front 1 The smallest unit of life is the: | back 1 Cell |
front 2 What are the attributes of life? | back 2 Order Regulation Adaptation Response to environment |
front 3 What are the three domains of life? | back 3 Bacteria Archaea Eukaryota |
front 4 True or false: Evolution works on individuals, not populations. | back 4 False |
front 5 True or false: A hypothesis must be testable. | back 5 True |
front 6 What are the four main elements life is made up of? | back 6 Oxygen, carbon, hydrogen, and nitrogen |
front 7 Atomic number = the number of _____ an element has | back 7 Protons |
front 8 An isotope has the same number of ______ and a different number of ______ as the original element | back 8 Protons, neutrons |
front 9 What is the difference between ionic and covalent bonds? | back 9 Ionic bonds involve the giving and taking of electrons, while covalent bonds involve the sharing of electrons. |
front 10 True or false: Ionic bonds are considered weak bonds in biology. | back 10 True |
front 11 What are the four main properties of water? | back 11 Cohesion Universal solvent Stabilizes temperature Expands when frozen |
front 12 True or false: Water is nonpolar | back 12 False |
front 13 What is the specific heat of water in calories? | back 13 580 |
front 14 Is water good at dissolving fats? | back 14 No |
front 15 What is the formula for pH? | back 15 -log[H+] |
front 16 How many valence electrons does carbon have? | back 16 4 |
front 17 What is an isomer? | back 17 A molecule with the same formula but a different structure |
front 18 List the names and formulas of three of the seven functional groups: | back 18 The options are carboxyl (COOH), amine (NH2), sulfhydryl (SH), phosphate (PO4), methyl (CH3), hydroxyl (OH), and carbonyl (CO) |
front 19 Name the formula of glucose: | back 19 C6H12O6 |
front 20 Sugars form what distinctive shape? | back 20 Rings |
front 21 Name three potential functions of a protein: | back 21 Enzymes Defensive proteins Storage Transport Hormones Receptor Contractile Structure |
front 22 Describe the four levels of protein structure. | back 22 1) Amino acid sequence 2) Hydrogen bonding (a helixes and B pleated sheets) 3) Interactions between R groups (various types of bonding) 4) Interactions between multiple proteins |
front 23 Name the type of bonds that hold amino acids, nucleic acids, carbohydrates, and lipids together. | back 23 1) Peptide bonds 2) Phosphodiester bonds 3) Glycosidic bonds 4) Ester bonds |
front 24 What are the purines and pyrimidines, and which one has two rings? | back 24 Pyrimidines: cytosine, thymine, uracil Purines: adenine, guanine Purines have two rings |
front 25 True or false: DNA is made of a sugar known as deoxyribose | back 25 True |
front 26 Eukaryotic cells can range in size from _____ - _____ microns, and the smaller prokaryotic cells range from ____-____ microns. | back 26 10-100 1-10 |
front 27 True or false: Prokaryotes have membrane-bound organelles. | back 27 False |
front 28 Name four common parts of a cell and their function: | back 28 Nucleus: Contains genetic material for reproduction. Mitochondria: Used to produce energy Golgi complex: Packages proteins that are to be sent outside the cell Smooth ER: Manufactures steroids and fats, acts in liver function Rough ER: Manufactures proteins that are to be sent outside the cell Free ribosome: Manufactures proteins that remain in the cell Lysosome: Digests unwanted parts of cell and intruders Extracellular matrix: Allows cells to communicate and structure themselves with other cells |
front 29 What is the fluid inside a cell called? | back 29 Cytosol |
front 30 Name 3 organelles plants have that animals don't: | back 30 1) Cell wall 2) Central vacuole 3) Chloroplasts |
front 31 True or false: The cell's membrane is called a methylipid membrane. | back 31 False (it is a phospholipid membrane) |
front 32 Sort these forms of transportation into active and passive. Diffusion H+ pump Facilitated diffusion Osmosis Na+/K+ pump Cotransport | back 32 Passive: Diffusion Facilitated Diffusion Osmosis Active H+ pump Na+/K+ pump Cotransport |
front 33 Describe one of the three forms of endocytosis: | back 33 phagocytosis - Cell engulfs a solid particle pinocytosis - Small particles are drawn into the cell and stored within vesicles receptor-mediated endocytosis - specific particles are drawn in |
front 34 True or false: The lipids in the plasma membrane have hydrophobic heads and hydrophilic tails | back 34 False |
front 35 Osmosis proceeds from a _______ concentration of substrate to a _______ concentration. | back 35 higher, lower |
front 36 Describe two key features of anabolic and catabolic reactions. | back 36 Anabolic: Builds molecules, requires energy Catabolic: Destroys molecules, gives off energy |
front 37 What are the First and Second Laws of Thermodynamics? | back 37 1) energy cannot be created or destroyed 2) entropy in the universe always increase |
front 38 What is the full name of ATP? | back 38 Adenosine triphosphate |
