DNA Replication
Mitosis
Meiosis
Inheritance Patterns
Organelles
100

This is where DNA replication begins.

What is an origin of replication?

100

This is the phase of mitosis where chromosomes line up at the metaphase plate.

What is (who could have guessed) metaphase?

100

These are the types of cells that result from meiosis.

What are germ cells?

100

In this pattern of inheritance, inheriting an allele that codes for a certain phenotype will cause the organism to ONLY display that trait, regardless of the other allele they have inherited.

What is dominant-recessive inheritance?

100

This organelle is responsible for the production of ATP using a hydrogen ion gradient.

What are mitochondria?

200
This protein opens up the DNA double-helix.

What is helicase?

200

In cytokinesis, this feature of a dividing animal cell begins to appear.

What is a cleavage furrow?

200

This process occurs in prophase I, and increases genetic variation.

What is 'crossing over'?

200

In this pattern of inheritance, both alleles do not fully express the phenotype they code for. For instance, a flower with a red allele and a white allele would produce pink petals.

What is incomplete dominance?

200

This organelle houses the DNA and allows for DNA transcription into mRNA.

What is the nucleus?
300

These bits of DNA on the lagging strand are later connected together by DNA ligase.

What are Okazaki fragments?

300

Sister chromatids are split during this phase of mitosis.

What is anaphase?

300

This is the number and ploidy level of the daughter cells after cytokinesis II.

What is '4 haploid cells'?

300

In this pattern of inheritance, both alleles are expressed without one expression diminishing the other.

What is co-dominance?

300

This organelle allows for the translation of mRNA into proteins.

What are ribosomes?

400

These allow DNA polymerase to bind to the DNA and begin replication on the lagging strand.

What are RNA primers?

400

This phase comes after the M phase and cytokinesis.

What is G1 (or G0)?

400

During metaphase I, this is the ploidy level of the dividing cell.

What is '4n'?

400

This phenomenon describes how genes that are closer together on a chromosome are often inherited together.

What is genetic linkage?

400

This organelle is responsible for the transport of newly-synthesized proteins, lipids, and other cellular products.

What is the golgi body/apparatus?

500

This term refers to one strand of DNA being 'new' and the other 'old' when inherited by a daughter cell.

What is semi-conservative replication?

500

These are the names of the phases of mitosis in order, and does not include cytokinesis.

What are: pro-, prometa-, meta-, ana-, and telophase?

500

These are the names of the phases of meiosis in order, including cytokineses.

What is pro-, prometa-, meta-, ana-, and telophase I, cytokinesis I, pro-, pro-, prometa-, meta-, ana-, and telophase II, and cytokinesis II.

500

This phenomenon describes how a pre-determined inheritance pattern can be overridden by the expression of an unrelated allele.

What is epistasis?

500

This organelle is present only in plant cells, and is mostly full of salts and ions to facilitate osmosis of water into itself to maintain turgor pressure.

What are central vacuoles?

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