History of Molecular Biology & Terminology
Transcription & Translation
Miscellaneous
Cell Cycle, Mitosis and Cytokinesis
Regulation of the Cell Cycle
100

DNA is an acronym for

Deoxyribonucleic acid

100

What is the difference between transcription and translation?

Transcription is the process of copying the code in a section of DNA onto a strand of mRNA. Translation is the process of decoding the mRNA into a sequence of amino acids that becomes a protein.

100

A gene is

specific sequences of nucleotides called "open reading frames" (ORFs) which start with a "start codon" and end with a "stop codon"

100

What is the difference between animal and plant cytokinesis?

In plant cells, a cell wall forms instead of a cleavage furrow. Cell plate joins to the plasma membrane. When the cell plate is large enough, it separates into 2 daughter cells.

100

Checkpoints that must be passed before cell division can proceed

G1

200

DNA & RNA are N________  A__________

Nucleic acids

200

Write the corresponding mRNA transcript on the whiteboard: 3'-GCTACTGACTAT-5'


5'-CGAUGACUGAUA-3'

200

What phase is most of a cell's life spent?

Interphase

200

DOUBLE trouble!!


Choose Prophase, Metaphase, or Anaphase stage... Using two different pipe cleaners and pony beads each team will make 3 chromosomes and place them in the stage they were given.

The first team with the correct chromosomes and positions wins the points

The answer is on a Google slide

200

Cells that multiply out of control due to a safety check malfunction. p 159

Cancer

300

Constructed a 3-D model of DNA (pg 136)

Watson & Crick

300

If DNA is a giant library, its bookshelves are chromosomes, what are the books?

Genes

300

What does helicase do in DNA replication?

It breaks the hydrogen (H+) bonds ... splitting the DNA strand.

300

What direction is the leading strand and what direction is the lagging strand?

The leading strand is 3' - 5"
The lagging strand is 5' - 3'

300

Where does M checkpoint occur and what does it ensure? p 159

Metaphase during mitosis and ensures all chromosomes are attached to spindle fibers before the spindle fibers pull the sister chromatids apart.

400

Fredrick Griffith

Developed the Transforming principle and described the structure of DNA and that structure provided a mechanism for it to be replicated.

400

Decode the proteins from the following mRNA sequence. 

5'-AUGGCUGAUGGUCAUUAUUGUUUUUAG-3'

AGU GCU GAU GGU CAU UAU UGU UUU UAG

Met-Ala-Asp-Gly-His-Tyr-Cys-Phe

400

The Central Dogma of Biology

Genetic information flows in one direction only, from DNA to RNA to protein

400

Name the phases of mitosis.

Interphase (G2), Prophase, Prometaphase, Metaphase, Anaphase, Telophase & Cytokinesis.

400

Human brain and muscle cells remain in this phase. Why?

G, Stem (satellite) cells wait for a need to transform like a muscle injury. They then transform into myoblasts that then go through mitosis.

500

Chargaff rules (pg 134)

in a sample of DNA, amounts of A and T are equal and amounts of C & G are equal

500

Where does the mRNA go after capping and splicing?

It exits the cell nucleus, enters the cytoplasm then joins with a ribosome.

500

DAILY DOUBLE

Original the DNA (coding) transcript was 5'-ATT-3' but mutated to 5'-ATC-3'
What effect would you expect on the organism?

They are different codons but they both map to the same amino acid. 

500

What are telomeres? p157 & 160-161

Telomeres protect the ends of chromosomes from fraying and fusing with other chromosomes, maintaining genomic stability.
  - Structure: Composed of repeating DNA sequences (TTAGGG in humans).
  - Shortening with age: Each time a cell divides, a small piece of the telomere is lost, contributing to the aging process. 

 

500

The built-in checkpoints that must be met before cell division look for 3 main things.

Is it safe and appropriate for the cell to divide, are they needed now

Is there enough energy, chemical resources (nutrients)

Is DNA damaged & in need of repair p 156-157