front 39 Which of the following is true about enzymes? a) They can only be used once b) They have the power to turn any reactant into their product c) They lower the activation energy of a reaction d) They raise the activation energy of a reaction | back 39 c |
front 40 Which of the following can affect the rate of an enzymatic reaction? a) Temperature b) pH c) Substrate concentration d) All of the above | back 40 d |
front 41 Oxidation implies __________, while reduction implies __________ | back 41 loss of electrons, gain of electrons |
front 42 Glycolysis requires an input of __ ATP, and produces a total of ____ ATP. | back 42 2, 4 |
front 43 Where do glycolysis, the Krebs cycle, and oxidative phosphorylation take place? | back 43 Glycolysis - cytoplasm Krebs Cycle - matrix of the mitochondria Oxidative phosphorylation - from the matrix into the intermembrane space |
front 44 True or false: The electron transport chain produces 34 ATP. | back 44 True |
front 45 How many NADH and FADH2 are produced over the course of cellular respiration, and what are they used for? | back 45 8 NADH, 2 FADH2. They are oxidized to fuel the electron transport chain. |
front 46 _______, an organelle found in plant cells, consist of a double membrane and an internal space called the ______, filled with stacks of ________ known as _______. | back 46 Chloroplasts, stroma, thylakoids, granae |
front 47 True or false: Chlorophyll is made of a hydrocarbon head and a porphyrin tail. | back 47 False. It's the other way around |
front 48 When the light reactions of photosynthesis occur, _______ are passed from _________, containing ______, to __________, which contains ________. | back 48 electrons, photosystem II, P680, photosystem I, P700 |
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front 51 True or false: Paracrine signaling occurs over long distances. | back 51 False |
front 52 Name the three stages of cell communication that occur once a signal is received. | back 52 1) Reception 2) Transduction 3) Response |
front 53 Name and describe the three major types of receptors. | back 53 G-protein coupled receptors. They are made up of a single protein that crosses the membrane seven times. That protein couples with a G-protein that binds GDP. When the ligand binds, the G-protein grabs a GTP instead and detaches, starting a cascade Receptor tyrosine kinases. These phosphorylate, hence their name. When a signal appears, they form dimers. Then a phosphorylation cascade eventually transduces the signal to its relevant location. Ion-channel receptors. These channels let only particular ions into the cell. |
front 54 What is the molecule used for signaling called? | back 54 The ligand |
front 55 True or false: The original signals sent never directly enter the target cell. | back 55 False: Some signals, like testosterone, will enter the cell. |
front 56 What are the five phases of the cell cycle and a brief description of each? | back 56 1) Interphase - cell is doing normal cell things, including duplicating chromosomes 2) Prophase - chromatin begins to condense into coherent chromosomes 3) Metaphase - chromosomes "line up" along the center of the nucleus 4) Anaphase - sister chromatids are pulled apart by microtubules called the mitotic spindle 5) Telophase - chromosomes separate fully and cytokinesis begins |
front 57 Homologous chromosomes are ______, while sister chromatids are ______. | back 57 Different chromosomes inherited from different parents, copies of the same chromosome ready for mitosis or meiosis |
front 58 Define the terms kinetochore, centromere, centrosome, and centriole | back 58 Kinetochore - where the spindle fiber attaches to a chromosome Centromere - the larger area that encompasses the kinetochore in the center of the chromosome Centrosome - the other end that the microtubules originate from Centriole - a part of the centrosome that functions in microtubule production |
front 59 True or false: All microtubules attach to a kinetochore during mitosis. | back 59 False: There are non-kinetochore microtubules |
front 60 Mitosis produces: a: Genetically identical daughter cells b: Genetically varied daughter cells c: It depends on the type of mitosis d: None of the above | back 60 a |
front 61 Meiosis produces: a: Genetically identical daughter cells b: Genetically varied daughter cells c: It depends on the type of meiosis d: None of the above | back 61 b |
front 62 If a cell has 36 chromosomes during G1, how many chromosomes will its gametes have? What is 2n and n? | back 62 Its gametes will have 18. 2n is 36 and n is 18. |
front 63 At what stage of meiosis do homologous chromosomes separate? At what stage do sister chromatids separate? | back 63 Anaphase I Anaphase II |
front 64 What are three major sources of genetic variation? Explain | back 64 independent assortment of chromosomes - chromosomes can line up on the metaphase plate in any arrangement crossing over - bits and pieces of chromosomes are exchanged random fertilization - who knows what gamete you'll get? |
