Cardiovascular System
Cell Biology
Molecular Biology
Random
Evolution
100

What is the pacemaker?

Sinoatrial node

Group of cells that control heartbeat

100

What is the Cell Theory?

1. All living things are composed of cells

2.  The cell is the smallest unit of life

3.  Cells come from pre-existing cells
100

Define an enzyme. Name factors that affect enzyme activity.

Enzymes are proteins that speed up chemical reactions.


Factors:

Temperature: High temperatures cause loss of shape and denaturation of enzymes. Low temperatures provide little to no energy for enzymatic activity.

pH: Affects charge of enzymes and causes loss of shape.

Substrate Concentration: Substrates cause an increase in enzymatic activity until a certain point where enzymatic activity will not increase no matter how many more substrates are added.

100

Define the alimentary canal and accessory organs. 


Alimentary Canal- organs which food passes (esophagus, stomach, small and large intestine).


Accessory Organs- aid in digestion but do not transfer food (salivary glands, pancreas, liver, gallbladder).

100

Name 3 causes of natural selection

1. Competition

2. Selection- Environmental pressures

3. Adaptions- Species with beneficial traits survive

4. Evolution- Change in allele frequency 

5. Inherited Variation- Genetic variation that can be inherited

200

Why is there a 12-second delay between the sinoatrial signal to the atrioventricular node?

AV nodes smaller, fewer sodium channels

To make sure the right atrium is thoroughly emptied before the ventricle contracts.

200

Structure of phospholipids 

Hydrophilic heads- polar 

Hydrophobic tails- non-polar

Phospholipids self-organize to make heads face exterior environment and tails face interior part of the membrane.

200

Differentiate DNA and RNA

DNA

-Bases: Adenine, Thymine, Guanine, Cytosine

-Double-Stranded

-Sugar: Deoxyribose


RNA 

-Bases: Adenine, Uracil, Guanine, Cytosine

-Single-Stranded

-Sugar: Ribose

200

Define:

Species

Populations

Communities

Ecosystems

Species: A group of organisms that can produce fertile offspring

Populations: Group of species

Communities: Group of populations

Ecosystem: A community and its abiotic environment

200

Name and define the three domains of life

1. Eukarya- eukaryotic organisms with a membrane-bound nucleus 

2. Archaea- prokaryotic cells that consist of extremophiles (microorganisms that live in extreme conditions)

3. Eubacteria- prokaryotic cells that consist of common pathogenic (disease-causing) forms

300

Define capillaries 

Blood vessels (carry blood) that get rid of the carbon dioxide in the body and allow cells to intake oxygen and glucose (sugar).

300

Differentiate Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Cells

Prokaryotic:

DNA naked and circular

No nucleus, no membrane-bound organelles, 70S ribosomes

Reproduction via binary fission

Small


Eukaryotic

DNA linear and bound to protein

Nucleus, membrane-bound organelles, 80S ribosomes

Reproduction via Mitosis and Meiosis 

Large

300

What is PCR? Steps?

Amplifies small quantities of DNA. 

Steps:

1. Denaturation: Heat to separate DNA strand 

2. Annealing: Primers pick which sequence to copy

3. Elongation: Large quantities of DNA produced

300

Example of Food Chain

Producer: Carrot Plant

Primary Consumer: Cottontail Rabbit

Secondary Consumer: Feral Cat

Tertiary Consumer: Red Fox

300

Differentiate and provide examples of analogous and homologous pressures. 

Homologous structures

1. Due to common ancestry

2. From divergent evolution (species with similar ancestors diverge)

Example: Pentadactyl limbs in vertebrates 


Analogous structures 

1. Due to selection pressures

2. From convergent evolution (similar traits in species with different lineage) 

Example: Wings of insects, birds, and bats

400

Differentiate between veins and arteries 

Arteries- Sends blood from the heart, Narrow lumen, High pressure, Thick walls, No valves, Large amounts of muscle and elastic fibers

Veins- Sends blood to heart, Wide lumen, Low pressure, Thin walls, Has valves, Small amounts of muscle and elastic fibers

400

Evidence that Endosymbiosis Theory

Double membrane 

Similar modes of replication

Same structure of DNA

70S ribosomes




400

Describe Transcription 

Transcription: 

- Process by which mRNA is produced from DNA sequence

-mRNA is complementary to DNA sequence

-DNA Adenine pairs with RNA Uracil

-DNA Thymine pairs with RNA Adenine

-DNA Guanine pairs with RNA Cytosine and vice versa

400

Pros and Cons of GMOs

Benefits

-Nutritional value of food can be improved

-Crops can lack allergens and have longer lives

-Improve food supply


Disadvantages

-Could cause unknown health effects

-Could cause superweeds

-Limits biodiversity

400

Give 1 example of the following animal phyla:

1. Porifera

2. Cnidaria 

3. Platyhelmintha

4. Mollusca

5. Arthropoda 

6. Chordata 

1. Sea sponge

2. Jellyfish, coral, sea anemone 

3. Tapeworm, planaria

4. Snail, octopus, squid

5. Insects, spiders

6. Mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish 


500

Describe blood flow

Blood enters through the interior and exterior Vena Cava into the right atrium. Sinoatrial nodes signal heartbeat, so the atria contracts via systole. Through the open tricuspid valve, blood travels from the right atrium to the right ventricle. To prevent backward blood flow, the tricuspid valve closes when the ventricle is full. Right ventricle contracts and blood goes through the pulmonary valve and then, through the pulmonary artery to the lungs where it is oxygenated. The pulmonary valves close when the ventricle is emptied of blood. This process is called pulmonary circulation.


The oxygenated blood enters through the pulmonary vein to the left atrium which contracts, causing blood to go to the left ventricle through the Bicuspid valve. When all of the blood goes to the ventricle, the Bicuspid valve closes to prevent blood from going back to the left atrium. When the ventricle contracts the blood goes through the aortic valve and through the aorta where the blood is released to the organs. This is called systematic circulation.

500

Describe steps of Interphase and Mitosis 

Interphase:

1. G1: Cell grows and prepares for DNA replication.

2. Synthesis: DNA replication.

3. G2: Cell grows and prepares for division.


Mitosis:

1: Prophase: DNA supercoils into chromosomes, Spindle fibers form, Nuclear Membrane dissolves.

2: Metaphase: Spindle fibers cause chromosomes to align in the center.

3: Anaphase: Spindle fibers cause sister chromatids to be pulled to opposite poles.

4: Telophase: Nuclear membrane forms around each set of chromosome set. Spindle fibers disappear and chromosomes decondense.

500

Define Translation

Process in which proteins are synthesized from mRNA sequence.

tRNA and mRNA are complimentary. mRNA is read in codons. tRNA has anticodons.

tRNA contains specific amino acids.

Ribosomes use amino acid sequence to make proteins.

500

Describe three main vessels in the liver

Hepatic artery- Receives oxygenated blood 

Portal vein- Receives nutrient-rich blood from the gut

Hepatic vein- Contains deoxygenated blood transported from the liver


500

Name and list characteristics and examples of 4 plant phyla

Bryophyta- no leaves, roots, or stems; no vascularisation, spores, anchored by rhizoids. Example: mosses


Filicenophyta- Leaves, roots, and stems; vascularization, spores, leaves are pinnate. Example: ferns


Coniferophyta- Leaves, roots, and stems; vascularization, seeds in cones, woody stems. Example: conifers


Angiospermophyta- Leaves, roots, and stems; vascularization, seeds in fruits, have flowers and fruits. Example: flowers