FIRST PUBLISH OCTOBER 2024
BIO 353 - Chen Exam 2 Study Guide with
Complete Solutions
endomembrane system - Ans:✔✔-A network of membranes inside and around a eukaryotic cell, related
either through direct physical contact or by the transfer of membranous vesicles.
Nuclear envelope, ER, GA, Lysosome, Vesicles, Endosomes, PM (plasma membrane)
Two types of Protein Synthesis - Ans:✔✔-From free polyribosomes in cytosol
From membrane-bound polyribosomes
Polyribosome - Ans:✔✔-a mRNA that has multiple ribosomes on it progressing from 5' to 3' end
Synthesis from free polyribosomes - Ans:✔✔--Makes proteins floating freely in cytosol
-Does NOT make transmembrane proteins nor proteins destined for exocytosis
Synthesis from membrane-bound polyribosomes - Ans:✔✔--Makes membrane associated proteins &
proteins in endomembrane vesicles
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FIRST PUBLISH OCTOBER 2024
-Present only in Eukaryotic cells
Universal retention sequence for Er - Ans:✔✔--Lys-Asp-Glu -Leu-COO-
KDEL
How are proteins directed to target organelles? - Ans:✔✔-Sorting signals
Where do proteins with no sorting signal go? - Ans:✔✔-Stay in cytosol
Proteins needed in nucleus - Ans:✔✔--soluble proteins that associate with DNA
How does nuclear envelope get lipids and membrane proteins? - Ans:✔✔-ER membrane is contiguous
w/ nuclear envelope, so
lipids and membrane proteins synthesized in ER can be transported via backfilling (aka lateral
movement_ along lipid layers
Nuclear Pore - Ans:✔✔-Large structures on nuclear envelope
-Inner meshwork made short repeated sequences called FGs of pore proteins which prevent the passage
of large molecules (lets in small hydrophilic ones)
-Protein fibrils protrude on both sides (cytosolic & nuclear). Form tentacles on cytosol and a basket on
nucleus
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FIRST PUBLISH OCTOBER 2024
How does nucleus get soluble proteins for DNA? - Ans:✔✔-Proteins are transported post-translationally
from cytosol (meaning in full functional form) through nuclear pores
What do proteins destined for nucleus have? And what are the two functions of this thing? - Ans:✔✔-A
sorting signal called a nuclear localization signal (NLS) which serves as both a mailing address to the
nucleus and a ticket in
What are NLSs recognized by? - Ans:✔✔-Nuclear import receptors (NIRs) aka IMPORTIN
Importin - Ans:✔✔-Nuclear import receptor (NIR)
How is protein import into nucleus accomplished? - Ans:✔✔--NLS on cargo protein recognized by NIR
which attach to cause conformational change in complex which results in high affinity to nuclear pore
tentacles in cytosol which pulls complex into the pore
-NIR grabs onto FG repeats and bounce from FG to FG, plowing way into nucleus
-Attract to basket to enter nucleus, NIR and cargo protein dissociate and cargo protein is delivered
Ran - Ans:✔✔-GTPase (has GTP on it) that can cause conformational changes essential for translocation
of protein through the NPC
Ran-GAP - Ans:✔✔-Ran-GAP (GTPase Activating Protein) helps convert Ran GTP to Ran GDP via
hydrolysis
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