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Is this a is poorly worded question, or should I have interpreted it differently (from Kaplan book)?
Trypsin and chymotrypsin cleave protein polypeptide chains at or between:
(a) the same site
(b) different sites
(c) arginine and lysine residues for trypsin and aromatic residues for chymotypsin
(d) a, b, and c are correct
(e) both a and b are correct
The passage states that...Trypsin breaks polypeptide chains on the carboxyl side of arginine and lysine residues. Chymotrypsin cleaves preferentially on the carboxyl side of aromatic and other bulky non polar amino acids.
I chose (c) because I thought that the fact they cleave at the carboxyl group was the same site, but just on different types of proteins. Correct answer says (e), saying they are different sites
Here's another one. Question:
Which of the following compounds can act as electron carriers in oxidative phosphorylation?
(a) NADP+
(b) NAD+
(c) Both NADP+ and NAD+
(d) ATP
(e) None of the above
I chose (e) because the actual electron carriers are NADH and NADPH after NAD+ and NADP+ are reduced, no? Correct answer said (c).
Trypsin and chymotrypsin cleave protein polypeptide chains at or between:
(a) the same site
(b) different sites
(c) arginine and lysine residues for trypsin and aromatic residues for chymotypsin
(d) a, b, and c are correct
(e) both a and b are correct
The passage states that...Trypsin breaks polypeptide chains on the carboxyl side of arginine and lysine residues. Chymotrypsin cleaves preferentially on the carboxyl side of aromatic and other bulky non polar amino acids.
I chose (c) because I thought that the fact they cleave at the carboxyl group was the same site, but just on different types of proteins. Correct answer says (e), saying they are different sites
Here's another one. Question:
Which of the following compounds can act as electron carriers in oxidative phosphorylation?
(a) NADP+
(b) NAD+
(c) Both NADP+ and NAD+
(d) ATP
(e) None of the above
I chose (e) because the actual electron carriers are NADH and NADPH after NAD+ and NADP+ are reduced, no? Correct answer said (c).