front 65 True or false: Meiosis occurs naturally in all body cells. | back 65 False. It only occurs to produce gametes. |
front 66 Describe the Law of Segregation and the Law of Independent Assortment, and when in meiosis they occur. | back 66 Law of Segregation: Each pair of alleles splits up when the gametes are formed. Occurs during Anaphase 1 Law of Independent Assortment: Alleles line up on the metaphase plate regardless of which parent they came from. Occurs during Metaphase 1 |
front 67 What two organisms are used in a test cross, what is its purpose, and how is that purpose achieved? | back 67 A dominant-phenotype, unknown-genotype plant and a known homozygous recessive plant are used. The purpose is to identify the genotype of the unknown plant. If the unknown plant has any recessive alleles, there will be some offspring that get two recessive alleles and thus express a recessive phenotype. If not, every single offspring will be dominant. |
front 68 Which scientist laid down the foundation for genetics, and what experiments did he perform? | back 68 Gregor Mendel, who crossed true-breeding pea plants to observe the resulting offspring. From the monohybrid cross he established the Law of Segregation, and the dihybrid cross established the Law of Independent Assortment |
front 69 Define terms: P1 F1 F2 dominant recessive homozygous heterozygous | back 69 P1: the parent generation of plants F1: The filial generation F2: The "Grandchildren" of the original plants Dominant: An allele that is expressed with either 1 or 2 copies Recessive: An allele that needs 2 copies to be expressed Homozygous: Having two of the the same allele Heterozygous: Having different alleles |
front 70 What are some examples of recessively inherited disorders? Dominantly inherited? | back 70 Tay-Sachs, sickle cell anemia, cystic fibrosis Huntington's |
front 71 What is a centimorgan? | back 71 A unit that measures distance between genes on a chromosome based on genetic recombination frequency. A centimorgan represents a 1% chance of recombination between two genes. |
front 72 What is aneuploidy? What is polyploidy? What are some examples? | back 72 Aneuploidy is when a single chromosome is duplicated or missing. Down Syndrome (trisomy 21) is an example. Polyploidy is when a whole set of chromosomes has been duplicated or is missing. An example is certain plants which naturally are polyploid, like many ferns and grasses. |
front 73 Name four common chromosomal alterations and explain. | back 73 deletion - part of a chromosome is lost duplication - part of a chromosome appears twice inversion - a piece of a chromosome is put in backwards translocation - parts of a chromosome are swapped with another part of a chromosome |
front 74 What is notable about Prader-Willi and Angelman syndrome? | back 74 They are caused by the same chromosomal abnormality, but Prader-Willi occurs if the deletion is on the paternally inherited chromosome and Angelman occurs if the deletion is on the the maternally inherited chromosome, due to imprinting. |
front 75 What is the formula for how many unique gametes a cell can produce? | back 75 2n where n is the number of chromosomes. |
front 76 Write an overview of the process of DNA replication in bacteria: | back 76 At first the two strands are attached. Then helicase unwinds the double helix, creating a replication bubble and two replication forks. Single-stranded binding proteins keep the strands separate, and topoisomerase releases the tension between the two as they unwind. The two separate strands are known as the leading and lagging strand: The leading strand can be replicated directly by DNA polymerase III, while the lagging strand is split into fragments called Okazaki fragments which are synthesized in the opposite direction by DNA polymerase I. This is because DNA polymerases can only function in the 5 (phosphate) to 3 (hydroxyl) direction. Primase functions to set up a primer for the DNA polymerase to work from. On the lagging strand, ligase joins the Okazaki fragments together. |
front 77 Describe the Griffith and Hershey-Chase experiments. | back 77 Griffith studied pneumonia in mice. There were two varieties of bacteria, R, which was harmless, and S, which was deadly. He combined heat-killed S bacteria with harmless R bacteria and the R bacteria picked up some substance (he didn't know which) that transformed it to become deadly. Hershey and Chase worked with E. coli and T2 phages. They prepared phages with radioactively labelled DNA and proteins. They found that, after the phages attacked, E. coli had radioactive DNA but not proteins, proving that the material that transformed it was DNA. |
front 78 What are Chargaff's rules, and why (was it later discovered) do they hold? | back 78 That A = T and C = G. This is true because A and G are the same type (purines) and both have two rings, and C and T are both pyrimidines that have one ring. The two-ring molecules couldn't fit together, and the one-ring molecules together would be too short. |
