APHY 102 Final Exam Study Guide 2026:
Comprehensive Anatomy and Physiology
Review
What is a hydrogen bond?
a) Strong bond between two nonpolar molecules
b) Ionic attraction between metal atoms
c) Weak attraction between a positive end of one polar molecule and the negative end of
another
d) Covalent bond involving shared electrons
Rationale: Hydrogen bonds are weak attractions between polar molecules like water. Ionic and
covalent bonds involve stronger electron interactions and are not the same as hydrogen bonds.
What is an ion?
a) Neutral atom with equal numbers of protons and electrons
b) Atom that shares electrons
c) Atom that gains or loses electrons, becoming charged
d) Molecule formed by hydrogen bonding
Rationale: Ions are charged atoms formed by gaining or losing electrons. The other options
describe neutral atoms or molecular interactions.
Which best defines a synthesis reaction?
a) Two or more atoms or molecules combine to form a larger molecule
b) Larger molecules are broken into smaller ones
c) Atoms are rearranged without bonding
d) Parts of molecules are exchanged
Rationale: Synthesis builds larger molecules from smaller units. Decomposition breaks
molecules down, and exchange reactions swap components.
What is a decomposition reaction? a)
Substances exchange parts
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b) Large molecules break down into smaller molecules
c) Two small molecules join together
d) Reaction that absorbs water
Rationale: Decomposition reactions break complex substances into simpler ones. Synthesis is
the reverse, and exchange reactions involve swapping parts.
What occurs in an exchange reaction?
a) Molecules split into atoms
b) Parts of molecules trade places
c) Molecules combine to form water
d) Acids react with metals
Rationale: Exchange reactions involve replacing components between molecules. It is neither
purely synthesis nor decomposition.
What is an acid?
a) Substance that absorbs hydrogen ions
b) Electrolyte that releases hydrogen ions (H⁺) in water
c) Molecule that releases hydroxide ions
d) Substance that cannot ionize in water
Rationale: Acids dissociate to release hydrogen ions. Bases remove H⁺ or release OH⁻, and
nonelectrolytes do not ionize.
What happens to a cell placed in a hypotonic solution?
a) Water moves into the cell, causing it to swell or burst
b) Water moves out of the cell, causing it to shrink
c) No net movement of water occurs
d) Solutes move into the cell causing plasmolysis
Rationale: In a hypotonic environment, water enters the cell, leading to swelling. Hypertonic
solutions cause shrinking, while isotonic solutions show no net movement.
What is an isotonic solution?
a) Solution with more solute than the cell
b) Solution with no water molecules
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c) Solution with the same solute concentration as the cell, causing no net water movement
d) Solution that causes cell lysis
Rationale: Isotonic solutions maintain equilibrium with no net movement of water. Hypertonic
and hypotonic solutions disrupt this balance.
Where does glycolysis occur in a cell? a)
Mitochondrial matrix
b) Inner mitochondrial membrane
c) Cytosol (cytoplasm)
d) Nucleus
Rationale: Glycolysis occurs in the cytosol. The Krebs cycle occurs in the mitochondrial matrix
and the ETC in the inner mitochondrial membrane.
What is the main purpose of NADH produced during glycolysis and the citric acid cycle? a)
To directly produce ATP
b) To break down glucose
c) To carry high-energy electrons to the electron transport chain
d) To store oxygen in cells
Rationale: NADH transports electrons to the electron transport chain to generate ATP. It does
not directly make ATP or store oxygen.
What is the role of oxygen in aerobic respiration?
a) Breaks glucose into pyruvate
b) Acts as the final electron acceptor in the electron transport chain
c) Produces glucose from water
d) Converts ATP to ADP
Rationale: Oxygen accepts electrons at the end of the electron transport chain, forming water.
Without oxygen, the chain stops and ATP production drops.
During which phase of the cell cycle does DNA replication occur? a)
Prophase
b) Cytokinesis
c) Interphase (S phase)
d) Telophase
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