DNA, Genetics, and Cell Division Study Guide

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125 Terms

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DNA

Deoxyribonucleic acid, carries genetic information.

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Nucleotide

The building block of DNA, made of a sugar, phosphate group, and nitrogen base.

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Pentose sugars

5-carbon sugars: deoxyribose (in DNA), ribose (in RNA).

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Nitrogen bases

Adenine, Thymine, Cytosine, Guanine (Uracil in RNA).

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Complementary base pairing

A pairs with T (or U in RNA), G pairs with C.

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Double helix

Shape of the DNA molecule.

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Sugar-phosphate backbone

Holds DNA strands together.

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Hydrogen bonds

Weak bonds between nitrogen bases.

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Covalent bonds

Strong bonds in the sugar-phosphate backbone.

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DNA replication

Copying DNA before cell division.

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Transcription

Making RNA from DNA.

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Translation

Making proteins from RNA.

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PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction)

Technique to amplify DNA.

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Gene mutation

A change in DNA sequence.

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Gene expression

How a gene produces its product (protein).

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Rosalind Franklin, Maurice Wilkins, Watson & Crick

Scientists who contributed to discovering DNA's structure.

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DNA subunits

Nucleotides (composed of a sugar-phosphate backbone with one nitrogen base).

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Base pairing rule

A-T, G-C.

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DNA vs RNA

DNA is double-stranded, has thymine, uses deoxyribose. RNA is single-stranded, has uracil, uses ribose.

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DNA's functions

Stores genetic info, replicates, guides protein synthesis.

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Gene mutations

Can change amino acid sequences, potentially altering protein structure and function.

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Chromosome

DNA and protein structures that carry genes.

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Chromatid

One half of a duplicated chromosome.

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Centromere

Region connecting two chromatids.

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Autosomes

Non-sex chromosomes (22 pairs in humans).

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Sex chromosomes

X and Y chromosomes; determine biological sex (1 pair in humans).

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Karyotyping

Visualising chromosomes to detect disorders.

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Chromosomal disorder

Abnormal number/structure of chromosomes.

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Trisomy

Three copies of a chromosome (e.g., Down syndrome = trisomy 21).

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Monosomy

One copy of a chromosome (e.g., Turner syndrome = monosomy X).

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Mitosis

Cell division producing identical cells for growth and repair.

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Meiosis

Cell division producing gametes (sperm/egg) with half the chromosome number.

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Parent cell

Original cell before division.

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Daughter cell

Resulting cells after division.

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Gamete

Sex cell (sperm or egg), haploid.

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Haploid

Half the number of chromosomes (23 in humans).

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Diploid

Full set of chromosomes (46 in humans).

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Fertilisation

Union of sperm and egg to form a zygote.

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Zygote

First cell of a new organism after fertilisation.

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Prophase, Metaphase, Anaphase, Telophase, Cytokinesis

Stages of cell division in both mitosis and meiosis.

<p>Stages of cell division in both mitosis and meiosis.</p>
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Mitosis produces

2 identical daughter cells; meiosis produces 4 genetically different daughter cells.

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Mitosis: daughter cells

have 46 chromosomes; Meiosis: daughter cells have 23 chromosomes.

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Mitosis is used for

growth and repair; meiosis is used for reproduction.

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DNA

DNA = deoxyribonucleic acid, lives in the nucleus.

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Genetic Blueprint

Instructions for how each cell behaves.

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Proteins

Substances that give us our specific characteristics.

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Genes

Sections of DNA that contain instructions to produce specific proteins.

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Chromatin

A very long (3m) strand of DNA that can't be seen under a light microscope.

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Chromosomes

Condensed, shortened, and thickened form of chromatin visible during cell division.

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Humans Chromosomes

Humans have 46 chromosomes in 23 pairs, with one of each pair from each parent.

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Autosomes

22 pairs of chromosomes that are numbered from 1 to 22 based on size.

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Homologous pairs

Chromosomes from each parent that are identical in terms of size, shape, and type of genes they carry.

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Karyotyping

A technique that allows us to look at chromosomes in utero and check for abnormalities.

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Gametes

Sperm and ova that each have 23 chromosomes, allowing them to combine to make a full set.

