Unit 1
Unit 2
Unit 3
Unit 4
Recent Stuff
100

Label the Levels of Biological Organization from Atoms to Biome/Biosphere

Atoms, molecules, organelles, cells, tissues, organs, organ system, organism, population, community, ecosystem, biome

100

What are some similarities and differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes?

What organelles are found in both prok and euk?

Prokaryotes: no membrane bound organelles, unicellular, circular DNA, smaller

Eukaryotes: nucleus, membrane bound organelles, bigger/more complex

Both have organelles: cytoplasm, membrane, ribosomes

100

Give me the location of glycolysis, citric acid cycle, and ETC

What are the products of glycolysis?

Glycolysis: cytosol

CAC: mitochondrial matrix

ETC: inner mitochondrial membrane

Products: 2 ATP (net), 2 NADH, 2 pyruvate

100

What is the difference between nonsense, silent, missense, and frameshift mutations?

Nonsense: codes for a stop codon

Missense: codes for another amino acid

Silent: codes for the same amino or not in ORF

Frameshift: insert or delete that causes a shift

100

Who is more affected by X-linked genes, males or females? Why?

Males (XY), X-linked genes are recessive -> females would need 2 affected copies of X

Ex: red-green colorblindness more common in males

200

What are the differences between polar covalent and nonpolar covalent bonds? What are ionic bonds and hydrogen bonds? What are some examples of each?

Polar covalent: different electronegativities (metal and nonmetal), shared electrons Ex: Water molecule

Nonpolar Covalent: similar electronegativity, shared electrons (Ex: CO2, O2)

Ionic: Cations/Anions (transfer electrons)

Hydrogen: weaker bonds between H and an electronegative atom on another molecule (ex: between water molecules)

200

Describe characteristics of the membrane: include descriptions of transmembrane, peripheral proteins, etc. 

Phospholipid bilayer, semipermeable layer

Transmembrane (integral)-> through entire membrane

Peripheral-> only on outside of one membrane

200

Write the equation of photosynthesis. What are the inputs/outputs of the light dependent reactions? Where does the light independent reactions take place

6CO2 + 6 H20 +light -> C6H12O6 + 6O2

Light dependent Inputs: Light, H2O

Outputs: ATP, NADPH, O2

Light dependents: stroma of chloroplast

200

What are the products in mitosis? What are the products in meiosis? Are they identical the the parent? What does diploid/haploid mean?

Mitosis- 2 identical diploid cells

Meiosis- 4 haploid different cells

Diploid: 2 sets of chromosomes

Haploid: 1 set of chromosome

200

What is the difference between incomplete dominance and codominance? What is gene epistasis?

Incomplete dominance: heterozygote=intermediate phenotype

Codominance: heterozygote= both phenotypes present

Gene epistasis: phenotypic expression of one gene is influenced by another gene (ex: lab coat color)

300

Draw a nucleotide. Which biomolecule is a nucleotide the monomer of. What are some differences between a DNA and RNA molecule?

Nucleotide: sugar, phosphate, nitrogenous base

DNA: double stranded, ATCG, deoxy sugar

RNA: single stranded, AUCG, ribose sugar

-Phosphodiester bonds

300

Pick 5 organelles and give me their function

Answers may vary (see chapter 4)

300

What direction is new DNA replicated? What is the difference between leading and lagging strands? Name one enzyme that helps with replication.

5'->3' / Leading- continuous replicated, Lagging- discontinuous replication (Okazaki fragments)

Helicase, DNA polymerase, DNA primase, Topoisomerase

300

Define biotechnology, recombinant DNA, and a vector?

Biotechnology- use of biology to develop new products, methods, and organisms

Recombinant DNA- a DNA molecule made in the laboratory using at least two sources of DNA

-Vectors: gene carrier, gene of interest

300

What are homologous structures?

What is convergent evolution?

Homologous structures: structures that are derived from the same structure in a common ancestor

Convergent evolution: similar environmental conditions result in the independent evolution of similar structures

400

Write out the monomers and polymers of carbohydrates.

What are the functions of lipids? What are some examples of lipids?

Carbohydrates: monosaccharides (monomer) ex: glucose / polysaccharides (polymer) ex: cellulose

Lipids: long term storage, components of membranes (phospholipids) Ex: phospholipids, steroids, triglycerides

400

What are enzymes? (Give any characteristics)

What do they do to chemical reactions?

What are endergonic vs exergonic reactions?

Enzymes: biological catalysts (speed up reactions by lowering activation energy)

Exergonic reactions (-delta G), release NRG

Endergonic (+delta G), use NRG, not spontaneous

400

Write the difference between cell respiration and fermentation (in terms of energy production). Do they both have any similar processes?

Cell Respiration: 36-38 ATP

Fermentation: 2 ATP, regenerate NAD+

Both go through glycolysis

400

Write out the steps of initiation, elongation, and termination for either transcription or translation (include the location)

Answers vary: check out chapter 13 for more info

400

What is the difference between stabilizing, directional, and disruptive selection

Stabilizing selection: selects against phenotypic
extremes, favors individuals with average phenotype

Directional selection: when an environment changes, phenotypes at one extreme of the normal distribution are favored

Disruptive selection: extreme changes in the
environment may favor two or more different phenotypes (rare)

500

What are the four levels of Protein Structure. What kinds of bonds do each level have? Be descriptive

Primary: string of amino acids (peptide bonds)

Secondary: alpha helix, beta sheets (hydrogen bonds), made of local structures

Tertiary: 3D shape (domains), has lots of bonds (hydrogen, ionic, disulfide bonds, Van der Waals)

Quaternary: multiple subunits come together (same bonds as before)

500

What are characteristics of hypotonic, hypertonic, and isotonic solutions?

Which is favorable in plant cells? In animal cells?

Hypotonic: water flows into cell (lyse), more solute in the cell (favored in plants)

Hypertonic: water flows out (crenate), more solute outside the cell

Isotonic: water flows equally (favored in animals)

500

Write anything you know about the Calvin Cycle (inputs, outputs, location, which part of photosynthesis)

Inputs: ATP, CO2, NADPH

Outputs ADP, NADP+, G3P

Stroma

500

Pick either mitosis or meiosis and write out the steps or any significant process in that step.

What happens in prophase 1 of meiosis?

Answers vary

Prophase 1: crossing over of tetrads, which increases genetic diversity and variety of gametes

500

Pick 2 and describe:

Genetic Drift, Bottleneck Effect, Founder Effect, Gene Flow

Genetic Drift: random evolutionary changes in small breeding populations result in changes in allelic frequencies

Bottleneck Effect: occasionally, a population
may rapidly and severely decrease due to disease,
exploitation, or sudden environmental change 

Founder Effect: genetic drift that results when a few
individuals from a large population found a new colony

Gene Flow: the migration of breeding individuals
between populations, with a corresponding movement of alleles, increasing genetic variability in the recipient population