The last step of viral infection.
What is the exit or lysing of the cell?
Inserting a new copy of a gene by first using a ssRNA intermediate to make dsDNA.
What is a retrotransposon?
The purpose of the myelin sheath.
What is insulation of the axon for sufficient signal transduction?
The neurons that deliver sensory receptors to the brain.
What are afferent neurons?
The layers off skin that contain nerves.
What is all of them?
The stage where a virus has incorporated itself into the hosts genome and is replicating with the host.
What is lysogenic?
The steps of the 3-Stage Approach.
What is linkage mapping, physical mapping, and DNA sequencing?
The 3 biogenic neurotransmitters.
What are norepinephrine, serotonin, and dopamine.
The location of a crickets ear/tympanic membrane.
What is it's leg?
The enzyme used to turn RNA into DNA.
What is reverse transcriptase?
The four viral shapes.
What are icosahedral, helical, spherical, and complex.
The majority of DNA in our genome is.
What is repetitive DNA that contains transposable elements and related sequences?
The cause of the undershoot after an action potential.
What is potassium channels remaining open but sodium channels being closed?
The response where a rod is hyperpolarized.
What is the light response?
Sensory hair cells are found in a lateral line across fish. They are also located here in humans.
What is the ear?
Three ways ssRNA can be used in a host cell.
What is as mRNA, a template for mRNA, and a template for DNA.
The steps for hemoglobin evolution in humans.
What is multiple gene duplications and mutations with transpositions?
The space between two neurons where a neurotransmitter is being transmitted.
What is the synaptic cleft?
The lines that distinguish one sarcomere.
What are the Z-lines?
The stage of the action potential where both Na+ and K+ channels are open.
What is none of them?
The term used for a virus who has incorporated its DNA into the host cells genome.
What is provirus?
Organisms with higher gene densities.
What is bacteria and archaea?
Two ways described in the notes to achieve an action potential from two impulses.
What is temporal summation and spatial summation?
The side of your eye that the right visual field located on.
What is the left?
The muscle that is contracting when your arm is flexed.
What is the bicep?