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Non-disjunction

A failure in meiosis where chromosomes do not separate properly, leading to gametes with too many or too few chromosomes.

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Chromosomal mutation

A genetic alteration that occurs if gametes with abnormal chromosome numbers end up in the zygote.

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Down syndrome

A chromosomal abnormality caused by having 3 copies of chromosome 21, characterized by distinct facial appearance and intellectual disability.

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Turner's syndrome

A condition in females caused by missing an X chromosome, characterized by short stature and infertility.

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Klinefelter's syndrome

A condition in males caused by an extra X chromosome, leading to characteristics such as delayed puberty and infertility.

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Jacobs syndrome

A condition in males caused by an extra Y chromosome, characterized by tall stature and behavioral issues.

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DNA monomers

Nucleotides, which are the repeating subunits of DNA.

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DNA

A polymer made up of monomers called nucleotides.

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Nucleotides

The building blocks of DNA, consisting of a nitrogenous base, a deoxyribose sugar, and a phosphate group.

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Nitrogenous bases

The four different components of nucleotides: Adenine (A), Guanine (G), Cytosine (C), and Thymine (T).

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Purines

Nitrogenous bases with two rings, specifically Adenine (A) and Guanine (G).

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Pyrimidines

Nitrogenous bases with one ring, specifically Cytosine (C) and Thymine (T).

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Protein synthesis

The process by which DNA tells the cell how to make proteins.

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Transcription

The process of making a copy of DNA (template strand) and taking it into the cytoplasm via messenger RNA (mRNA).

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Messenger RNA (mRNA)

The single-stranded copy of DNA that carries the genetic information to the cytoplasm.

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Uracil

A nitrogenous base that replaces Thymine in RNA.

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Covalent bonds

The type of bonds that join the phosphate group and deoxyribose sugar in nucleotides.

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Hydrogen bonds

The type of bonds that join the nitrogenous bases in DNA.

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Anti-parallel strands

The orientation of the two strands of DNA running in opposite directions.

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Ribose

A sugar that is not deoxyribose.

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RNA polymerase

An enzyme that unzips DNA by breaking hydrogen bonds and connects an RNA strand to one of the DNA strands.

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Transcription

The process that begins when RNA polymerase unzips the section of DNA corresponding to the gene for a particular protein.

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mRNA

Messenger RNA that adds free nucleotides to the exposed strand according to base pairing rules.

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Codon

A sequence of three bases on the mRNA strand that represents an amino acid.

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Amino acids

The building blocks of proteins.

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Stop codons

Three codons (UAA, UAG, UGA) that indicate the end of the gene.

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tRNA

Transfer RNA that carries the amino acid corresponding to the mRNA codon to the ribosome.

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Anti-codon

A three-base sequence on tRNA that binds with the mRNA codon.

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Peptide bond

A strong bond formed when two amino acids are brought together.

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Polypeptides

Long chains of amino acids.

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Protein functions

Important purposes include providing structure, regulating body processes, transporting materials, helping with immunity, and providing energy.

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DNA replication

The process of creating new DNA strands using existing strands as templates.

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Helicase

An enzyme that unwinds and separates the two strands of DNA by breaking hydrogen bonds.

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DNA polymerase

Enzymes that attach to exposed strands and synthesize new strands of DNA.

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Semi-conservative replication

A process where each of the two created DNA molecules contains one original strand and one newly synthesized strand.

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Gene regulation

The process by which RNA polymerase copies only the wanted genes.

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Stem cells

Unprogrammed cells that can differentiate into various cell types.

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Epigenetics

An emerging field suggesting that life experiences can affect gene expression in offspring.

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Nucleus

The cell organelle where DNA is stored and transcription occurs.

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Cytoplasm

The part of the cell where tRNA retrieves amino acids.

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25000 genes

The approximate number of genes present in every cell.

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Locus

Position of gene on its specific chromosomes.

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Linked genes

Genes on the same chromosome.

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Cell division

The process by which cells grow, repair damaged tissue, or prepare for sexual reproduction.

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Mitosis

Type of cell division for growth and repair.

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Meiosis

Type of cell division for the production of gametes.