Pregunta 1
Pregunta
Body proteins are continuously degraded to amino acids and re-synthesised.
Pregunta 2
Pregunta
All proteins have the same half-lives.
Pregunta 3
Pregunta
Protein cannot be stored in the body.
Pregunta 4
Pregunta
Why is a high protein intake in an already well-fed individual wasteful?
Respuesta
-
Excess amino acids are catabolised and excreted as urea
-
Excess amino acids cause breakdown of glycogen
-
Excess amino acids cause fat accumulation
-
Excess protein will not be catabolised so will yield no energy
Pregunta 5
Pregunta
What is true of healthy adults?
Respuesta
-
Nitrogen intake = nitrogen excretion
-
Nitrogen intake > nitrogen excretion
-
Nitrogen intake < nitrogen excretion
Pregunta 6
Pregunta
When is a positive nitrogen balance (nitrogen intake > nitrogen excretion) required?
Respuesta
-
Growth in childhood, recovery after illness, after immobilisation, during pregnancy
-
During starvation, during serious illness, in injury and trauma
-
All the time - this is required for healthy adults
Pregunta 7
Pregunta
When might a negative nitrogen balance (nitrogen intake < nitrogen excretion) occur?
Respuesta
-
During starvation, during serious illness, in injury and trauma
-
Growth in childhood, recovery after illness, following immobilisation, during pregnancy
-
In normal circumstances - this is required for healthy adults
Pregunta 8
Pregunta
How are most cellular proteins degraded?
Respuesta
-
Ubiquitin breakdown system
-
Proteolytic enzymes in lysosomes
-
Proteolytic enzymes in the gut
-
Dissolve in the cytosol
Pregunta 9
Pregunta
How are exogenous proteins degraded?
Respuesta
-
Proteolytic enzymes in lysosomes
-
Ubiquitin breakdown system
-
Proteolytic enzymes in gut
-
Dissolve in cytoplasm
Pregunta 10
Pregunta
What is oxidative deamination?
Pregunta 11
Pregunta
Which enzymes carry out oxidative deamination?
Respuesta
-
Dehydrogenases
-
Carboxylases
-
Oxidoreductases
-
Lyases
Pregunta 12
Pregunta
NADH + H+ are formed from NAD during oxidative deamination.
Pregunta 13
Pregunta
Oxidative deamination and transamination are reversible reactions.
Pregunta 14
Pregunta
What is a co-product of oxidative deamination?
Respuesta
-
Ammonia/ammonium ions
-
Pyruvate
-
Amino acids
-
FADH2
Pregunta 15
Pregunta
Fill in the blanks below to summarise oxidative deamination.
An amino acid reacts with [blank_start]water[blank_end] to form a [blank_start]keto acid[blank_end] and [blank_start]ammonia[blank_end]. This is catalysed by a [blank_start]dehydrogenase[blank_end] enzyme specific to that amino acid. This is a [blank_start]reversible[blank_end] reaction that forms NADH and H+ from [blank_start]NAD[blank_end].
Respuesta
-
water
-
keto acid
-
ammonia
-
dehydrogenase
-
reversible
-
NAD
Pregunta 16
Pregunta
What is transamination?
Pregunta 17
Pregunta
What type of enzymes carry out transamination?
Respuesta
-
Transaminases
-
Dehydrogenases
-
Decarboxylases
-
Oxidoreductases
Pregunta 18
Pregunta
Fill in the blanks below to describe transamination.
An amino acid reacts with a [blank_start]keto acid[blank_end] to form a keto-carboxylate such as [blank_start]pyruvate[blank_end] and the amino acid of the [blank_start]keto acid[blank_end]. This is carried out by [blank_start]transaminase[blank_end] enzymes in a [blank_start]reversible[blank_end] reaction.
Respuesta
-
keto acid
-
pyruvate
-
keto acid
-
transaminase
-
reversible
Pregunta 19
Pregunta
What are glucogenic amino acids?
Respuesta
-
Amino acids that can be converted back to glucose by the liver during starvation
-
Amino acids that can be degraded to acetyl CoA
-
Amino acids that can be incorporated into glycogen
-
Amino acids that stimulate glycogen degradation
Pregunta 20
Pregunta
What are ketogenic amino acids?
