Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
100

What is a genome?

  • the complete set of genes or genetic material present in a cell or organism.

100

The two sister chromatids are attached at the _______________.

centromere

100

Phenotype vs Genotype 

Genotype is the combination of alleles an individual contains, while phenotype is the physical appearance.

100

Genes located near each other on the same chromosome tend to be inherited together and are called 


linked genes

100

What are the 3 parts of a nucleotide?

Phosphate group, ribose or deoxyribose sugar, nucleotide base.

200

The condensed histone protein-DNA complex is called

 Chromatin.

200

Name the common five stages of mitosis and meiosis I. 

Prophase, prometaphase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase.

200

What is meant by P, F1 and F2 generations?

The true-breeding parents are referred to as the P generation  (parental generation), and their hybrid offspring are the F1 generation (first filial generation, the word filial from the Latin word for “son”). Allowing these hybrids to self-pollinate (or to cross-pollinate with other hybrids) produces an F2 generation (second filial generation).

200

Define genetic recombination.

Genetic recombination (also known as genetic reshuffling) is the exchange of genetic material between different organisms which leads to production of offspring with combinations of traits that differ from those found in either parent.

200

Which bases are pyrimidines and purines and what pairs with what?

pyrimidines: T and C

purine: A and G

A pairs with T 

G pairs with C

300

Differentiate among human somatic cells and gametes? How many chromosomes are present in both?

Somatic cells are non-reproductive cells that have two sets of chromosomes, whereas gametes are reproductive cells such as sperm and eggs and have one set or half as many chromosomes as somatic cells. 46 somatic and 23 gametic.

300

Prokaryotes produce by a type of cell division known as 

binary fission.

300

What is Mendel’s law of independent assortment?

  • It states that each pair of alleles segregates independently of any other pair of alleles during gamete formation. This law applies only to genes on different, nonhomologous chromosomes or those far apart on the same chromosome. Genes located near each other on the same chromosome tend to be inherited together.
300

What is the purpose of a Barr body?

  • A Barr Body is an inactivated, condensed X chromosome found in female cells. Since females possess two X chromosomes and males have one X chromosome and a Y chromosome, Barr bodies are essential to regulate the amount of X-linked gene product being transcribed.
300

How does replication start? What prevents the unwound DNA for twisting back?

Helicase unzips DNA, single stranded binding proteins keep it unzipped.

400

During the interphase DNA is in _________ form and during M phase DNA is in _______ form.

1. chromatin

2. chromosome

400

M checkpoint:

This occurs in mitosis near the end of metaphase. It checks whether the sister chromatids are correctly attached to the spindle fibers before the cell enters the irreversible anaphase stage.

400

What does Mendel’s law of segregation state?

It states that the two alleles for a heritable character segregate (separate from each other) during gamete formation and end up in different gametes. Thus, an egg or a sperm gets only one of the two alleles that are present in the somatic cells of the organism making the gamete. One allele from each parent for each gene.

400

________is a condition in which an organism has more than two complete sets of chromosomes

Polyploidy

400

Identify the enzyme  called as molecular glue that joins the okazaki fragments by forming phosphodiester bonds is

ligase

500

What do you know about Interphase? What are its subphases and what do they stand for?

Interphase is where cells spend about 90% of their time. G1 phase is the “first gap”, S phase is for synthesis and that is where the chromosomes are duplicated. The G2 phase is the “second gap.”

500

3 differences between mitosis and meiosis. 

  • Mitosis results in two identical daughter cells, whereas meiosis results in four different cells.
  • Mitosis results in diploid cells and meiosis results in haploid cells.
  • In mitosis, during metaphase individual chromosomes line up on the metaphase plate, but in meiosis 1, in metaphase 1, homologous chromosome pairs line up on the equator.
500

In a cross between a white-eyed female fruit fly and red-eyed male, what percent of the female offspring will have white eyes? (White eyes are X-linked, recessive).

0%

500

What happens in nondisjunction?

pairs of homologous chromosomes (a) OR sister chromatids (b) do not separate normally during meiosis


500

Why the two strands of the helix have to be elongated by two slightly different mechanisms?

  • Strands must be built from 5’ to 3’. Leading strand can be built continuously following replication fork. Lagging strand must be built moving away from fork, so polymerase must restart repeatedly by moving further back into opening fork