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Summary Neurobiology DT1 - Practice Exam with Full Solutions (UU Biology)

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Complete practice exam for Neurobiology DT1 covering all topics. Includes full exam questions with detailed model answers and step-by-step explanations based on the official practice exam. Ideal for final exam preparation, active recall, and testing understanding across the full course content.

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Practice Exam 1: Neurobiology

Question 1: Explain how you can do optogenetic experiments with Channelrhodopsins.

Answer: Optogenetic experiments with Channelrhodopsins involve using light to control neurons that have been genetically modified to express
light-sensitive proteins. Channelrhodopsins are light-sensitive ion channels that can depolarize neurons when activated by specific wavelengths
of light. To express Channelrhodopsins in specific neurons, researchers use transfection in cultured neurons or engineer transgenic animals. The
responses of neurons or animals to light activation of the channelrhodopsins can be recorded with electrophysiology.


Question 2: Glia cells have various functions in the nervous system. Glia cells: Schwann cells, Astrocytes, Oligodendrocytes, Microglia.

Functions: phagocytosis of surplus material, formation of myelin sheath in the PNS, secretion of cytokines, forms part of blood brain barrier,
support of neurons through regulation of extracellular ion concentrations, reuptake of neurotransmitters, formation of myelin sheath in the CNS.

Answer:

• Schwann cells: formation of myelin sheath in the PNS
• Astrocytes: forms part of blood brain barrier, support of neurons through regulation of extracellular ion concentrations, reuptake of
neurotransmitters
• Oligodendrocytes: formation of myelin sheath in the CNS
• Microglia: phagocytosis of surplus material, secretion of cytokines


Question 3: What is antibody staining used for?

a. Visualising specific protein locations in the cell
b. Retrograde tracing of connections
c. Identifying neuron-specific gene transcription
d. Anterograde tracing of connections
e. Visualising structural changes due to a lesion

Answer: Visualising specific protein locations in the cell


Question 4: The image shows part of the primary visual cortex. The image is an example of which of the following
stainings?

a. Golgi
b. Antibody staining against microglia
c. Intracellular dye injection
d. Nissle

Answer: Nissle


Question 5: Which of the following brain scanning techniques has the highest spatial resolution?

a. Positron Emission Tomografie (PET)
b. Computerized Tomografie (CT)
c. Magnetoencephalografie (MEG)
d. Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI)
e. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
f. Single-Photon Emission Computerized Tomografie (SPECT)

Answer: Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)


Question 6: What is a measured membrane potential of +58 mV consistent with?

a. 10 mM Cl- in the cell, 100 mM Cl- outside the cell
b. 100 mM K+ in the cell, 10 mM K+ outside the cell
c. 100 mM K+ in the cell, 100 mM Na+ outside the cell
d. 10 mM Na+ in the cell, 100 mM Na+ outside the cell

Answer: 10 mM Na+ in the cell, 100 mM Na+ outside the cell




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, Question 7: What properties of the axonal membrane make axons poor conductors?

a. The length of the axon
b. The ion channels in the membrane consume current
c. Current runs through the membrane
d. The capacity of the lipid membrane

Answer: Current runs through the membrane. The capacity of the lipid membrane.


Question 8: What explains that action potentials only travel in one direction?

a. Leakage currents in the axons, such that return of action potentials is prevented
b. The polarised orientation of microtubules in the axon
c. The refractory period at a site where an action potential has just passed
d. The voltage dependency of potassium channels
e. The voltage dependency of sodium channels

Answer: The refractory period at a site where an action potential has just passed.


Question 9: Hodgkin and Huxley studied the resting membrane potential of the squid giant axon. What were their findings?

a. Increase in extracellular sodium depolarised the membrane potential
b. Changing sodium or potassium had the same effect on the membrane potential
c. Increase in extracellular sodium hyperpolarised the membrane potential
d. Increase in extracellular potassium depolarised the membrane potential
e. Increase in extracellular potassium hyperpolarised the membrane potential

Answer: Increase in extracellular potassium depolarised the membrane potential.


Question 10: What causes the different electrical signals in nerve cells?

a. Negative charges bound to the inside and outside of the cell membrane.
b. Ion currents through the cell membrane.
c. Positive charges bound to the inside and outside of the cell membrane.
d. The movement of charged proteins in the plane of the cell membrane.

Answer: Ion currents through the cell membrane.


Question 11: Explain the difference between active and passive electrical membrane properties.

Answer:

Passive properties:

• Govern how electrical signals passively spread and decay within the neuron. They are essential for determining the neuron’s electrical
behavior in the absence of action potential.

• Membrane resistance is determined by the density and properties of leak channels (non-voltage-gated ion channels).
• Membrane capacitance is determined by the surface area of the lipid bilayer of the plasma membrane.

Active properties:

• Voltage-Gated Ion Channels, including Na+ and K+ channels, each contributing to different phases of the action potential.
• Involve energy-dependent processes that enable the generation and propagation of action potentials and synaptic transmission. These
properties allow neurons to actively transmit information over long distances without the loss of signal strength.


Question 12: Rapid depolarization during the rising phase of the action potential is partly determined by an important difference between Na+
and K+ channels. Which difference is the determining factor in this?

a. Na+ channels inactivate, K+ channels do not
b. Na+ channels are more sensitive to potential differences than K+ channels
c. Na+ has a larger driving force than K+
d. Na+ channels open and close faster than K+ channels

Answer: Na+ channels open and close faster than K+ channels.


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High-quality, structured study notes for the Bachelor Biology programme at Utrecht University. Focused on clear, exam-oriented summaries of first-year, second-year, and third-year courses, with a specialisation in cellular biology, developmental biology, and neuroscience. These notes are designed to simplify complex biological concepts into well-structured, high-yield summaries to support efficient and effective exam preparation.

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