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AP Biology Semester 1 Jeopardy 1 A: Biochem & Cells B: Cell Structure C: Cell Membrane D: Cell Communication E: Energetics F: Cell Respiration G: Photosynthesis 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 200 200 200 200 200 200 200 300 300 300 300 300 300 300 400 400 400 400 400 400 400 500 500 500 500 500 500 500 Final Jeopardy Help (1) Save a duplicate of this template. (2) Enter all answers and questions in the normal view. (view/normal) (3) Change the category headings in the normal view (view/normal) (4) View as a slideshow. (5) Use the home red button after each question. ©Norman Herr, 2003 A-100 • ANSWER: They are insoluble in water, contain twice as much energy as other energy-yielding molecules, and they are a major component of cell membranes. • QUESTION: What are lipids? Answer Question A-200 • ANSWER: The first reaction builds molecules while removing a water molecule, the second reaction adds a water molecule while breaking down molecules. • QUESTION: What are dehydration and hydrolysis reactions? Answer Question A-300 • ANSWER: • QUESTION: What do diagrams for a simple sugar, an unsaturated fat and an amino acid look like? Answer Question A-400 • ANSWER: They distinguish one amino acid from another • QUESTION: What are side chains (or R groups)? Answer Question A-500 • ANSWER: 3 characteristics that distinguish prokaryotes from eukaryotes • QUESTION: What are 3 of: – Prokaryotes are structurally less complex than eukaryotes, prokaryotes do not have chromosomes enclosed in a nucleus, they are unicellular, they do not have membranebound organelles, they do not process RNA after transcription Answer Question B-100 • ANSWER: The first type supports ribosomes and the other is involved in lipid synthesis • QUESTION: Distinguish between the major functions of the rough endoplasmic reticulum and the smooth endoplasmic reticulum. Answer Question B-200 • ANSWER: Functions of the lysosome, cytoskeleton and Golgi apparatus • QUESTION: What are waste destruction, cellular support and organization, and processing & packaging of proteins? Answer Question B-300 • ANSWER: It compartmentalizes enzymes used to break down wastes and cellular components when they are no longer needed. • QUESTION: What is the function of the lysosome? Answer Question B-400 • ANSWER: The first structure makes rRNA and the second encloses the nucleus but contains pores so some materials may enter and exit • QUESTION: What are the nucleolus and nuclear envelope? Answer Question B-500 • ANSWER: Peroxisomes (3 things) • QUESTION: Which organelle can detoxify alcohol and other harmful substances, help synthesize lipids, metabolize (break down) free radicals and break down H2O2 to H2O Answer Question C-100 • ANSWER: It is a passive process in which molecules move from a region of higher concentration to a region of lower concentration. • QUESTION: What is diffusion? Answer Question C-200 • ANSWER: Active Transport • QUESTION: What is movement of a substance across a membrane against its concentration gradient, with the addition of energy? Answer Question C-300 • ANSWER: The fluid mosaic model • QUESTION: What is the term for the model of the plasma membrane that describes it as a lipid bilayer with proteins moving laterally among the lipids? Answer Question C-400 • ANSWER: Integral proteins and peripheral proteins • QUESTION: What type of proteins extend all the way through the plasma membrane, and what type are just on the exterior or interior surface? Answer Question C-500 • ANSWER: Hypotonic and hypertonic (in order) • QUESTION: What conditions exist when the environment outside a cell has a lower concentration of solutes than the cell; and what condition exists when the environment outside a cell has a higher concentration of solutes than the cell? Answer Question D-100 • DAILY DOUBLE! • ANSWER: Cell signaling used in each of the following situations: • Nearby cells • Distant cells • Signals from neuron (nervous tissue) cells • QUESTION: What type of cell-to cell signaling results in paracrine, hormonal and synaptic communication? Answer Question D-200 • ANSWER: The 3 stages of cell signaling (in order) • QUESTION: What are cell reception, signal