Transcription/Translation Part I
Transcription/Translation Part II
Inheritance
Mitosis/Meiosis
Miscellaneous
100

What is the central dogma of biology?

DNA->RNA->Protein

100

How are Eukaryotic and Prokaryotic transcription different?

Eukaryotes have have three RNA polymerases, while Prokayotes only have one. 

100

What is genotype? What is phenotype?

Genotype: the alleles an organism has

Phenotype: the characteristic an organism exhibits

100

List the phases of mitosis

Prophase, Metaphase, Anaphase, and Telophase with Cytokinesis

100

What are the basic steps of transcription?

Initiation, elongation, termination.
200

Which direction do RNA and DNA polymerases synthesize in?

5'->3'

200

During splicing, what parts of the pre-mRNA are removed?

Introns are removed.

200

What is the Law of Independent Assortment?

Separate genes are inherited separately.

200

What is the product of mitosis? What is the product of meiosis?

Mitosis: 2 identical diploid daughter cells

Meiosis: 4 unique haploid daughter cells

200

Why is meiosis useful to cells? Why is mitosis?

Meiosis produces genetically diverse reproductive cells, while mitosis is used for growth and repair.

300

Where does RNA polymerase bind, and what process does it initiate?

It binds on the promoter region of a gene (DNA) to initiate transcription.

300

What are the three tRNA sites in a ribosome, and what do they do?

A (aminoacyl) site: where charged tRNA comes in

P (peptidyl) site: where amino acid chain grows

E (exit) site: where uncharged tRNA leaves

300

Are men or women more likely to exhibit recessive X-linked traits? Why?

Men because they only inherit one X chromosome.

300

Do plant cells have a cleavage furrow in cytokinesis? Why or why not?

Plant cells do not have a cleavage furrow because they have a rigid cell wall.

300

What modifications turn a pre-mRNA into a mature mRNA?

-removal of introns

-poly-A tail

-5' G cap

400

Where is an anticodon found?

On tRNA

400
In what order do the other molecules involved in translation bind to the small ribosome subunit?
1) mRNA 2) initiator tRNA 3) large ribosome subunit
400

What is the difference between codominance and incomplete dominance?

Codominance: both alleles are equally and separately expressed (like blood type)

Incomplete dominance: alleles are expressed together (like snapdragon color)

400

How are homologous chromosomes and sister chromatids different?

Homologous chromosomes: have the same genes, but different alleles; come from different parents

Sister chromatids: identical copies of the same chromosome

400

What is a trisomy? How does it happen?

A trisomy is a genetic abnormality in which an organism has three of a chromosome instead of two. It results from nondisjunction in meiosis.

600

A template DNA strand reads:

3'-TTCAGCGCGATAGCGCTAGCT-5'

What is the mRNA sequence and the amino acid sequence?

5'-AAGUCGCGCUAUCGCGAUCGA-3'

Lys-Ser-Arg-Tyr-Arg-Asp-Arg

600

A coding DNA strand reads:

5'-ACGCTGTATTCTGGCATCACA-3'

What is the mRNA sequence and the amino acid sequence?

5'-ACGCUGUAUUCUGGCAUCACA-3'

Thr-Leu-Tyr-Ser-Gly-Ile-Thr



600

What will be the phenotypic and genotypic ratios in a monohybrid cross between a true breeding recessive and a true breeding dominant organism? What will the phenotypic ratio be in the F2 generation? 

Draw both Punnett squares

F1- 1:0 ratio (1:0 heterozygous dominant)

F2- 3:1 ratio (1:2:1 homozygous dominant:heterozygous dominant:homozygous recessive)

600

How is anaphase I of meiosis different from anaphase of mitosis?

Draw both.

In anaphase I of meiosis, homologous chromosomes separate. In anaphase of mitosis, sister chromatids separate.

600

Draw a basic eukaryotic cell. Where do transcription, translation, and DNA replication take place?

Transcription: nucleus

Translation: cytoplasm or on rough ER

DNA Replication: nucleus
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