9700 s06 QP 2
9700 s06 QP 2
9700 s06 QP 2
1 hour 15 minutes
Candidates answer on the Question Paper.
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TOTAL
SP (CW/CGW) T08216/2
© UCLES 2006 [Turn over
2 For
Examiner’s
Use
Answer all the questions.
1 Fig. 1.1 is a drawing made from an electron micrograph of a longitudinal section of a capillary
in muscle tissue.
A B
C
× 8000
Fig. 1.1
(a) Complete the table below using the information in Fig. 1.1 to help you.
permit exchange
function of cell ingest bacteria
of gases
diameter / µm 20 7
[4]
D ......................................................................................................................................
E ......................................................................................................................................
F ..................................................................................................................................[3]
oxygen .............................................................................................................................
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glucose ............................................................................................................................
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(d) Describe how the structure of the wall of a vein differs from that of a capillary.
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[Total: 13]
fruit
Fig. 2.1
Fig. 2.2
© UCLES 2006 9700/02/M/J/06
5 For
Examiner’s
Use
(a) (i) Name G and H.
G ..............................................................................................................................
H ...........................................................................................................................[1]
(ii) Describe three ways in which the structure of a xylem vessel differs from the
structure of cell G.
1. ..............................................................................................................................
2. ..............................................................................................................................
3. ..........................................................................................................................[3]
(b) The liquid extracted from the phloem of C. pepo contains sucrose.
Explain how sucrose is transported in the phloem along the stem from the leaf to the
fruit.
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(c) Most of the sucrose transported in the phloem enters the fruit.
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[Total: 9]
BLANK PAGE
Fig. 3.1 is a diagram showing the formation of a polypeptide at a ribosome in a plasma cell.
ser
amino acid
gly
lys ser
val
tRNA
C
CC
U U U AG C J
G G G A A A U C G G U C
mRNA
movement of ribosome
Fig. 3.1
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The bacterium that causes cholera, Vibrio cholerae, releases a toxin known as choleragen.
During an immune response to cholera some B-lymphocytes produce antibodies that combine
with choleragen so inactivating it. Antibodies that inactivate toxins are called antitoxins.
(d) Explain how the structure of an antibody, such as the antitoxin for choleragen, makes it
specific to one substance.
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(e) Explain why cholera remains a significant infectious disease in some parts of the world.
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[Total: 17]
0.5 µm
Fig. 4.1
1. ......................................................................................................................................
2. ..................................................................................................................................[2]
(c) Chloroplasts absorb phosphate ions from the surrounding cytoplasm. Suggest one way
in which chloroplasts use phosphate ions.
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(d) Starch grains in plant cells contain both amylose and amylopectin.
Explain how both of these substances are formed from glucose in plant cells.
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(e) State three functions of the water stored in the vacuoles of plant cells.
1. ......................................................................................................................................
2. ......................................................................................................................................
3. ..................................................................................................................................[3]
[Total: 11]
Urease catalyses the hydrolysis of urea to form ammonia and carbon dioxide:
Some fertilisers added to soils to help crop growth contain urea. Although some crop plants
can absorb ammonium ions, most obtain their source of nitrogen as nitrate ions.
(a) Describe how urea from fertilisers becomes available to plants as nitrate ions.
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Table 5.1
reaction boiled
urea water thiourea lead nitrate urease
mixture urease
1
The student recorded an increase in pH in reaction mixtures 1 and 2. The reaction was faster
in 1 than in 2. The pH in the other reaction mixtures did not change.
(i) ‘No reaction took place because urease was denatured.’ [1]
(ii) ‘There was no reaction because there was no substrate for urease.’ [1]
(iii) ‘The reaction did not occur because there was an inhibitor present.’ [1]
Thiourea has a molecular structure that is very similar to that of urea. The student
designed an experiment to find out whether thiourea is a competitive inhibitor. The
student set up several reaction mixtures like 1 using increasing concentrations of urea.
The student determined the initial rate of the reaction for urease at each concentration
of urea. The results are shown in Fig. 5.1.
initial rate
of reaction
concentration of urea
Fig. 5.1
The student then repeated the experiment using the same concentrations of urea.
However, the student added the same volume and concentration of a thiourea solution
to each test-tube in place of the water.
(c) Sketch a curve on Fig. 5.1 to show the results that the student would expect if thiourea
acts as a competitive inhibitor of urease. [2]
(d) Explain why it is important to determine the initial rate of reaction when investigating
the effect of a competitive inhibitor on an enzyme.
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[Total: 10]
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9700/02/M/J/06