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3 min read•june 18, 2024
👋 Welcome to the AP Bio Unit 4 FRQ (Blood Sugar Homeostasis) Answers. Have your responses handy as you go through the rubrics to see how you did!
⏱ Remember, the AP Biology exam has 6 free-response questions, and you will be given 90 minutes to complete the FRQ section. (This means you should give yourself ~15 minutes to go through each practice FRQ.)
Blood sugar in humans is regulated through a series of homeostatic mechanisms to maintain levels at a consistent, healthy level. When sugar is consumed and blood sugar rises, different metabolic pathways are triggered to return the levels to normal. When blood sugar levels fall too low, other metabolic pathways are triggered to return the levels to normal.
A person with diabetes mellitus (a.k.a., Type II diabetes) experiences disruptions to these feedback loops when their blood sugar rises uncontrollably, and the body is unable to lower it on its own. A person with juvenile diabetes (a.k.a., Type I diabetes) also results in uncontrollable blood sugar levels, but due to a lack of a hormone that promotes blood glucose uptake in the liver to lower blood sugar levels.
🏆 1pt: Identify
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🏆 2pts: Describe - A negative feedback loop forces a system to try and return to normal by stopping something that is pushing the organism out of homeostasis
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🏆 3pts: Construct a graph
🏆 1pt: Identify
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