transduction and cellular response Answer Question D-300 • DAILY DOUBLE! • ANSWER: One type provides cytoplasmic junctions between animal cells and the other type provides channels between plant cell walls • QUESTION: What are gap junctions and plasmodesmata? Answer Question D-400 • ANSWER: Membrane receptors that attach phosphates and can trigger multiple signal transduction pathways at once • QUESTION: What are receptor tyrosine kinases? Answer Question D-500 • ANSWER: a receptor that works with the help of a specific protein, which is activated when the signal molecule attaches to the receptor – The activated protein detaches from the receptor and binds to an enzyme; the enzyme is activated and the next step in the pathway to cellular response ensues • QUESTION: How does a G-protein-linked receptor work? Answer Question E-100 • DAILY DOUBLE! • ANSWER: exergonic reactions (3 things) QUESTION: In what type of reactions is: – ΔG negative – Energy released – The reaction is spontaneous – Work is done Answer Question E-200 • ANSWER: In redox reactions, the first is the substance that loses electrons, the second gains electrons • QUESTION: What substances are oxidized and reduced in redox reactions? (also, the reducing agent and oxidizing agent; and the electron donor and electron acceptor) Answer Question E-300 • ANSWER: The molecule receiving a phosphate group in a chemical reaction • QUESTION: What is a phosphorylated molecule? Answer Question E-400 • DAILY DOUBLE! • ANSWER: The mechanism by which ATP energizes cellular processes • QUESTION: What is energy coupling? (or the coupling of free energy released by ATP hydrolysis to the free energy needed by other reactions) Answer Question E-500 • ANSWER: This is how energy is released from ATP when the terminal phosphate bond is broken • QUESTION: What happens in ATP during a chemical change to a state of lower free energy? Answer Question F-100 • ANSWER: Oxygen’s role in cellular respiration • QUESTION: What is accepting electrons at the end of the electron transport chain? Answer Question F-200 • ANSWER: The 3 main processes in cellular respiration, and the 2 processes that make up the 3rd • QUESTION: What are glycolysis, Kreb (citric acid) cycle, and oxidative phosphorylation; and the electron transport chain and chemiosmosis? Answer Question F-300 • ANSWER: The 2 processes in respiration the make ATP, the 2nd generating the most ATP • QUESTION: What are substrate phosphorylation and chemiosmosis? Answer Question F-400 • ANSWER: Cellular respiration without oxygen; yeast and bacteria conduct the first type, and muscle cells can conduct the second type during heavy exercise • QUESTION: What is anaerobic respiration and what types of cells or organisms conduct alcoholic fermentation and lactic acid fermentation (in order)? Answer Question F-500 • ANSWER: the sequence electrons travel during aerobic respiration (4 steps) • QUESTION: What does this sequence represent? – Food NADH electron transport chain oxygen Answer Question G-100 • ANSWER: The 3 parts of the light reactions, in order • QUESTION: What are – Photosystem II – Electron Transport Chain – Photosystem I Answer Question G-200 • ANSWER: The primary function of the light reactions • QUESTION: What photosynthetic processes yield the energy carriers ATP and NADPH? Answer Question G-300 • ANSWER: The primary function of the Calvin cycle • QUESTION: What is the synthesis of simple sugars from carbon dioxide (or carbon fixation)? Answer Question G-400 • ANSWER: Type of plants whose stomata close on hot, dry days, causing oxygen concentration in leaves to exceed that of carbon dioxide, reducing photosynthesis, and the name of this effect • QUESTION: What are CAM plants and photorespiration? Answer Question G-500 • ANSWER: The type of plants, and the first and second cell types where carbon fixation takes place, as an adaptation to avoid photorespiration and still conduct photosynthesis during the day • QUESTION: What are C4 plants, mesophyll cells and bundle-sheath cells? Answer Question FINAL JEOPARDY • ANSWER: Potential energy stored in an electrochemical gradient, generated by pumping H+ across biological membranes • QUESTION: What is a proton-motive force? Answer Question