Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
100

The main types of signal-mediated cell to cell communication (4) 

What is Endocrine, Paracrine, Neural Signaling, and Contact-Dependent? 

100

Found in the cytoplasm of most animal cells, surrounding the nucleus and extending into the cell periphery. Functions to enable cells to withstand mechanical stress. 

What is intermediate filaments

100

A network of regulatory proteins, this system guarantees that the events of the cell cycle occur in a set sequence and that each process has been completed before the next one begins. 

What is a cell-control system

100

When a small number of individuals (some who carry a particular mutation by chance) become separated from the larger population. As this subpopulation expands, the frequency of the mutation becomes higher. 

What is the founder effect

100

A family of proteins that support the structure and function of different tissues. 

What are collagens

200

Binds with molecules that are two large or too hydrophilic to cross the plasma membrane of the target cell

What are cell-surface receptors

200

These extend throughout the cytoplasm, and form long, stuff tubes that create a train-track system within the cell where vesicles, organelles, and other macromolecules can be transported

What are microtubles

200

This process can remove cells that are not needed during development and/or cell maintenance. 

What is apoptosis

200

Combinations of polymorphisms or other DNA markers that are inherited as a unit. 

What is a haplotype block

200

The core protein to which chains of glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) are covalently linked to. They can have a variety of shapes, sizes, and chemistry.

What are Proteoglycans

300

Either acts as an enzyme, or associates with enzymes inside the cell. When stimulated, the enzyme can activate a variety of intracellular signaling pathways. 

What is an enzyme-coupled receptor

300

These are stabilized by accessory proteins like plectin, that cross-link the filaments to bundles and connect them to microtubules, to actin filaments, and to adhesive structures in desmosomes. 

What is the stabilizing of intermediate filaments by cross-linking accessory proteins? 

300

These bind to receptors on the cells surface, activating a intracellular pathway such as the Ras-MAP pathway, which then increases transcription of genes that would stimulate cell division. 

What are mitogens

300

These mutations are usually dominant. These mutations are ones that increase the activity of a gene or its product, or result in the gene being expressed in inappropriate circumstances.

What is gain-of-function
300

Allows the epithelial sheet to develop tension and change shape in many ways. These movements are particularly crucial during embryonic development, in the spinal cord, the lens of the eye, etc.

What is an Adherens Junction

400

These kinases, which can integrate information and produce a coordinated cell response, often phosphorylate, and regulate, components in other signaling pathways in addition to their own. 

What are protein kinases

400

A head domain and tail, in which the head domain binds to actin filament and has the ATP-hydrolyzing motor activity which allows it to move in a repetitive cycle of binding, detachment, and rebinding. Its function is to carry cargo

What is Myocin I

400

One of various kinds of secreted signal proteins that inhibits growth and proliferation, but when a gene that encodes for that protein is deleted, the growth can go unregulated.

What is Myostatin

400

Chemicals applied to cells to damage DNA. These are artificially produced mutations and the mutation results are random, which is an alternative to combing through thousands/millions of organisms for interesting spontaneous mutations.

What are Mutagens

400

seal neighboring cells together, making it harder for water-soluble molecules to leak between them

What is a tight junction

500

Membrane-embedded calcium ion pumps aid in keeping cytosolic calcium concentration and terminate the calcium ion signal

What is cells keeping calcium in the cytosol low

500

When intermediate filaments form a meshwork, underlying and reinforcing the nuclear envelope. 

What is the nuclear lamina

500

M-Cdk complexes accumulate throughout G2, but are not switched on until the end of the phase. When the activating phosphatase Cdc25 removes the inhibitory phosphatases, it creates a

what is a positive feedback loop

500

During meiotic prophase exchanges segments of DNA between homologous chromosomes and thereby reassorts genes on each individual chromosome

What is crossing-over

500

These recognize tumor-specific cell-surface molecules can be produced in vitro and injected into an individual to mark those tumor cells for destruction.

What are antibodies