Biology Review (Large Set)

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155 Terms

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Activation Energy
amount of energy needed to start a reaction
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Amino Acid
Bounded by peptide bonds; monomer of a protein
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Carbohydrate
(monosaccharides) main source of energy for the cell; 1 gram \= 4 calories
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Catalyst
used in enzymes to lower the activation energy and speed up the reaction
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Enzyme
Protein and Catalyst; have an active site and a substrate
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Lipid
(1 glycerol \= 3 fatty acids) used for long term energy storage, make up the phospholipid bilayer; 1 gram \= 9 calories
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Monosaccharide
simple sugars, monomer for carbs (glucose and sucrose)
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Nucleic Acids
Made of nucleotides, function is to store genetic information which can be seen in DNA and RNA
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Organic Molecule
bounded molecules made of carbon
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Protein
(amino acids) referred to as the building blocks
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Cell Theory
All living things are made of cells; Cells come from other cells; Cells are the basic structure and function of an organism
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Differentiation
How cells (stem cells) get their jobs
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Eukaryote
Cells that have a nucleus, large, complex (Ex. Plants and Animals)
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Multicellular Organisms
Organisms composed of many cells (Ex. tissue, humans, etc.)
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Organelles
Small structures that perform various functions for the cell (reside within the cytoplasm)
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Prokaryote
Cells with no nucleus, small, simple (Ex. Bacteria)
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Stem Cells
Undifferentiated cells
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Unicellular Organism
Organisms composed of only one cell (Ex. Bacteria)
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Passive Transport
No energy required; transport of small and medium materials across the plasma membrane (Osmosis, Diffusion, and Facilitated Diffusion)
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Diffusion
No energy required; transports molecules from high to low concentrations in order to even them out (for small materials)
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Osmosis
No energy required; transports WATER from high to low concentrations in order to even them out
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Facilitated Diffusion
"Semi-active" uses transport proteins to help move material across the plasma membrane, but still doesn't require energy
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Homeostasis
Internal condition is balanced
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Active Transport
Requires energy (ATP) for large molecules. Gets molecules across the cell through pumps and vesicles (endocytosis and exocytosis)
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Pumps
Molecules are "pumped" by a transport protein to get across the membrane, requiring energy
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Vesicles
Used when molecules are too large to pass through the membrane, even with the help of a transport protein
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Endocytosis
Large molecules going INTO the cell
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Exocytosis
Large molecules going OUT of the cell
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Concentration Gradient
Drives diffusion; moves from left to right
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Nucleus
Only in eukaryotic cells, holds DNA
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Mitochondria
Makes ATP, (Power house of the cell); Where Cellular Respiration occurs
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Chloroplast
Makes glucose for the plant; Where Photosynthesis occurs
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Lysosomes
Breaks down waste, food, etc.
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Vacuole
Where molecules, waste, etc. is stored; Bigger in Plant Cells
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Ribosomes
Makes protein; Where translation in protein synthesis occurs
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Rough ER
Transports Proteins; Has Ribosomes
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Smooth ER
Transports Proteins; Does not have Ribosomes
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Golgi Apparatus
UPS of the cell; Sorts and packages molecules
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Cilia
Movement for Eukaryotes
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Flagella
Movement for Prokaryotes
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Cell Membrane
Semi-permeable, therefore maintains homeostasis
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Nuclear Envelope
Controls what goes in/out of the nucleus
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Cell Wall
Only in Plant Cells; supports and provides protection
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Cytoplasm
dissolves nutrients, allowing diffusion to occur; holds all the organelles
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Hypotonic
Water only entering the cell, resulting in it being Lysed/Burst
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Isotonic
Same amount of water entering the cell as existing, resulting in an equilibrium, normal Cell
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Hypertonic
Water only exiting the cell, resulting in it being shriveled
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Photosynthesis

