This macromolecule will ALWAYS have phosphorous in it.
What is nucleic acid?
This is an example of something that must match on enzyme's & their substrates.
What is Charge / shape / polarity?
What is Prophase, Metaphase, Anaphase, and Telophase?
Which process creates 4 haploid cells?
What is Meiosis?
This macromolecule's function is to provide short term energy storage?
What is carbohydrates?
This organelle is the site of aerobic respiration
What is the Mitochondria?
What is denatured?
This stage of the Cell Cycle is described by the cytoplasm and organelles separating.
What is cytokinesis?
This describes when chromosomes fail to separate during meiosis
What is nondisjunction?
This part of the phospholipid bilayer happily interacts with water.
What are Hydrophilic Heads?
This organelle is key to causing apoptosis within the cell.
What is a Lysosome?
These are the electron / energy carriers created during the light reactions.
What are NAPDH & ATP ?
This type of feedback loop describes how glucagon would be released into the bloodstream after a meal to return blood sugar level to normal.
What is negatvie feeback?
Parents who have a child that is affect but they are unaffected must have what genotype?
What are Carriers / Heterozygous?
This type of reaction uses the addition of a water molecule to break a polymer into a monomer
What is Hydrolysis?
If ATP is unable to be phosphorylated, what type of transport is affected?
both aerobic respiration and fermentation begin with this step.
What is Glycolysis?
This describes what can happen to a protein in a transduction pathway that might result in a conformational change and thus loss in function
This describes the change in chromosome number from G2 (post S phase) - meiosis - fertilization. Use humans: 2n = 46.
What is 92 - 23 - 46?
This type of reaction uses the removal of a water molecule to make a polymer from monomers.
What is dehydration sythesis?
This is a piece of evidence that supports the endosymbiotic theory.
This is the main function of the Electron Transport Chain.
What is create a proton gradient?
These molecules must be present in a cell in order for the cell to pass a checkpoint and continue moving through the cell cycle.
What are Cyclins & CDKs?
This is the main difference between metaphase 1 and metaphase 2
What is in metaphase 1 PAIRS line up, while in metaphase 2 sister chromatids are lined up?