front 79 Who established the structure of DNA, and what is that structure? | back 79 Watson, Crick and Franklin performed x-ray crystallography to find DNA is a double helix. |
front 80 What is a nucleotide made up of? | back 80 Whatever base it has, a deoxyribose sugar, and a phosphate group |
front 81 A protein is about to be made. The ___________ affixes to the ______, which enters at the _____ site. Next, whichever one of the 64 ________ is read and ___________. | back 81 large ribosomal subunit, RNA, A. Codons, translated |
front 82 What are some modifications made in RNA before it is used? | back 82 1) Addition of a 5' cap made of guanine 2) Addition of a poly A tail made of adenines 3) Introns are removed by spliceosomes |
front 83 Explain the reading frame. | back 83 It ensures only three amino acids are read at the same time and they actually belong to one codon rather than being different.. |
front 84 What are the start and stop codons? | back 84 AUG is start, UAG, UAA, and UGA are stop |
front 85 What are the three steps of transcription and what happens during each? | back 85 1) Initiation (transcription initiation complex forms at the promoter) 2) Elongation (RNA is made) 3) Termination (transcription enzymes reach stop codon and separate) |
front 86 Describe the trip and Lac operons. | back 86 Trip operon refers to E. coli, which sometimes needs to synthesis tryptophan for its use. It is repressible, meaning it is normally on and, if tryptophan is present, its presence will turn it off. It has a repressor which is made inactive and tryptophan will bind to it and activate it in a form of feedback inhibition. Lac operon is also present in E. coli. It is inducible, meaning it is normally off. The presence of lactose will turn off the repressor and allow the bacteria to digest lactose. |
front 87 In what configuration is chromatin usually stored? | back 87 30 nm fibers |
front 88 True or false: Acetylation discourages transcription. | back 88 False; it actually causes chromatin to spread out and makes it easier |
front 89 What are proximal and distal control elements? | back 89 Proximal elements are near the promoter and are sometimes classified as part of it. Distal elements are farther away and are divided into silencers and enhancers. |
front 90 What is feedback inhibition? | back 90 When the buildup of a product causes regulation of the enzyme making the product so that the product is no longer made. |
front 91 What is a capsid? What is a capsomere? | back 91 The virus's protein coat is called a capsid, and it is made up of capsomeres. |
front 92 What are the four major types of viruses, along with a brief description? | back 92 1) Helical - tube-shaped, about 15-19 nm wide, 300-500 in length 2) adenovirus - icosahedral 3) Envelope virus - has a distinct coat 4) Phage - larger, has head and tail |
front 93 Describe the lytic and lysogenic cell cycles, and name a virus that functions in each way. | back 93 Lytic: Virus enters a cell, uses it to manufacture new viruses, explodes and kills it. Common cold is an example Lysogenic: Virus enters a cell, incorporates its genome into the DNA and waits for the opportune time to reproduce, leaving the cell alive. HIV is an example |
front 94 Viruses are generally how big? | back 94 20-50 nm |
front 95 What four types of genetic material can a virus have? | back 95 Either 1 or 2-stranded DNA, or 1 or 2-stranded RNA |
front 96 What is a plasmid? | back 96 A circular DNA molecule separate from the rest of the cell's DNA, common in bacteria and useful for cloning. |
front 97 What are restriction enzymes? | back 97 Enzymes that cut DNA at a certain pre-programmed point. |
front 98 What is PCR, what does it stand for, and what are its steps? | back 98 A technique by which DNA can be cloned, also known as Polymerase Chain Reaction. A DNA molecule is heated so that it denatures and its strands separate. Annealing occurs (attachment of primers to the relevant section of DNA). Then enzymes are used to make new DNA off the strands of the previous DNA, and the process is repeated until the scientists have enough DNA to work with. |
front 99 True or false: During gel electrophoresis, larger molecules end up farther away from the source. | back 99 False |
front 100 True or false: When performing animal cloning, one female provides the egg, a different one hosts the zygote in her womb, and a different one provides DNA. | back 100 True |
front 101 What percent of human DNA is non-coding repetitive? | back 101 59% |
front 102 What is the difference between transposons and retrotransposons? | back 102 Transposons can move by themselves and insert into a different part of DNA, while retrotransposons require RNA made of them and then copied back into DNA. |
front 103 What is alternative splicing? | back 103 When RNA is made, different sections are used as eons, creating different RNA and different proteins. |
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