Vocab
Structures
Processes
Concepts
Wild Card
100

This is the major enzyme used during protein synthesis

What is DNA helicase?

100

This is where translation occurs

What is 'in the cytoplasm at a ribosome?' 

100

During RNA processing, these pieces of a gene are spliced together and continue to translation

What are exons?

100

These pieces of a gene are considered to be 'non-functional' and are spliced out during RNA processing

What are introns?

100

This is where transcription occurs

What is 'in the nucleus?' 

200

This is the process of turning a photocopy of a gene into a protein

What is translation?

200

This man briefly worked with Rosalind Franklin and took some of her unpublished data when they parted ways

Who is Maurice Wilkins? 

200

This is the process of copying a gene from a DNA strand to a piece of RNA

What is transcription?

200

This is the central dogma of biology:

What is 'DNA to RNA to Proteins?' 

200

This scientist was responsible for the infamous 'Photo 51'

Who is Rosalind Franklin?

300

This is another term for the process of protein synthesis

What is 'gene expression?' 

300

This organelle is used during protein synthesis to actually build proteins

What are the ribosomes? 

300

On the board, write the complementary RNA sequence for the following DNA strand: TAT CGG CGA AAA ATC

What is 'AUA GCC UUU UAG'

300

Briefly explain HOW we see redundancy built into genetic code AND explain why this is a good thing

What are 'multiple codons code for the same amino acid - this is beneficial because it reduces the overall chances of mistakes?' 

300

Briefly describe the purpose of rRNA

What is 'to bind with certain proteins on ribosome and hold entire ribosome together during translation?' 

400

Briefly explain what happens during 'RNA processing?' 

What is 'the non-coding sections of the gene (introns) are removed and the coding/functional sections of the gene (exons) are spliced together?' 

400

List the two structures that can form to create a secondary protein

What are 1) alpha helix or 2) beta pleated sheet?

400

In what direction must pieces of mRNA be created?

What is5' --> 3'?

400

These are three traits that are not visible to the naked eye

What is: blood type, immune functioning, allergies, presence of tumors, personality, mental illness, autoimmune diseases, etc? 

400

Anti-codons are always found on this type of RNA

What is tRNA? 

500

List all three types of RNA used during protein synthesis (full name, not just letters)

1) messenger RNA, 2) ribosomal RNA and 3) transfer RNA

500

Why do we think that the end product of gene expression has evolved to always be a protein?

What is 'because proteins can take on many complex shapes and are the most structurally diverse of all the biomolecules?' 

500

List the five major facts about genetic code that we discussed in class

What is 'Genetic code is: 1) redundant, 2) universal, 3) lacks punctuation, 4) broken up into codons, and 5) has directionality?' 

500

This is how a copy of a gene is translated into a physical protein

What is 'the ribosome 'reads' the strand of mRNA and each codon has a matching anti-codon on a piece of tRNA, which brings each amino acid to the ribosome?' 

500

Name the four basic structures of proteins AND briefly define them

What is 1) primary structure - chain of amino acids, 2) secondary structure - alpha helix or beta pleated sheet, 3) tertiary structure - formed when two or more secondary structures come together, 4) quaternary structure - formed when multiple tertiary proteins join?

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