These are the individual "building blocks" that bond together to form a polymer.
What are monomers?
Known as the "Father of Genetics," he used pea plants to discover the laws of inheritance.
Who is Gregor Mendel?
This rule states that the amount of Adenine always equals Thymine, and Cytosine equals Guanine.
What is Chargaff’s Rule?
DNA is a double-stranded molecule, while RNA usually exists in this form.
What is single-stranded?
This enzyme acts like a zipper, unwinding and separating the DNA strands.
What is Helicase?
This is the specific monomer that makes up DNA and RNA.
What is a nucleotide?
Using "Rough" and "Smooth" bacteria in mice, these two scientists discovered the "Transforming Principle."
Who are Griffith and Avery?
These weak bonds hold the nitrogenous bases together in the center of the double helix.
What are hydrogen bonds?
RNA replaces Thymine with this nitrogenous base.
What is Uracil?
This enzyme is the "builder," adding new nucleotides in the 5'
to 3'
direction.
What is DNA Polymerase?
This term refers to the polymer name for both DNA and RNA.
What are nucleic acids?
This team used radioactive phosphorus and sulfur in viruses (bacteriophages) to prove DNA is the genetic code.
Who are Hershey and Chase?
This is the specific sugar found in the backbone of a DNA molecule.
What is deoxyribose?
Unlike the permanent nature of DNA, RNA is described as this, meaning it is not permanent.
What is transient?
These short segments of DNA are produced on the lagging strand.
What are Okazaki fragments?
While DNA is a nucleic acid, these are the monomers that make up proteins.
What are amino acids?
She used X-ray crystallography to produce "Photo 51," a crucial image of the DNA molecule.
Who is Rosalind Franklin?
Because DNA strands run in opposite directions (5'
to 3'
and
3'
to 5'), they are described by this term.
What is anti-parallel?
This is the name of the sugar found in RNA.
What is ribose?
This enzyme acts like "glue," attaching all the new nucleotides together.
What is Ligase?
This three-step concept describes the flow of genetic information: DNA-->mRNA-->Protein.
What is the Central Dogma?
These two scientists used Franklin's image to build the first double-helix model of DNA in 1953.
Who are Watson and Crick?
These larger, double-ringed bases (A and G) must always pair with smaller, single-ringed pyrimidines.
What are purines?
DNA is kept safely inside this organelle to protect it from damage.
What is the nucleus?
Replication is called this because each new DNA molecule contains one original strand and one new strand.
What is semi-conservative?