UNCW Biology 201 Final Exam

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Last updated 3:26 PM on 5/3/26
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144 Terms

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What are the three domains of life?

Bacteria, archea, and eukaryotes

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What is the main difference between bacteria and archea

both are prokaryotes, but bacteria's cell walls contain peptidoglycan and archea have membranes composed of phospholipids.

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What is the strongest bond?

Covalent bonds

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What is the weakest bond?

Hydrogen bonds, but collectively hydrogen bonds are extremely strong

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What four properties does hydrogen bonding give water?

1. Cohesion and adhesion

2. Solid is less dense than liquid

3. High specific heat

3. Universal solvent of life

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Cohesion

The hydrogen bonds between linking water molecules gives them the ability to stick to themselves.

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Adhesion

The ability for molecules to stick to surfaces.

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How do hydrogen bonds allow ice to float?

Hydrogen bonds in ice are "more ordered" than in the liquid form of water, making ice less dense than the liquid.

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Is water polar or non-polar?

Polar

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Hydrocarbons

Organic molecules consisting of only carbon and hydrogen.

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What are the 7 functional groups?

1. Carboxyl Group

2. Carbonyl Group

3. Hydroxyl Group

4. Amino Group

5. Sulfhydryl Group

6. Phosphate Group

7. Methyl Group

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Monomers build polymers through...

dehydration reactions

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Condensation (Dehydration) Reactions

When two molecules are linked through the removal of a water molecule.

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Polymers are disassembled into monomers by....

hydrolysis

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Hydrolysis

The reverse of a dehydration reaction, a water molecule is added to a polymer to separate the monomers.

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What are the four classes of macromolecules?

1. Carbohydrates

2. Proteins

3. Nucleic Acids

4. Lipids

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Lipids consist of...

fats, phospholipids and steroids

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Fats are composed of the two smaller molecules....

glycerol and fatty acids

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Structure of glycerol

A three-carbon alcohol with a hydroxyl group linked to each carbon

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Structure of fatty acids

Consists of a carboxyl group attached to a large carbon skeleton

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Cyclin

Cellular protein that play an important role in regulating the cell cycle.

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Genome

Consists of the complete genetic sequence of a cell.

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Somatic Cells

Non-reproductive cells.

Have two sets up chromosomes making it a 'diploid' cell.

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Gametes

Reproducing cells (egg and sperm)

Have only a single set of chromosomes making it a 'haploid' cell.

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What are the two main phases of the cell cycle?

1. Interphase

2. Mitotic Phase (Mitosis & cytokinesis)

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Mitosis

A process of nuclear division in eukaryotic cells that conserves the number of chromosomes.

-produces two daughter cells identical to parent cells. (n=46)

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What are the five stages of Mitosis?

1. Prophase

2. Prometaphase

3. Metaphase

4. Anaphase

5. Telophase

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Prophase

1st stage of mitosis

Chromosomes begin to condense and form a mitotic spindle.

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Prometaphase and metaphase

2nd and 3rd stage of mitosis

-Microtubules (spindle fibers) attach to the kinetochore (form at centromeres of chromatids) of chromosomes

-Chromosoms align on the metaphase plate

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Anaphase

4th stage of mitosis

Chromatids split of each chromosome and heads towards opposite poles of the cell

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Telophase

5th stage of mitosis

-nucleus divides into two daughter nuclei

-cytokinesis has begun

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Cytokinesis

The division of the cytoplasm to form two separate daughter cells after mitosis, meiosis I & meiosis II

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Meiosis

-A type of cell division that occurs in two stages (Meiosis I & Meiosis II) and produces 4 daughter cells with half as many chromosomes as the parent cell

(Diploid cell to haploid cell)

-Daughter cells have half as many chromosomes as parent cells

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Chromosomes

-Carry genetic information

-In nucleus of eukaryotic cells

-Consist of DNA and protein

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What are three events that occur in Meiosis but not Mitosis?

1. Synapsis and crossing over in Prophase I: Homologous chromosomes connect and exchange genetic information b/w non-sister chromatids.

2. Paired homologous chromosomes (tetrads) are at metaphase plate in Meiosis, instead of individual separated chromosomes as in Mitosis

3. At anaphase 1 the homologous chromosomes separate instead of sister chromatids

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Hybridization

When two organisms are crossed with contrasting characteristics

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True Breeding

When the P generation always passes down a specific phenotypic trait

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P Generation

Parent generation

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F1 Generation

Offspring of the P generation

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F2 Generation

Offspring from the F1 generation self pollinating itself

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Interphase

-The period in the cell cycle when the cell is not dividing

-Chromosomes and organelles are duplicated and cell size increases

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Cleavage

-Process of cytokinesis in animal cells

-Characterized by pinching of plasma membrane

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What are the three phases on interphase?

1. G1 Phase

2. S Phase

3. G2 Phase

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Explain the three phases of interphase

1. G1 Phase: 1st gap of cell growth

2. S Phase: Synthesis of cell cycle; DNA is replicated

3. G2 Phase: 2nd gap of cell growth phase

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Centrosome

-An organelle near the nucleus of a cell that contains the centrioles

-From which spindle fibers develop in cell division

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G0 Phase

Non-dividing state occupied by cells that have left the cell cycle.

