MCAT · Biochemistry · Luzon, Philippines

Biochemistry for the MCAT Exam — Luzon candidates

25% of the MCAT test plan. Amino acids, enzyme kinetics, metabolic pathways, and molecular biology are the largest single content area on the MCAT, spanning both B/B and C/P sections. Calibrated for Luzon-based Filipino candidates.

Behind every published pass rate is a distribution of which topics caused most of the failures. This is one of those topics. Biochemistry sits at roughly 25% of the Medical College Admission Test content distribution — Biochemistry is the backbone of the MCAT. The B/B section alone is roughly 65% biochemistry and molecular biology. Enzyme kinetics (Michaelis-Menten, competitive vs. non-competitive inhibition), metabolic pathways (glycolysis, TCA cycle, oxidative phosphorylation, beta-oxidation), and amino acid chemistry (pKa, side-chain properties, post-translational modifications) are all tested. Mastery of this area is the single strongest predictor of a 510+ score. Pass rates for the MCAT are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For Luzon candidates preparing for MCAT, the calibration of study to local context matters: Luzon hosts Manila, the dominant Pearson VUE NCLEX site in the Philippines, plus the largest IELTS and TOEFL cohorts. CHED-accredited nursing programs are concentrated in Metro Manila.

Pass rates for MCAT (Luzon, Philippines) are published periodically by the awarding body.

Common failure modes

These are the patterns that cause most candidates to lose marks on this topic. Recognising them in advance is half the work.

  • !Confusing Km and Vmax behavior under competitive vs. non-competitive inhibition on Lineweaver-Burk plots
  • !Not connecting metabolic pathways — e.g., failing to trace acetyl-CoA from beta-oxidation through the TCA cycle
  • !Memorising amino acid structures without understanding how side-chain charge and polarity drive protein folding and function
  • !Missing how allosteric regulation and feedback inhibition appear as data-interpretation questions
  • !Confusing mRNA processing steps (5' cap, 3' poly-A, splicing) with transcription initiation details

Study tips

  • 1Draw the full glycolysis → pyruvate dehydrogenase → TCA → ETC pathway from memory daily until every enzyme, substrate, and energy yield is automatic.
  • 2Learn Lineweaver-Burk plots by constructing them — not just recognising them. Competitive inhibition changes x-intercept; non-competitive changes y-intercept.
  • 3Group amino acids by side-chain properties (nonpolar, polar uncharged, acidic, basic) and link each to one clinically relevant disease or protein.
  • 4Practice passage-based biochemistry questions — MCAT passages give you data (gel images, enzyme assays, metabolite concentrations) that you must interpret using mechanism knowledge.
  • 5Review DNA replication, transcription, and translation at the enzyme level — primase, DNA Pol III, helicase, gyrase errors are classic question targets.
  • 6For NCLEX-RN: the Pearson VUE Manila centre is the only PH NCLEX site — book 6–8 weeks in advance, especially Q1 (post-graduation surge).
  • 7CGFNS CES is mandatory for U.S. board endorsement of Filipino nursing credentials — start the application the same week you confirm your NCLEX ATT.
  • 8For IELTS: British Council and IDP both run multiple weekly sessions in Manila. Speaking-test slots in Makati and Pasig fill first; book a Quezon City slot if you can travel.

Sample MCAT Biochemistry questions

These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real MCAT questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.

  1. 1

    An enzyme has a Km of 2 mM and a Vmax of 100 nmol/min. A competitive inhibitor is added at a concentration that doubles the apparent Km. At a substrate concentration of 2 mM, the reaction velocity is approximately:

    • A50 nmol/min
    • B33 nmol/minCorrect
    • C25 nmol/min
    • D100 nmol/min
    Why this answer?

    With competitive inhibition, apparent Km doubles to 4 mM while Vmax remains 100 nmol/min. Using v = Vmax[S] / (Km + [S]) = 100 × 2 / (4 + 2) = 200/6 ≈ 33 nmol/min. This illustrates that competitive inhibition reduces velocity at sub-saturating substrate concentrations but can be overcome by increasing [S]. (Illustrative question — AAMC does not publicly release operational items.)

  2. 2

    During a prolonged fast, the primary fuel source for the brain after the first 48 hours shifts from glucose to:

    • AFree fatty acids
    • BGlycerol
    • CKetone bodies (acetoacetate and beta-hydroxybutyrate)Correct
    • DAlanine
    Why this answer?

    Fatty acids cannot cross the blood-brain barrier. During prolonged fasting, the liver converts acetyl-CoA (from beta-oxidation) into ketone bodies, which cross the BBB and supply up to 70% of the brain's energy needs after 48–72 hours of fasting. Free fatty acids fuel muscle and liver but not brain directly.

  3. 3

    Which amino acid has a side chain that contains an imidazole ring and acts as a general acid-base catalyst in the active sites of many enzymes?

    • ALysine
    • BArginine
    • CHistidineCorrect
    • DTryptophan
    Why this answer?

    Histidine's imidazole side chain has a pKa near 6, meaning it is ~50% protonated at physiologic pH. This unique property allows histidine to shuttle protons during catalysis, making it the most common active-site acid-base catalyst. Classic examples include serine proteases (chymotrypsin, trypsin) where a catalytic triad of Ser-His-Asp operates.

  4. 4

    A cell line is treated with oligomycin, which blocks ATP synthase. Which immediate consequence is expected?

    • AIncreased rate of the TCA cycle
    • BProton gradient across the inner mitochondrial membrane increasesCorrect
    • CNADH concentration decreases
    • DGlycolysis is inhibited via product inhibition
    Why this answer?

    Oligomycin blocks the F0 subunit of ATP synthase, preventing proton flow through the channel. Since protons can no longer re-enter the matrix, the electrochemical gradient (proton-motive force) builds up. This back-pressure halts electron transport through Complexes I, III, and IV, stopping NADH oxidation and causing NADH to accumulate — not decrease.

Frequently asked questions

How much biochemistry is on the MCAT compared to general biology?
AAMC states the B/B section is approximately 65% biochemistry and molecular biology and only 5% general biology. Even the C/P section includes ~25% biochemistry. Overall, biochemistry is by far the most heavily tested science subject.
Do I need to memorise all metabolic pathway enzymes?
Focus on rate-limiting enzymes and their regulation. For glycolysis: PFK-1. For gluconeogenesis: PEPCK and fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase. For TCA: isocitrate dehydrogenase. Know activators, inhibitors, and the logic of how energy charge controls each.
What is the MCAT pass rate for Luzon-based Filipino candidates?
Pass rates for MCAT candidates in Luzon, Philippines are published periodically by the awarding body. Practice questions, full-length simulations, and weak-area drills are the highest-impact way to improve your odds.
How long should Luzon-based Filipino candidates study Biochemistry for the MCAT?
For most candidates, focused mastery of Biochemistry requires 20–40 hours of deliberate practice — drilling sample questions, reviewing failure modes, and timing yourself against exam conditions. Luzon hosts Manila, the dominant Pearson VUE NCLEX site in the Philippines, plus the largest IELTS and TOEFL cohorts. CHED-accredited nursing programs are concentrated in Metro Manila. Combine Biochemistry study with full-length mock exams in the final two weeks before your test date.

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Related study guides

Regulatory citation: AAMC MCAT 2015 Content Specifications — Biological and Biochemical Foundations of Living Systems.