Biology Now, 2e

(Ben Green) #1

A10fiffAnswers


A2: ATP and NADPH.


Q3: What are the two major products of photosynthesis?


A3: Glucose and oxygen.


Figure 5.8


Q1: Why is it important that enzymes are not permanently altered


when they bind with substrate molecules?


A1: The fact that they are not permanently altered means


that they can continue to perform their function without having


to be present in great numbers or needing to be continually


produced.


Q2: How would a higher temperature or higher salt concentration


make it more difficult for an enzyme to function effectively?


A2: Both would change the shape of the enzyme so that it would


not be able to bind to its specific molecules.


Q3: If a cell was unable to produce a particular enzyme necessary


for a metabolic pathway, describe how the absence of that enzyme


would affect the cell.


A3: The metabolic pathway would either proceed very slowly or,


possibly, come to a complete halt, so the cell would not be able to


function.


Figure 5.11


Q1: What are the products of cellular respiration?


A1: Carbon dioxide and water.


Q2: Considering the inputs and products of each process, why


is cellular respiration considered the reciprocal process to


photosynthesis?


A2: Photosynthesis uses carbon dioxide and produces oxygen,


whereas cellular respiration does the opposite, using oxygen and


producing carbon dioxide.


Q3: Which of the three stages of cellular respiration—glycolysis,


the Krebs cycle, or oxidative phosphorylation—could organisms


have used 4 billion years ago, before photosynthesis by


cyanobacteria released oxygen into the atmosphere?


A3: Glycolysis, because it does not depend on oxygen. As the text


says, “Glycolysis was probably the earliest means of producing ATP


from food molecules, and it is still the primary means of energy


production in many prokaryotes.”


Figure 5.12


Q1: Which product released by fermentation accounts for the


bubbles in beer?


A1: Carbon dioxide (CO 2 ).


Q2: Bakers of yeast breads also rely on fermentation, allowing


bread to “rise” before baking. Describe what is occurring with the


yeast as the bread rises.


A2: During bread rising, yeasts are performing metabolic


functions—and growing and reproducing—using energy created


through fermentation. The fermentation produces CO 2 as a


waste product, which is trapped within the bread dough and


causes it to rise.


Q3: Explain in your own words why lactic acid builds up in your
muscles during strenuous physical activity.

A3: Something like this: “During strenuous exercise, my muscles
can’t get enough oxygen to produce all the needed ATP. So,
glycolysis produces ATP anaerobically, which generates lactic acid
as a by-product.”

CHAPTER 6


END-OF-CHAPTER ANSWERS



  1. b

  2. a

  3. (a) 4, (b) 1, (c) 2, (d) 3

  4. Meiosis, binary fission, homologous chromosomes, sister chro-
    matids

  5. (a) 1, (b) 2, (c) 5, (d) 3, (e) 4

  6. a

  7. b

  8. b

  9. b

  10. S phase. Chromosomes replicate during S phase; at some
    point during S phase, there will be the original DNA strands
    and half of the newly synthesized DNA strands. In all other
    phases, there is either the same amount of DNA as in the G 1
    phase, or twice as much DNA as in G 1.

  11. (a) 54, (b) 27, (c) 27

  12. c

  13. The G 1 checkpoint ensures that the cell is ready to divide—
    for example, that it is large enough and has enough energy
    to produce two normal daughter cells. The G 2 checkpoint
    ensures that the cell’s DNA has been replicated and packed
    into pairs of sister chromatids. Bypassing the G 1 checkpoint
    could allow cells to divide before they’re ready; bypassing the
    G 2 checkpoint could lead to the production of daughter cells
    with defective chromosomes.


ANSWERS TO FIGURE QUESTIONS


Figure 6.2


Q1: When is DNA replicated during the cell cycle?

A1: In interphase.

Q2: When in the cell cycle does DNA separate into the two
genetically identical daughter cells?

A2: Late in the mitotic phase of cell division.

Q3: If a cell is not destined to separate into daughter cells, what
phase does it enter? Is this part of the cell cycle?

A3: It enters the G 0 phase, which is not part of the cell cycle.
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