymes. (4) at last, the lysosomal enzymes are transported to lysosome. 10. Describe the roles of the following in vesicular transport: A.SRP B.Signal Sequence C.Bip (10) A. A:signal-recognition particle(SRP), which cycles between the ER membrane and the cytosol and binds to the ER signal sequence, plays a role when secretory proteins are synthesized in ER. The SRP binds to both the exposed ER signal sequence and the ribosome, thereby inducing a pause in translation. The SRP receptor in the ER membrane binds the SRP-ribosome complex and directs it to the translocator. B. Signal sequences are short continuous amino acid sequence in proteins that direct proteins from the cytosol into the ER, mitochondria, chloroplasts, and peroxisomes, and they are also used to transport proteins from the nucleus to the cytosol and from the Golgi Complex to the ER. C. Bip (binding protein) are ER resident proteins. During the cargo proteins are synthesized in ER, the molecular chaperone Bip functions to recognize and bind to unfolded or misfolded proteins and give them the opportunity to attain their correct three-dimensional structure. In addition, Bip pulls the polypeptide chain into the ER lumen through the translocator.