R E S O U R C E S
School Of Medicine
Q U I Z R E S U L T
Y O U R S C O R E I S
1
There is a pathway to your MD through the BSc-MD program with IUHS. This will allow you to complete or re-mediate your foundation sciences and seamlessly transition into the MD program.
For information on the premed courses click here.
PRE-MED pathway
You likely need to complete or refresh your foundation sciences
Here are some things you missed on the quiz and we think you should review.
Biology/Biochemistry
Degradation of p21 implies that the concentration of p21 in its active form goes down. The diagram shows that p21 has a negative influence on CDK2. In other words, when p21 is high, CDK2 goes low. But in our instance, p21 is low (degraded) so this allows CDK2 to rise unchecked.
Biology/Biochemistry
You should recognize that enzymes typically end with –ase and so you can see that the figure provided indicates the 3 enzymes that are catalysts for the three reactions as shown.
Biology/Biochemistry
On the Surface: In the previous question, we established that the enzyme argininosuccinase must be functional for both strains and that means that argH is not defective (no mutation) for either P or Q. Thus any answer choice suggesting an argH mutation is incorrect.
Biology
On the Surface: Dialysis only refers to the transfer of the solute (diffusion), while the transfer of the solvent is called osmosis.
Going Deeper: Diffusion is the movement of a substance down its concentration gradient (from a region of high concentration to one of lower concentration). This is the process that must be occurring in the dialyser to remove toxins from the blood (because the dialysate, logically, would have no toxins so the toxins defuse out of the blood into the dialysate).
Biochemistry
Protein phosphorylation is an important regulation of protein activity and function. Upon phosphorylation, a phosphate moiety is covalently attached to a hydroxyl (-OH) group of any of the three amino acids: Tyrosine (Y), Threonine (T) or Serine (S), which are the only 3 amino acids with a side chain containing hydroxyl.
Psychology
Symbolic interactionists observe how people relate to things based on the meanings those things have for them. These meanings are created through social interaction and can be interpreted differently. For instance, people can meet to ‘have a coffee’ but are not obliged to actually consume the drink.