Respuesta
-
Amino acids that can be degraded to acetyl CoA
-
Amino acids that can be converted back to glucose by the liver during starvation
-
Amino acids that form ketone bodies in the blood
-
Amino acids that cause ketoacidosis
Pregunta 21
Pregunta
Which amino acids are ketogenic only?
Respuesta
-
Leucine
-
Lysine
-
Tyrosine
-
Iseoleucine
-
Phenylalanine
-
Histidine
-
Methionine
-
Alanine
-
Cysteine
Pregunta 22
Pregunta
Which amino acids are both glucogenic and ketogenic?
Respuesta
-
Tyrosine
-
Iseoleucine
-
Phenylalanine
-
Tryptophan
-
Threonine
-
Leucine
-
Lysine
-
Histidine
Pregunta 23
Pregunta
Only the liver can convert ammonia to urea for excretion in the urea cycle.
Pregunta 24
Pregunta
What does glutaminase do?
Pregunta 25
Pregunta
What enzyme forms glutamine from glutamate?
Respuesta
-
Glutamine synthetase
-
Glutamate deaminase
-
Glutamate hydrolase
-
Glutamate carboxylase
Pregunta 26
Pregunta
When glutamate is formed from glutamine, the enzyme [blank_start]glutaminase[blank_end] catalyses the reaction. This involves [blank_start]water[blank_end] as a reactant and [blank_start]ammonia[blank_end] as a product.
Respuesta
-
glutaminase
-
water
-
ammonia
Pregunta 27
Pregunta
When glutamine is formed from glutamate, ATP and [blank_start]ammonia[blank_end] are required. [blank_start]ATP[blank_end] is hydrolysed to provide energy for the reaction. [blank_start]Glutamine synthetase[blank_end] catalyses this reaction. Glutamine can carry [blank_start]two[blank_end] ammonia equivalents in this way.
Respuesta
-
ammonia
-
ATP
-
Glutamine synthetase
-
two
Pregunta 28
Pregunta
Why do we carry ammonia via glutamine to the liver for urea formation?
Respuesta
-
Carries 2 ammonia equivalents to prevent its toxic effects
-
The most soluble amino acid
-
Carries 3 ammonia equivalents to prevent its toxic effects
-
The most neutral amino acid
Pregunta 29
Pregunta
When ammonium ions combine with CO2/HCO3- in the mitochondria, what is formed?
Respuesta
-
Carbamoyl phosphate
-
L-Citruline
-
L-Aspartate
-
Urea
Pregunta 30
Pregunta
ATP hydrolysis is required for the synthesis of carbamoyl phosphate from CO2/HCO3- and ammonia.
Pregunta 31
Pregunta
What does carbamoyl phosphate combine with in the mitochondria to form citrulline?
Respuesta
-
Ornithine
-
Arginine
-
Fumarate
-
Arginosuccinate
Pregunta 32
Pregunta
What is lost when carbamoyl phosphate and ornithine react to form citrulline?
Respuesta
-
Inorganic phosphate
-
ATP
-
Methyl group
-
Carbonyl group
Pregunta 33
Pregunta
Which enzyme catalyses the formation of citrulline from carbamoyl phosphate and ornithine?
Respuesta
-
Ornithine transcarbamyolase
-
Ornithine pyrophosphatase
-
Citrulline synthetase
-
Carbamoyl pyrophosphatase
Pregunta 34
Pregunta
Where does citrulline combine with aspartate to form arginosuccinate?
Respuesta
-
Cytosol
-
Mitochondria
-
Plasma
-
Endoplasmic reticulum
Pregunta 35
Pregunta
Where does argininosuccinate synthase receive its energy to combine citrulline and aspartate to form argininosuccinate?
Pregunta 36
Pregunta
What reaction forms arginine and fumarate from argininosuccinate?
Respuesta
-
Cleavage
-
Condensation
-
Phosphorylation
-
Dephosphorylation
Pregunta 37
Pregunta
What does the enzyme argininosuccinase do?
