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NROS 310 Exam 3 FINAL || very Flawless.

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What are the three main components of the cytoskeleton and what are their main functions? correct answers Microtubules, microfilaments and intermediate filaments that help form the cytoskeleton to create stability, structure, and allow movement What are the main similarities and differences betw...

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  • October 28, 2024
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NROS 310 Exam 3 FINAL || very Flawless.
What are the three main components of the cytoskeleton and what are their main functions?
correct answers Microtubules, microfilaments and intermediate filaments that help form the
cytoskeleton to create stability, structure, and allow movement

What are the main similarities and differences between the three components of the
cytoskeleton? correct answers Microfilaments: flexible, smallest, regulate motion, help stabilize,
polymerized from monomers to polymers

Microtubules: less flexible, wider, hallow, important for movement, more organized pattern,

Intermediate filament: less dynamic, many cells don't need them, specialized structures, good for
strength

Describe how the assembly of actin filaments is regulated. Include both the role of associated
proteins and monomer concentration. correct answers It is regulated by concentration of actin
monomers bumping into the filament and its a lot easier for a filament to build once there are
already some oligomers

The cell can regulate nucleation to make the filament grow or fall apart


The filament also has polarity and it is easier to add onto the plus end than the minus end

Describe how actin filaments bind and fall apart correct answers Actin binds together in the ATP
form and fall off in the ADP form

What would be the effect of incorporating a nonhydrolyzable analog of ATP in the assembly
process? correct answers The filaments would grow until it ran out of monomers

What is the rate-limiting step in actin filament assembly? correct answers Going from monomers
to oligomers, also called nucleation

Define critical concentration. correct answers The amount of actin in an ATP form that keeps the
actin from neither shrinking nor growing (i think)

How do the ends of the actin filament differ? correct answers One is positive, one is negative,
monomers will add faster to the positive end

What is dynamic instability? How does the regulation of ATP hydrolysis figure into the process?
correct answers The actin filament will grow when there are more ATP monomers and shrink
when they switch to ADP and they begin to fall off

As long as the filament has ATP on the ends, it stays stable, but once hydrolysis catches up and
the ends are in the ADP form, it begins to shrink

, If actin is so dynamically unstable, how can it function in a stable structure like skeletal muscle?
correct answers ARP 2/3 binds onto the minus end and covers it so actin monomers cannot fall
off and exposes the plus end so it can grow

A different capping protein binds onto the plus end to stabilize it

How do the properties of actin subserve both stable and dynamic functions in the cell? correct
answers It can be stable by putting caps on the ends but can change into dynamic structure if it is
cut in the middle and the ADP ends are exposed

What are the main functions of the different classes of actin associated proteins? correct answers
ARP 2/3: binds onto actin on the minus end and nucleates

Profilin: puts monomers in GTP form

Tropomyosin: stabilizes filament

Formin: binds onto actin on the plus end and nucleates

Thymosin: binds subunits to prevent assembly

Tropomodulin: Prevents assembly and disassembly at the minus end

Cofilin: Binds ADP actin filaments and accelerates disassembly

Gelsolin: severs filaments and binds to plus end

Capping protein: prevents assembly and disassembly at minus end

How does the hydrolysis of ATP cause myosin to move along the actin filament? correct answers
Myosin heads have bound phosphate and ADP, once it binds to actin, phosphate is released and
the power stroke happens, then ATP replaces ADP, causing the myosin head to detach, ATP is
hydrolyzed and re-cocks into the start position

Why is it important that each individual myosin head group is only transiently attached to the
actin filament? correct answers Because it needs to detach once it moves the filament forward so
it can grab onto another part of the actin and drag it forward

Diagram the components of a sarcomere in skeletal muscle. Identify the proteins involved
including actin, myosin, titin, CapZ, and tropomodulin. B.) If you looked at an electron
micrograph of skeletal muscle, could you tell if the muscle was contracted or relaxed? What
would you see if there was a difference? C.) Predict the functional effects of a defect in titan.
correct answers B. Yes, if there is a lot of overlap, the muscle is contracted
C. If titin was defective, the muscle could stretch too far and become damaged

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