This is what you call the location where a murder has taken place, as evidence is collected.
What is a Crime Scene?
Blueprint (code) of life
What is
DNA?
Test used to determine blood sugar levels.
What is GTT? (Glucose Tolerance Test)
Humans may be one of how many types of blood? (Do not include +/-)
What are 4?
The role of protein synthesis
What is to produce proteins?
This person dispatches police to a crime scene.
Who is a 911 Operator?
DNA can be made into fragments using these specific proteins.
What is a
Restriction Enzyme?
This type of diabetes is caused by the inability of beta cells to produce insulin.
What is Type 1 Diabetes?
Sickle cell is a disorder of which component of blood?
What is red blood cells (or hemoglobin, to be precise)?
Variable that can be changed in an experiment
What is an independent variable?
These can be used to identify suspects at a crime scene. They are unique to each individual and often found on hard surfaces.
What are fingerprints?
Three parts of a nucleotide
What is phosphate, sugar, and nitrogenous base?
Neuropathy, retinopathy, stroke, heart attack are all ______ of diabetes.
What are complications?
Erythrocytes contain this molecule on their surface, which determines blood type.
What are antigens?
Blood splatter diameter can help investigators determine this at a crime scene.
What is height of blood fall?
Who is responsible for sweeping a crime scene, collecting evidence, and taking pictures?
Who is a Crime Scene Investigator?
This scientist used x ray diffraction to show DNA as a helical structure.
Who is Rosalind Franklin?
This cell membrane structure is responsible for accepting insulin and opening a glucose portal.
What is insulin receptor?
Sickle cell is caused by what type of mutation?
What is a point or substitution mutation?
Transcription is the process by which DNA creates which RNA molecule?
What is mRNA? (messenger RNA)
These are the three parts of hair that investigators use to identify suspects.
What is the
Cuticle, Cortex, Medulla?
Why are Purines and Pyrimidines paired together?
What is "to keep a consistent width in DNA?"
This molecule is utilized by a feedback mechanism in the body to correct hypoglycemia.
What is glucagon?
The mutation in the hemoglobin gene causes what change in amino acid sequence?
What is Glutamic Acid to Valine?
The pathway taken to create a protein, name.
What is the Central Dogma?
(DNA - RNA - Protein)