Kara M Dismuke Week 2 Journal: Difference between revisions

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# dehydrogenase: enzyme that oxidizes a substrate by transferring hydrogen to an acceptor that is either NAD/NADP or a flavin enzyme. An enzyme that is used to remove hydrogen from its substrate, which is used in the cytochrome (hydrogen carrier) system in respiration to produce a net gain of ATP.
# dehydrogenase: enzyme that oxidizes a substrate by transferring hydrogen to an acceptor that is either NAD/NADP or a flavin enzyme. An enzyme that is used to remove hydrogen from its substrate, which is used in the cytochrome (hydrogen carrier) system in respiration to produce a net gain of ATP.
#*http://www.biology-online.org/dictionary/Dehydrogenase
#*http://www.biology-online.org/dictionary/Dehydrogenase
# 2nd term
# ammonia: the common Name for NH3, a strongly basic, irritating, colourless gas which is lighter than air and readily soluble in water. It is formed in nature as a by-product of protein metabolism in animals. Industrially, it is used in explosives, fertiliser, refrigerants, household cleaning solutions, etc.
#*cite
#*http://www.biology-online.org/dictionary/Ammonia
# 3rd term
# 3rd term
#*cite
#*cite

Revision as of 20:40, 25 January 2015

Definitions

  1. dehydrogenase: enzyme that oxidizes a substrate by transferring hydrogen to an acceptor that is either NAD/NADP or a flavin enzyme. An enzyme that is used to remove hydrogen from its substrate, which is used in the cytochrome (hydrogen carrier) system in respiration to produce a net gain of ATP.
  2. ammonia: the common Name for NH3, a strongly basic, irritating, colourless gas which is lighter than air and readily soluble in water. It is formed in nature as a by-product of protein metabolism in animals. Industrially, it is used in explosives, fertiliser, refrigerants, household cleaning solutions, etc.
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Outline

  1. What is the main result presented in this paper?
    • Answer:
  2. What is the importance or significance of this work?
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  3. What were the limitations in previous studies that led them to perform this work?
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  4. What were the methods used in the study?
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  5. Briefly state the result shown in each of the figures.
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  6. What do the X and Y axes represent?
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  7. How were the measurements made?
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  8. What trends are shown by the plots and what conclusions can you draw from the data?
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  9. What is the overall conclusion of the study and what are some future directions for research?
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User: Kara M Dismuke

BIOL398-04/S15:Week 2