BioDiaries Crack the Question Crack the Question: Week 16 (Plant Physiology)

Crack the Question: Week 16 (Plant Physiology)

Q1.

Source: CSIR NET NOV 20; Session II

Following are certain statements regarding nitrogen uptake and assimilation by plants:

A. Plant roots can take up nitrogen in the form of NO3- or NH4+

B. NH4+ taken up by plants can be directly assimilated into amino acids

C. Amino acids are synthesised exclusively in plastids and chloroplast of roots and leaves respectively

D. NO3- can be stored in vacuoles of both, roots and leaves

Which one of the following combination is correct?

a. A,B, and C

b. B,C, and D

c. A,B, and D

d. A,C, and D

Statement Analysis

Plants absorb nitrogen primarily as nitrate (NO3-) and ammonium (NH4+), making statement A correct.

Ammonium can be rapidly incorporated into amino acids through the GS-GOGAT pathway, making statement B correct.

Plants can also store excess nitrate in the vacuoles of both roots and leaves, making statement D correct.

Statement C is incorrect because amino acid synthesis is not restricted exclusively to plastids and chloroplasts. Several steps occur in other cellular compartments as well.

Correct answer: c. A,B, and D

Q2.

Source: GATE, 2020

In a typical green plant, the first stable product of calvin cycle is:

a. Oxaloacetic acid

b. Succinic acid

c. Maleic acid

d. 3-phosphoglyceric acid

Statement Analysis

The first stable product of the Calvin cycle is 3-phosphoglyceric acid (3-PGA).

When carbon dioxide combines with RuBP (ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate), a 5-carbon molecule, an unstable 6-carbon intermediate is formed. This intermediate immediately splits into two molecules of 3-PGA.

Since the first stable product contains three carbon atoms, plants that use this pathway are known as C3 plants.

Correct Answer: d. 3-phosphoglyceric acid

Exam insights

Carbon count matters!

  • RuBP = 5 carbon
  • COâ‚‚ = 1 carbon
  • Unstable intermediate = 6 carbons
  • First stable product (3-PGA) = 3 carbons

Your Score?

How many did you get right this week?

2/2 – Plant Physiology Pro!

1/2 – Good attempt!

0/2 – Time for a quick revision!

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