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Spindle Fibers

Fanlike microtubules from centrosomes that help separate chromosomes during mitosis

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Pleiotropy

A gene that has multiple phenotypic effects

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Eukaryotic cells

-Have a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles

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Prokaryotic Cells

-Simpler and smaller than a eukaryotic cell

-Does not contain nucleus or other membrane-bound organelles

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Atomic Number

Number of protons and electrons in an element

(Left subscript)

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Mass Number

Number of protons and neutrons in an element

(Left superscript)

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Covalent Bond

Sharing of a pair of valence electrons between two atoms.

- Shared electrons count as a part of each atom's valence electrons

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Electronegativity

A measure of an atom's tendency to attract other electrons from atoms to form a covalent bond

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Non-polar Covalent Bond

Electrons shared equally between atoms

-Atoms have similar electronegativity

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Polar Covalent Bond

Electrons shared unequally between atoms

-Atoms have different electronegativity

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The building blocks of DNA are.....

nucleotides

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Purines

Nucleotides that contain two sugar rings

Incldues: Adenine and Guanine

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Pyrimidines

Nucleotides that contain a single sugar ring.

Includes: Thymine, Cytosine, and Uracil

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Describe the shape of DNA

-A "double helix", composed of two strands twisted into a ladder

-The sugar and phosphate group compose the "backbone" of the ladder and the nitrogen base composes the "steps"

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base-pairing rules for DNA & RNA

DNA: A pairs with T and G pairs with C

RNA: A Pairs with U and G pairs with C

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DNA

Deoxyribonucleic acid

-Contains genetic information which hold instructions to make proteins

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Replication

The name of the process where DNA is copied during the cell cycle; DNA is "unzipped" and each strand is used as a template to make another copy of DNA

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DNA Polymerases

A group of enzymes that bind nucleotides together during DNA replication

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RNA

Ribonucleic acid

Single stranded molecule that is translated from DNA & "read" in order to make proteins

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Transcription

Process where a sequence of DNA is copied into a complementary sequence of RNA (mRNA)

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RNA Polymerases

Enzyme that binds nucleotides together to make a RNA molecule

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mRNA

Messenger RNA, that is "read" in order to make proteins

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rRNA

Ribosomal RNA, forms part of a ribosome (cell's protein factory)

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tRNA

Transfer RNA, brings amino acids from the cytoplasm to the ribosome so they can be used to make proteins

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Ribosome

Cellular organelle that puts amino acids together to make proteins.

"cellular factory of proteins"

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What are the building blocks of proteins?

Amino acids

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Translation

Process that converts mRNA to amino acids to be used to make proteins

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Codon

Sequence of three nucleotides that are used to code for a particular amino acid

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Start Codon

A codon that signals the start of translation

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Stop Codon

A codon that signals the end of translation

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Anticodon

A codon that is complimentary to an mRNA codon

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Promoter

A DNA segment that allows a gene to be transcribed; helps RNA polymerase find where gene "starts"

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Operator

A gene segment that can turn a gene "on" or "off"

-If a gene is "on" it can be read to make a protein

-If a gene is "off" it cannot be read to make a protein

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Operon

Segment of DNA that includes the operator, the promoter and all the genes that code for a particular physical trait

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Point Mutation

A mutation in a sequence of DNA where one nucleotide is substituted for another

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Frameshift Mutation

A mutation where a nucleotide has either been inserted or removed from a DNA sequence

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Gene duplication

Type of chromosomal mutation where chromosome has two copies of a gene

-Usually occurs when homologous chromosomes don't line up properly during crossing over

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Gene translocation

Type of chromosomal mutation where a piece of one chromosome moves to another non-homologous chromosome

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Mutagens

Agents in environment that cause genetic mutations

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Brief description of sequence of DNA to protein

1. mRNA synthesized in nucleus from DNA

2. mRNA exits nucleus into cytoplasm and is transported to ribosome

3. mRNA is "read" in ribosome to make a protein

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Triglyceride

In a fat, three fatty acids are linked to a glycerol by an ester linkage, creating a triglyceride.

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Phospholipid structure

Two phospholipids & a phosphate group are attached to a glycerol.

(The two phospholipid tails are hydrophobic and the phosphate group and its attachments form a hydrophilic head)

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What are the three R-groups of amino acids?

1. Nonpolar (Hydrophobic)

2. Polar (Hydrophilic)

3. Electrically charged

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Amino acids are linked together by....

Peptide bonds

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What is the polymer of the amino acids?

Polypeptide

-Two or more linked polypeptide chains form a macromolecule (protein)

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What do R-groups determine?

The R-groups determine the sequence of the protein. The structure determines its function.

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The 4 levels of a proteins structure are...

1. Primary

2. Secondary

3. Tertiary

4. Quaternary

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Describe the first level of protein structure

Primary

The sequence of amino acids in a protein determined by inherited gene information

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Describe the second level of protein structure

Secondary

The polypeptide backbone of the protein coils and foils and folds into either a a-helix or b-pleated sheet

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Describe the third level of protein structure

Tertiary

Determined by interactions b/w R-groups

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Describe the fourth level of protein structure

Quaternary

When two or more polypeptide chains form one macromolecule

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Protein structure is effected by....

pH, temperature and say concentration

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Nucleic Acids

DNA & RNA

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Building blocks of nucleic acids

nucleotides