Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 17
100

The protein structure is the 3D structure formed by bonds btwn R groups and H2O

tertiary

100

This identifies all mRNA in a cell under specific conditions

Transcriptomics

100

Mutations that occur before/during meiosis that leads to a mutated gamete which is passed on to the next generation

Germline 

100

Shortens with each cell division

telomeres

100

Which class of HLA is found on macrophages, T cells, and dendritic cells

II

200
Leads the polypeptide and ribosome into ER pore

Signal sequence

200

Diabetes shares genes with obesity and htn, this is an example of a...

diseasome

200

A catastrophic allelic disorder means what?

A gene is missing

200

DNA probes labeled with fluorescent dye to bind to complementary DNA 

FISH (Fluorescence in situ hybridization

200

Most antigens are....

proteins or carbohydrates

300

What misfolded protein ca be passed to other proteins and act as a chaperone protein

prion

300

In humans, viral DNA is derived from what specifically?

Human endogenous retrovirus

300

An A being changed for a T would be considered what type of point mutation

Transversion

300

Schematic chromosome map indicating p and q arms and major region delineated by banding patterns

ideogram

300

Name 3 physical barriers to pathogens

unbroken skin, mucous membrane and secretions, waving cilia or resp tract, flushing effect. 

400

Misfolded proteins are tagged with ______ to moved to the ______

ubiquitin/proteasome
400

In sickle cell patients why might reactivating gamma globins be beneficial?

Gamma give rise to Beta and in SC the beta aren't functioning normally. If gamma were reactivated it would function as a normal beta.

400

Inherited colon cancer is an example of what repair malfunctioning?

mismatch

400

Explain the differences in the 2 types of translocation

Robertsonian- 2 nonhomologous acrocentric chromosomes break at the centromere and long arms fuse, leaving short arms lost (familial down syndrome) (extra chromosome)

Reciprocal- 2 nonhomologous chromosomes exchange parts (still have normal number of chromosomes)

400

Name and describe the 3 types of antimicrobial proteins involved in the innate immune response.

Cytokines: interferons: antiviral

interleukins: fever inducing

tumor necrosis: anticancer

colony stimulating factors: stimulate bone marrow to produce lymphocytes

Collectins: Fight bacteria, yeast, and some viruses.

Complement: plasma proteins aid the other defense systems.

500

3 ways chaperone proteins help folding

prevent proteins from getting stuck in intermediate form, stabilize partially folded regions, develop into drugs to treat misfolded proteins

500

Most control of gene expression occurs in what two things and how?

Chromatin remodeling through the use of acetyls (shift His to open it up for transcription), phosphates (add a negative charge to loosen nucleosome and promote transcription), Methyls (removed to allow transcription). 

MicroRNAs that are noncoding to bind to target mRNA and prevent translation

500

Explain the 3 types of DNA repair 

photoreactivation (bacteria) use photo energy to break extra bonds in pyrimidine dimer

Excision repair (humans) multiple nucleotides are removed and replaced. Nuc (up to 30 bases) Base (1-5)

Mismatch repair enzymes detect single nucs that don't base pair and excise and replace it


500

What are the causes of uniparental disomy

nondisjunction in egg and sperm in same chromosome or nondisjunction in egg and chromosome lost in sperm

500

Explain the differences by the types of T calls

Helper t: has cd4 antigen in cellular mediated immunity they release cytokines and activate cytoxic T. In humoral immunity they recognize the antigen presented and stimulate B cells.

Cytoxic t: cd8 antigens. kill virus or cancer cells when activated and release perforin to break open cencer cells. 

Regulatory t: suppress immune system when not needed

natural killer: surveil the cell to kill antigens

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