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Cellular Respiration

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Anaerobic Respiration
Doesn't require oxygen; includes Lactic Acid Fermentation and Alcohol Fermentation of Cellular Respiration
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ATP
Main source of energy for the cell; made in the Mitochondria. When used in the cell it turns into ADP and returns to the Mitochondria to be converted back
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Aerobic Respiration
Stage of Cellular Respiration that requires Energy; includes the Krebs Cycle and ETC
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Lactic Acid Fermentation
In Anaerobic Respiration- pyruvates break down creating energy (found in muscles)
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Alcohol Fermentation
In Anaerobic Respiration- occurs mostly in yeast, pyruvates break down forming alcohol, CO2, and releasing energy
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Chromosome
long thread of DNA containing genetic information
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Sister Chromatid
One of 2 strands of a chromosome that becomes visible during mitosis
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Centromere
region of chromosomes that holds the two sister chromatids together during mitosis
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Centriole
(fishing pole) cell organelle that produces spindle fibers
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Spindle Fibers
Fibers that extend across a dividing eukaryotic cell and assists in the separation of chromosomes
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DNA
Makes up chromosomes and copies itself during cell division, provides a blueprint for protein synthesis by specific arrangement of nitrogenous bases; Deoxyribose, Double Helix
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Cell Cycle
Repeated pattern of growth and division that occurs in eukaryotes
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Daughter Cells
Created at the end of mitosis, each has the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell and will be identical to each other
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Mitosis
Somatic Cells undergo this in order to repair and regrow, creating two identical diploid daughter cells
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Interphase
G1: growth
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S: (synthesis) replicate DNA

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G2: growth

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Prophase
Preparing, Cell membrane begins to break down and spindle fibers form
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Metaphase
Chromosomes line up in the middle and spindle fibers attach to the centromere
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Anaphase
Spindle fibers pull the sister chromatids apart, pulling them away from the center of the cell
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Telophase
Cells membrane forms, spindle fibers retract, and chromosomes uncoil as the cell starts to become two
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Cytokinesis
The division of the cytoplasm into two individual cells
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Cancer
Uncontrolled Cell Growth (tumor)
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Gamete
Sexual reproductive cell (egg and sperm)
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Somatic
Body cell (liver, skin, etc.)
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Haploid
(1n) one set of chromosomes (egg and sperm)
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Diploid
(2n) two sets of chromosomes from each parent
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Homologous Pair
Cluster of four chromosomes, two from male and two from female, can exchange genetic information through crossing over
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Zygote
offspring (baby) where the egg and sperm meet
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Crossing Over
Allows for genetic diversity where the genetic information from male and female swap; occurs during Prophase I
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Meiosis
Start with one diploid cell and end with four unique haploid cells
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Alleles
different forms of a gene (Ex. 'A')
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Dominant
Trait is always expressed if present
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Recessive
Trait is only seen if dominant allele isn't present
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Homozygous
When an organism has two alike alleles for a trait (Ex. AA or aa)
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Heterozygous
When an organism has two different alleles for a trait (Ex. Aa)
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Genotype
Genetic makeup of an organism, revealing the types of alleles he/she has inherited (Ex. AA)
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Phenotype
Physical appearance/characteristic of an organism (Ex. Blue eyes)
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Monohybrid Cross
examines the inheritance of one trait
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F1 Generation
the first generation's offspring
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F2 Generation
the second generation's offspring
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Incomplete Dominance
Offspring is a mixture of the parent's characteristics through multiple generations
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Pedigree
A chart made to show inheritance patterns within a family
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Codominance
offspring contains BOTH parent's characteristics distinctly
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Polygenic Trait
Trait controlled by two or more genes (Ex. Skin color and Eye Color)
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Multiple Alleles
Exists for a particular trait even through only two alleles are inherited (Ex. Blood Type)
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Sex-Linked Trait
Involves genes on either the X or the Y chromosome; Passed most normally through the Y chromosome (Ex. Color blindness, Hemophilia)
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Trait
Characteristic that can be passed from one parent to offspring
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Heredity
Passing of traits from parent to offspring
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Genetics
Study of Heredity, each somatic cell is a diploid where chromosomes are inherited from offspring's parent
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Mendel
Father of Genetics; responsible of the Law of Inheritance