Respuesta
-
Cleave argininosuccinate into fumarate and arginine
-
Cleave argininosuccinate into malate and arginine
-
Dephosphorylate argininosuccinate
-
Phosphorylate argininosuccinate
Pregunta 38
Pregunta
What reaction converts arginine to urea and ornithine?
Respuesta
-
Hydration
-
Condensation
-
Phosphorylation
-
Dephosphorylation
Pregunta 39
Pregunta
What is required to convert arginine to urea and ornithine?
Respuesta
-
Water
-
Inorganic phosphate
-
Carbon dioxide
-
Bicarbonate
Pregunta 40
Pregunta
Fill in the blanks below to describe the ornithine/urea cycle.
1. Ammonium ions react with c[blank_start]arbon dioxide[blank_end] or b[blank_start]icarbonate[blank_end] in the [blank_start]mitochondria[blank_end]. This forms [blank_start]carbamoyl phosphate[blank_end]. This reaction is catalysed by [blank_start]carbamoyl phosphate synthase I[blank_end] and requires [blank_start]ATP[blank_end] hydrolysis.
2. [blank_start]Carbamoyl phosphate[blank_end] combines with [blank_start]ornithine[blank_end] to form [blank_start]citrulline[blank_end] in the mitochondria. [blank_start]Inorganic phosphate[blank_end] is lost in this reaction. This reaction is catalysed by [blank_start]ornithine transcarbamyolase[blank_end].
3. [blank_start]Citrulline[blank_end] is transported into the [blank_start]cytosol[blank_end] where it combines with [blank_start]aspartate[blank_end] to form [blank_start]argininosuccinate[blank_end]. This is catalysed by [blank_start]argininosuccinate synthase[blank_end] and requires [blank_start]ATP[blank_end] hydrolysis.
4. [blank_start]Argininosuccinate[blank_end] is cleaved into [blank_start]fumarate[blank_end] and arginine in a reaction catalysed by [blank_start]argininosuccinase[blank_end].
5. [blank_start]Arginine[blank_end] is hydrated and splits into urea and [blank_start]ornithine[blank_end]. This requires water and is catalysed by [blank_start]arginase[blank_end]. The [blank_start]ornithine[blank_end] combines with more [blank_start]carbamoyl phosphate[blank_end] in the mitochondria to continue the cycle and the [blank_start]urea[blank_end] is excreted.
Respuesta
-
arbon dioxide
-
icarbonate
-
mitochondria
-
carbamoyl phosphate
-
carbamoyl phosphate synthase I
-
ATP
-
Carbamoyl phosphate
-
ornithine
-
citrulline
-
Inorganic phosphate
-
ornithine transcarbamyolase
-
Citrulline
-
cytosol
-
aspartate
-
argininosuccinate
-
argininosuccinate synthase
-
ATP
-
Argininosuccinate
-
fumarate
-
argininosuccinase
-
ornithine
-
Arginine
-
arginase
-
carbamoyl phosphate
-
urea
-
ornithine
Pregunta 41
Pregunta
Fill in the blanks below to describe some of the end products of nitrogen metabolism.
Protein breakdown results in [blank_start]urea[blank_end].
Creatine phosphate breakdown results in [blank_start]creatinine[blank_end].
DNA and RNA breakdown results in [blank_start]uric acid[blank_end].
The control of body pH results in [blank_start]ammonia[blank_end].
Respuesta
-
urea
-
creatinine
-
uric acid
-
ammonia
Pregunta 42
Pregunta
Hyperammonaemia is caused by an impaired conversion of [blank_start]ammonia[blank_end] to [blank_start]urea[blank_end]. This can be caused by liver failure, for example in viral [blank_start]hepatitis[blank_end], c[blank_start]irrhosis[blank_end] or other toxins. This can also be caused by genetic defects, for example causing mutations in the enzymes involved in the [blank_start]urea cycle[blank_end].
The symptoms of this include irratibility, headache and vomiting. In more severe cases hyperammonaemia can result in encephalopathy, seizures and ataxia.
Respuesta
-
urea
-
ammonia
-
hepatitis
-
irrhosis
-
urea cycle