Biology 2 Mike
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- Bacteria are what type of cells
- Prokaryotes
- Prokaryotes are separated into which two groups?
- Archaea and Bacteria
- Eukaryotes are grouped into these 4 groups
- protists, fungi, plants, animals
- What is a chromatin?
- a long strand of DNA and proteins they condense into chromasomes
- 1" chromosome contains DNA this length...
- 583 feet
- WHo discovered DNA?
- Dr. Johann Friedrich Meisner
- what did Dr. Mesiner first call DNA?
- nuclein
- Who was the first to coin the term nucleic acid?
- Richard Altmann
- What was the conclusion found in the Hershey Chase experiment of 1952?
- DNA is what directs Bacteria to produce more
- Who got screwed out of the Nobel Prize in 1962?
- Rosalind Franklin
- What is DNA's structure called?
- the double helix
- How many strands compose RNA?
- one
- What is the building block of DNA and RNA called?
- a nucleotide
- What are nucleotides composed of?
- a pentose sugar, a nitrogenous base, and a phosphate group
- What are Purines?
- 2 ring structures( Adenine and Guanine)
- What are Pyrimidines?
- One ring structures(uracil, Thymine and Cytosine)
- What Pyrimidines and Purines does DNA contain?
- adenine, guanine, Cytosine, and THymine
- What is the difference between DNA and RNA in regard to nucleotides?
- Uracil instead of Thymine
- What links the sugars of each side of DNA?
- a phosphate group
- How many hydrogen bonds in a T A pair? a C G?
- two, three
- What other organelles is DNA found in?
- Mitochondria(animals) chloroplasts (plants)
- What does the endosymbiotic theory suggest?
- one prokaryote engulfed another symbiotically and the two became mutual partners
- What is a codon?
- 3 nucleotide sequence of DNA and messenger RNA
- whats an anticodon?
- 3 nucleotide sequence of tRNA
- Whats a gene?
- a set of codons, and codes for a single polypeptide
- chromosome?
- double strand of DNA
- locus?
- position on a chromosome where a gene resides
- Genome?
- nuclear plus mitochondrial DNA
- amino acid?
- 20, used for building polypeptides
- proteins and enzymes?
- functional polypeptides
- where does transcription begin?
- inside the nucleus
- after transcription where does mRNA go?
- the cytoplasm for translation
- what is the average polypeptide length in humans?
- 425 AA
- what produces the raw materials for natural selection?
- mutations
- when does nuclear division occur?
- during mitosis
- when is dna replicated?
- during the S phase
- what do chromatin fibers consist of?
- DNA and proteins
- what does karyotype mean?
- the number of chromosomes in a eukaryote
- Mitosis: What happens in interphase?
- DNA replicates
- Mitosis:what happens in Prophase?
- chromatin supercoils into chromosomes
- Mitosis: what happens in prometaphase?
- nuclear envelope breaks down..chromatids now connected to poles
- Mitosis: what happens in Metaphase?
- sister chromatids align along equatorial plate
- Mitosis:what happens in anaphase?
- sister chromatids separate and move to opposite poles
- Mitosis: what happens in telophase?
- nuclei and nucleoli reform cell enters interphase
- which process meiosis or mitosis has more steps?
- meiosis
- what is a genotype?
- the complete set of genes related to a trait or a set of traits
- what is a phenotype?
- the observable characteristics of an individual due to its genotype and interplay with the environment
- what is a mutation?
- a detectable, heritable change in the genotype not caused by recombination
- what percentage of genetic mutations are harmful?
- 70%
- what are the 4 types of chromosomal mutations?
- deltions, duplications, inversions, and translocations
- when were cells known as the fundamental units of life?
- the mid 1800's
- whats the oldest concept of heredity?
- preformation, god placed seeds for everything that would populate the earth
- whats pangenisis?
- a term coined by Darwin but the idea dates back to Hippoclitus, gemmules
- who discovered sperm and when?
- van leeowhick, 1696
- who discovered Ovum?
- De Graaf
- Nicolas de Maalbrache...who was he?
- french rationalist..wanted to put the thinking of the church with descartes..his work led to the school of natural theology
- who wrote the developmental history of animals?
- Karl Von Baer
- Blending Heritance
- the view that traits from each parent blended to form intermediaries
- EPigenesis
- the idea that organisms developed from an undifferentiated mass
- alleles
- different forms of a gene
- particulate theory of inheritance
- the units responsible for inheritance are discreet particles that exist within an organism in pairs, separate during gamete formation, and retain their integrity
- what is mendels first law?
- the law of segregation(telophase)
- What is mendels second law?
- the law of Independent assortment
- what are homologous pairs of chromosomes called?
- autosomes
- Who had a very theistic view of classification?
- Plato
- Who was one of the first to classify living things based on logical division
- Plato
- the history of classifying things began with?
- aristotle
- Aristotles grouping to similarities is now called...
- phenetics
- who developed the system of classification we still use today?
- linnaeus
- what were some of the drawbacks of linnean classification?
- based on essentialist logic, all identification was based only on structure
- what is the practice of classifying living things called?
- taxonomy
- what is studying the evolutionary relationships among living things called?
- systematics
- who provided one of the significant contributions to the study of nature in the western world?
- emperor frederick 2 of prussia
- who wrote one of the classics of biology?
- John Ray
- who was the founder of natural theology?
- Aurelius Augustinus
- in what period of time did natural theology peak?
- 1833-1836
- This guy believed everything was in a state of flux
- Heraclitus
- Who was given credit for being the guy to argue that chance played a major role
- Democritus
- Who recognized the true organic nature of fossils?
- de Maillet and Xenophanes
- Who was the first to publish a scientific age of the earth?
- George Louis De Clerc Buffon, 168,000 years old
- who is now considered the father of evolutionism?
- Buffon
- James Hutton
- changed geology from a sport to a true science
- what is thinking of the world as a steady state called?
- uniformitarianism
- Who published principles of geology?
- Charles Lyell
- the two groups of geologists?
- uniformists and catastrophists