100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

Biochemistry, Voet - Solutions, summaries, and outlines. 2022 updated

Rating
-
Sold
1
Pages
233
Grade
A+
Uploaded on
09-02-2022
Written in
2021/2022

Description: INCLUDES Some or all of the following - Supports different editions ( newer and older) - Answers to problems & Exercises. in addition to cases - Outlines and summary - Faculty Approved answers. - Covers ALL chapters.

Show more Read less











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Document information

Uploaded on
February 9, 2022
Number of pages
233
Written in
2021/2022
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Subjects

Content preview

Chapter 1


Life

1. (a) The number of cells in 10 L of saturated culture is :

10 L × 103 mL/L × 1010 cells/mL = 1014 cells.

2n = 1014 where n is the number of doublings.

n = 14/log 2 = 46.5

Since each doubling takes 20 min = 1/3 hour,

Time to reach a saturated culture is 46.5/3 = 15.5 hours.

(b) Volume of an E. coli cell = πρ2η = π × (1 × 10–6 m/2)2 × 2 × 10–6 m

= 1.57 × 10–18 m3

Volume of 1 km3 = (103 m)3 = 109 m3

Number of E. coli in 1 km3 = 109 m3/1.57 × 10–18 m3

= 6.37 × 1026 E. coli

,2 Chapter 1. Life


2n = 6.37 × 1026

n = log (6.37 × 1026)/log 2 = 89 doublings

Time to reach 1 km3 volume = 89/3 = 29.7 hours

2. See Figures 1-2 and 1-5. An animal cell possessing mitochondria, peroxisomes,
and cilia, in addition to a nucleus, has four lines of descent.

3. (a) For an E. coli cell:

Surface area of cylinder = 2πrh + 2πr 2

= 2π (1 × 10–6 m/2) × 2 × 10–6 m + 2π (1 × 10–6 m/2)2

= 7.85 × 10–12 m2

Volume = πr 2h = π (1 × 10–6 m/2)2 × 2 × 10–6 m = 1.57 × 10–18 m3

Surface-to-volume ratio = 7.85 × 10–12 m2/1.57 × 10–18 m3 = 5 × 106 m–1

For a eukaryotic cell:

Surface area = 4πr2




= 3 × 2/20 × 10–6 m = 3.0 × 105 m–1

Thus, the ratio of these two surface-to-volume ratios is

E. coli/eukaryotic = 5 × 106 m–1/3.0 × 105 m–1 = 17

Since cells must take in all nutrients through their surfaces, the E. coli cell can
absorb nutrients 17 times faster per unit volume. Thus, an E. coli cell can have a
17 times greater metabolism per unit volume than the eukaryotic cell, all else
being equal.

, Chapter 1. Life 3

(b) A single microvillus adds the volume

π × (0.1 × 10–6 m/2)2 × 1 × 10–6 m = 7.85 × 10–21 m3

and the surface area

π × 0.1 × 10–6 m × 1 × 10–6 m = 3.14 × 10–13 m2

to the brush border cell (the top of the cylinder is not added surface area since
the cell has this surface area without the microvilli). The area on the eukaryotic
cell that is covered with microvilli is

0.20 × 4π × (20 × 10–6/2)2 = 2.5 × 10–10 m2

There is one microvillus per (0.2 × 10–6 m)2 = 4 × 10–14 m2

Number of microvilli = 2.5 × 10–10 m2/4 × 10–14 m2 = 6250




= 4.19 × 10–15 m3 + 4.91 × 10–17 m3 = 4.23 × 10–15 m3

Area of the brush border cell

= 4π × (20 × 10–6 m/2)2 + 6250 × 3.14 × 10–13 m2

= 1.26 × 10–9 m2 + 1.96 × 10–9 m2 = 3.16 × 10–9 m2

Surface-to-volume ratio of cell with microvilli

= 3.16 × 10–9 m2/4.23 × 10–15 m3

= 7.47 × 105 m–1

Thus, the microvilli have increased the surface-to-volume ratio of the brush
border cell by a factor of 7.47 × 105/3.0 × 105 = 2.49.

4. (a) Volume of E. coli cell = π (1 × 10–6 m/2) × 2 × 10–6 m × 103 L·m–3 = 1.57 × 10–15 L

Number of moles of the protein in an E. coli

= 2 molecules/6.02 × 1023 molecules·mol–1 = 3.32 × 10–24 mol

Concentration of the protein = 3.32 × 10–24 mol /1.57 × 10–15 L = 2.11 × 10–9M

, 4 Chapter 1. Life



(b) 1 m M concentration contains 6.02 × 1023 × 10–3 molecules·L–1

= 6.02 × 1020 molecules·L–1

Number of molecules in an E. coli cell

= 1.57 × 10–15 L × 6.02 × 1020 molecules·L–1

= 9.45 × 105 molecules of glucose

5. (a) Volume of E. coli cell = π × (1 × 10–6/2)2 × 2 × 10–6 m3 = 1.57 × 10–18 m3

Volume of DNA

= π × (20 Å × 10–10 m·Å–1/2)2 × 1.6 mm × 10–3 m/mm = 5.03 × 10–21 m3

Fraction of volume of an E. coli cell occupied by DNA

= 5.03 × 10–21 m3/1.57 × 10–18 = 3.20 × 10–3


Volum e of hum an cell = 4 π × (20 x 10 /2) m 3 = 4.19 × 10
–6 3 –15
m3
(b) 3 ×
Volume of human DNA

= 700 × volume of E. coli DNA = 700 × 5.03 × 10–21 m3

= 3.52 × 10–18 m3

Fraction of volume of human cell occupied by DNA

= 3.52 × 10–18 m3/4.19 × 10–15 m3 = 8.40 × 10–4

6. Since it is likely that any life forms on the planet will be microscopic, they will
have to be detected by chemical means. Such life forms may not have
macromolecules that resemble those of terrestrial life forms but they will most
probably have some sort of a carbon based metabolism. Thus, if the life forms
were supplied with radioactively labeled nutrients, their ability to incorporate
the label into new compounds would indicate their existence. [Such experiments
were carried out on Mars by the Viking landers in 1976. The results were
negative. See Horowitz, H.N., The Search for Life on Mars, Sci. Am. 237(5): 52-61
(1977).]

7. With the earth so cold and dark, those eukaryotic species unable to withstand the
cold, particularly those from the tropics, would rapidly die out. As time passed,
surviving plants would be unable to photosynthesize so that they and the other

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
TestBanks2022 Harvard University
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
2127
Member since
3 year
Number of followers
1700
Documents
2246
Last sold
4 weeks ago

4.0

344 reviews

5
183
4
59
3
46
2
18
1
38

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions