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GWHS AP Biology - Chapter 19: Viruses Flashcards

Viruses

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8910662566virusparticle made up of nucleic acid, protein, and in some cases lipids that can replicate only by infecting living cells.0
8910662567capsidthe outer covering of protein surrounding the nucleic acid of a virus1
8910662568viral envelopea membrane that cloaks the capsid that in turn encloses a viral genome2
8910662569bacteriophagesviruses that infect bacteria3
8910662571lytic cyclea viral reproductive cycle in which copies of a virus are made within a host cell, which then bursts open, releasing new viruses4
8910662573prophagethe viral DNA that is embedded in the host cell's DNA5
8910662574lysogenic cyclea viral reproductive cycle in which the viral DNA is added to the host cell's DNA and is copied along with the host cell's DNA6
8910662576retrovirusAn RNA virus that reproduces by transcribing its RNA into DNA and then inserting the DNA into a cellular chromosome; an important class of cancer-causing viruses.7
8910662577reverse transcriptasea polymerase that catalyzes the formation of DNA using RNA as a template8
8910662578HIVretrovirus that causes aids9
8910662579AIDSa syndrome caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) that renders immune cells ineffective, permitting opportunistic infections, malignancies, and neurologic diseases to develop; transmitted sexually or through contaminated blood10
8910662580provirusViral DNA that inserts into a host genome.11
8910662586restriction enzymeany of the enzymes that cut nucleic acid at specific restriction sites and produce restriction fragments12

Campbell AP Biology--CHAPTER 3 Flashcards

terms along with vital information covering Campbell's 6th edition Biology textbook

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7343268989polar covalenttype of bond in water? Oxygen is more electronegative than hydrogen and the electrons of the polar bonds spend more time near oxygen thus, making oxygen more negativity charged and hydrogen more positively charged0
7343268990Cohesionholding a substance together1
7343268991Adhesionclinging of a substance to another2
7343268992Capillary actionthe attraction of the surface of a liquid to the surface of a solid, which causes the liquid to rise or fall Capillary action is the ability of a liquid to flow in narrow spaces without assistance. It occurs because of intermolecular forces between the liquid and surrounding solid surfaces. If the diameter of the tube is sufficiently small, then the combination of surface tension (which is caused by cohesion within the liquid) and adhesive forces between the liquid and container wall act to propel the liquid. When adhesion > cohesion, capillary action occurs.3
7343268993Surface TensionA measure of how difficult it is to break/stretch a surface4
7343268994Kinetic Energyenergy of motion5
7343268995Heattotal kinetic energy due to molecular motion6
7343268996Calorieamount of heat it takes to move 1 gram of substance 1 degree Celsius higher7
7343268997Temperatureintensity of heat due to average kinetic energy8
7343268998Specific heatamount of heat needed to be absorbed /lost to change the temperature by 1 degree Celsius water has a high _____.9
7343268999water1 calorie/1 gram/I degree Celsius is the specific heat of ____.10
7343269000Evaporative coolingremains of a liquid cool down11
7343269001vaporizationamount of heat needed to turn liquid into gas12
7343269002evaporationprocess of liquid becoming gas13
7343269003How does the density of water contribute to aquatic life?if ice sank, ponds/oceans/lakes would freeze solid, killing the life (during the summer only top would thaw) instead the floating ice insulates liquid water from below preventing it from freezing and killing animals14
7343269004solutionliquid completely homogeneous of two or more substances15
7343269005solventdissolving agent16
7343269006solutesubstance dissolved17
7343269007aqueous solutionwater is solvent18
7343269008hydration shellsphere of water molecules around dissolved ions19
7343269009hydrophobicwater hating substances20
7343269010hydrophilicwater loving substances21
7343269011molethe molecular weightof a substance expressed in grams (6.02 x 10^23)22
7343269012molarityconcentration measured by number of mols/liter of solution23
7343269013hydrogen ionH+24
7343269014hydroxide ionOH-25
7343269015hydronium ionH30+26
7343269016acidsincrease H+ concentration27
7343269017basesreduce H+ concentration28
7343269018pH scalemeasures concentration of H+ (scale from 1-14)29
7343269019bufferssubstance that minimizes changes in H+/OH- concentration30
7343269020acid precipitationpresence of sulfur oxides/nitrogen oxides and gaseous compounds react with air and goes into lakes, oceans, and soil, affecting animal life31

AP Biology Unit 8 Genetics Flashcards

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8818966489geneticsThe field of biology devoted to understanding how characteristics are transmitted from parents to offspring.0
8818966490heredityThe transmission of characteristics from parents to offspring.1
8818966491traitA genetically determined variant of a characteristic, such as yellow flower color.2
8818966492pollinationOccurs when pollen grains produced in the anthers, are transferred to the female reproductive part of a flower, called the stigma.3
8818966493self-pollinationOccurs when pollen is transferred from the anthers of a flower to the stigma of either that flower or another flower on the SAME plant.4
8818966494cross-pollinationPollination that occurs between flowers of two plants.5
8818966495true-breedingPure for a trait that always produces offspring with that trait when they self-pollinate.6
8818966496P generationThe true breeding parent generation in Mendel's experiment.7
8818966497F1 generationFirst filial generation; the offspring of the P generation by cross-pollination in Mendel's experiment.8
8818966498F2 generationSecond filial generation; the offspring of the F1 generation by self-pollination in Mendel's experiment.9
8818966499dominantMasks the factor for another trait in a pair of traits; represented by capital letters10
8818966500recessiveThe trait that sometimes has no observable effect on an organism's appearance (represented by lowercase letters)11
8818966501law of segregationStates that a pair of factors is segregated, or separated, during the formation of gametes.12
8818966502law of independent assortmentStates that factors separate independently of one another during the formation of gametes.13
8818966503molecular geneticsThe study of the structure and function of chromosomes and genes.14
8818966504alleleEach of two or more alternative forms of a gene.15
8818966505genotypeAn organism's genetic makeup (the alleles or letters)16
8818966506phenotypean organism's genetic makeup; the alleles or letters (e.g. BB, Bb, and bb)17
8818966507homozygousWhen both alleles of a pair are alike (e.g. BB and bb)18
8818966508heterozygousWhen the two alleles in a pair are different (e.g. Bb)19
8818966509probabilityThe likelihood that a specific event will occur.20
8818966510monohybrid crossa cross in which only one characteristic is tracked (e.g. only look at eye color); the Punnet square is 2 x 221
8818966511Punnett squarediagram used to aid biologists in predicting the probable distribution of inherited traits in the offspring; the parent alleles go on the outside and offspring inside22
8818966512genotypic ratioThe ratio of the genotypes that appear in offspring.23
8818966513phenotypic ratioThe ratio of the offspring's phenotypes.24
8818966514testcrossA cross in which an individual of unknown genotype is crossed with a homozygous recessive individual.25
8818966515complete dominanceA relationship in which one allele is completely dominant over the other.26
8818966516incomplete dominanceneither allele is completely dominant over the other (e.g. when a red and white flower make a pink flower)27
8818966517codominanceWhen both alleles for a gene are expressed in heterozygous offspring.28
8818966518dihybrid crossA cross in which two characteristics are tracked (e.g. eye color and hair color); the Punnet square is 4 by 429
8818966519MendelA monk who studied heredity in garden peas. He used statistics to discover dominant and recessive traits, the law of segregation, and the law of independent assortment.30

AP Biology Campbell Ch 21 Flashcards

The Genetic Basis of Development

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5974801188model organismorganism choosen for study0
5974801189embryonic developmentgives rise to cells of different types and higher level structures1
5974801190cell divisionmany mitotic cell devisions, the zygote gives rise to a large number of cells2
5974801191cell differentiationcells become specialized in structure and function3
5974801192morhogenesisthe biological process that causes an organism to develop its shape4
5974801194totipotentdescribing a cell that can give rise to all parts of an organism5
5974801195somatic cellsany cells that are not your sex cells6
5974801196cloningmaking a geniticall identical individual7
5974801197nuclear transplantationremoves the nucleus of an infertilized eff cell or zygote and replace it with the nucleus of a differentiated cell8
5974801199reproductive cloningthe goal to reproduce new indivuals9
5974801200stem cellunspecialized cell that can divide during a single division into one identical daughter cells10
5974801201therapeutic cloningwhen a major aim of cloning is to produce embryonic stem cells to treat disease11
5974801202cell determinationstem cells become committed to develop into only one type of cell12
5974801204cytoplasmic determinantsmaternal substances in egg that influence the course of early development.13
5974801206embryonic lethalmutations with phenotype causing death at the the embryonic or larval stage14
5974801208segmentation genesgap genes, pair rules genes, segment polarity15
5974801209homeotic genesthe anatomical identity of the segments is set by this master regulatory gene16
5974801210transcriptional regulationturning off and on of specific genes17
5974801211cell lineagethe ancestry of a cell18
5974801212cell signalinghelps direct daughter cells down the appropriate pathways19
5974801213apoptosisprogrammed cell death20
5974801214chimeraorganism with a mixture of genetically different cells21
5974801215organ identity genesplant homeotic genes that use positional information to determine which emerging leaves develop into which tpes of floral organs22
5974801216homeobox180 nucleotide sequence withing homeotic genes and some other developmental genes that is widely conserved in animals23

AP Biology Properties of Water Flashcards

A review of all of the Campbell 7th Edition terms for the new 2013 AP Biology Curriculum

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7480423704polarMolecule with partial charges. Mixes with water.0
7480423705nonpolarNo partial charges. Do not mix with water.1
7480423706electronegativityAttraction of an atom for electrons in a covalent bond.2
7480423707cohesionWater molecules sticking to each other.3
7480423708adhesionWater molecules sticking to other surfaces.4
7480423709soluteSomething dissolved in a solution.5
7480423710solventDissolving agent of a solution.6
7480423711capillary actionA process powered by adhesion that causes water molecules to move upward through a narrow tube such as the stem of a plant.7
7480423712Heat capacity/specific heatthe amount of thermal energy that must be absorbed or lost to change the temperature of a substance or object by 1oC8
7480423713surface tensionAn inward force that tends to minimize the surface area of a liquid; it causes the surface to behave as if it were a thin skin9
7480423714heat of vaporizationThe amount of energy required for the liquid at its boiling point to become a gas10
7480423715heat of fusionthe amount of energy required to change a substance from the solid phase to the liquid phase at its melting point11
7480423717hydrophobicinsoluble in water12
7480423718hydrophilichaving a tendency to mix with, dissolve in, or be wetted by water.13
7480423719covalent bondsBonds created by sharing electrons with other atoms.14
7480423720ionic bondsBonds between atoms that form by transferring electrons15
7480423721hydrogen bondsVery weak bonds; occurs when a hydrogen atom in one molecule is attracted to the electrostatic atom in another molecule16
7480423722polar covalent bondA covalent bond between atoms that differ in electronegativity. The shared electrons are pulled closer to the more electronegative atom, making it slightly negative and the other atom slightly positive.17
7480423723ionsCharged atoms18
7480423726acidA substance that increases the hydrogen ion concentration of a solution.19
7480423727baseA substance that decreases the hydrogen ion concentration in a solution.20
7480423728alkalinea basic substance; chemically, a substance that absorbs hydrogen ions or releases hydroxyl ions; in reference to natural water, a measure of the base content of the water.21
7480423729pH scalemeasurement system used to indicate the concentration of hydrogen ions (H+) in solution; ranges from 0 to 14. O is most acidic + and 14 is most basic + or alkaline.22
7480423730bufferA solution that minimizes changes in pH when extraneous acids or bases are added to the solution.23
7480423731transpirationThe process by which water is lost through a plant's leaves24
7480423732evaporative coolingThe process in which the surface of an object becomes cooler during evaporation, owing to a change of the molecules with the greatest kinetic energy from the liquid to the gaseous state.25
7480423733temperatureA measure of the average energy of motion of the particles of a substance.26
7480423736hydrogen ionsH+, acids27
7480423737hydroxide ionsOH-, bases28

AP Biology - Chapter 10 (photosynthesis), AP Biology Chapter 10 Photosynthesis Flashcards

AP Bio Photosynthesis

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8575874671photosynthesis (definition)process of harnessing light energy to build carbohydrates in autotrophs (ex. plants, cyanobacteria)0
8575874672photosynthesis (equation)6 CO2 + 6 H2O + light energy --> C6H12O6 + 6 O21
8575874673autotrophorganism that CAN capture energy from sunlight or chemicals and use it to produce its own food (producer)2
8575874674heterotrophorganism that CANNOT produce its own food and therefore obtains it by consuming other living things (consumer)3
8575874675light-dependent reactions1st step of photosynthesis during which light energy is captured and used to synthesize ATP and NADPH4
8575874676light-independent reactions (aka Calvin cycle)2nd step of photosynthesis during which CO2 is incorporated into a sugar molecule using ATP and NADPH produced during the light dep. rx.5
8575874677thylakoid membranes of chloroplastslocation of light-dependent reactions6
8575874678stroma of chloroplastslocation of light-independent reactions7
8575874679inverseWhat is the relationship between wavelength and energy?8
8575874680pigmentssubstances that can absorb particular wavelengths of light energy9
8575874681absorption spectrumgraph of a pigment's ability to absorb various wavelengths of light10
8575874682action spectrumgraph of a plant's photosynthesis rate at different wavelengths of light11
8575874683violet, blue and redWhich wavelengths of the visible light spectrum do chlorophylls ABSORB?12
8575874684green and yellowWhich wavelengths of the visible light spectrum do chlorophylls REFLECT?13
8575874685carotenoidsaccessory pigments in chloroplasts that broaden the spectrum of colors used in photosynthesis (absorb green/blue but reflect red/yellow/orange)14
8575874686mesophyll(C) ground tissue of a leaf, sandwiched between upper and lower epidermis that specializes in photosynthesis15
8575874687chlorophyll bpigment, green/olive, in chloroplast16
8575874688chlorophyll apigment, blue/green, in chloroplast17
8575874689excited statewhen absorbed photon energy causes electron to move away from nucleus18
8575874690photosystemslocated in the thylakoid membrane and trap light energy and use it to excite electrons19
8575874691parts of photosystemsaccessory (aka antenna) pigments, reaction center chlorophyll a, primary electron acceptor20
8575874692reaction-center complex(4) centrally located proteins associated with a special pair of chlorophyll a molecules and a primary electron acceptor21
8575874693light harvesting complex(3) proteins associated with pigment molecules that capture light energy and transfers it to center of a photosystem22
8575874694photosystem II (PS II)1st of two light harvesting units in thylakoid membrane that passes excited electrons to reaction-center chlorophyll23
8575874695primary electron acceptor(2) electrons from the reaction-center in thylakoid membranes are transferred to this molecule24
8575874696watersplitting this molecule replaces electrons which are excited and passed to primary electron acceptor in PSII25
8575874697O2released as a byproduct of splitting water26
8575874698photosystem I (PS I)2nd of two light-capturing units in thylakoid membranes that replaces its electrons by those from the 1st complex and results in production of NADPH27
8575874699proton-motive forcecreated by pumping hydrogen ions from stroma to thylakoid space during electron transport chain between PS II and PS I28
8575874700ATP synthaseenzyme that synthesies ATP by utilizing a proton-motive force29
8575874701Calvin cycle, dark reactions, and carbon fixationother names for light independent reactions30
85758747023 steps of light independent reaction1. carbon fixation 2. reduction 3. regeneration of RuBP31
8575874703reductionstep in Calvin cycle that produces sugar G3P32
8575874704carbon dioxidemolecule reduced in Calvin cycle to produce sugar33
8575874705thylakoids(C) flattened membranous sacs inside chloroplasts that contain systems which convert light energy to chemical energy34
8575874706absorbedenergy is ____________ in photosynthesis35
8575874707releasedenergy is _____________ in cellular respiration36
8575874708glucose and oxygenreactants of cellular respiration37
8575874709carbon dioxide and waterreactants of photosynthesis38
8575874710glucosesource of electrons used in ETC of cellular respiration39
8575874711intermembrane spacesite of proton gradient built up in cellular respiration40
8575874712thylakoid spacesite of proton gradient built up in photosynthesis41
8575874713NAD+ and FADhigh energy electron carrier(s) before reduction in cellular respiration (after they drop off electrons at ETC)42
8575874714NADH and FADH2high energy electron carrier(s) after reduction in cellular respiration (after they pick up electrons from Kreb's cycle)43
8575874715NADP+high energy electron carrier(s ) before reduction in photosynthesis (after they drop off electrons for Calvin cycle)44
8575874716NADPHhigh energy electron carrier(s ) after reduction in photosynthesis (after they pick up electrons from ETC)45
8575874717ATPenergy product(s) from ETC in cellular respiration46
8575874718ATP and NADPHenergy product(s) from ETC in photosynthesis47
8575874719H2Oreactant(s) oxidized in photosynthesis (source of electrons)48
8575874720cyclic electron flowlight dependent reactions using only photosystem I to pump protons and generate excess ATP (not NADPH)49
8575874721linear electron flowlight dependent reactions involving both photosystems; electrons from H2O are used to reduce NADP to NADPH50
8575874722rubiscoenzyme with affinity for both CO2 and O2 that catalyzes first step of Calvin cycle by adding CO2 to ribulose bisphosphate (RuBP)51
8575874723PEP carboxylaseenzyme with great affinity for CO2 (gas) adds it to phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) to form oxaloacetate (4-carbon solid) prior to photosynthesis52
8575874724stomatapore-like openings on underside of leaves that allow gases (CO2 and O2) and water to diffuse in and out53
8575874725bundle-sheath cellstightly packed around the veins of a leaf (site of Calvin cycle in C4 plants)54
8575874726photorespirationoccurs on hot, dry days when stomata close, O2 accumulates and Rubisco fixes O2 rather than CO2, using up ATP, O2 and sugars55
8575874727C3 plantsdo not separately fix CO2 and use Rubisco in Calvin Cycle56
8575874728C4 plantsspatially separate carbon fixation (mesophyll cells) from Calvin Cycle (bundle-sheath cells); use PEP carboxylase instead of Rubisco to fix CO257
8575874729CAM plantstemporally separate carbon fixation (day) and Calvin Cycle (night); use PEP carboxylase instead of Rubisco to fix CO258
8575874730autotrophorganism capable of synthesizing its own food from CO₂ and other inorganic raw materials. The producers.59
8575874731heterotrophan organism that depends on other's complex organic substances for nutrition.60
8575874732photoautotrophplants that use energy from sunlight to convert carbon dioxide and water to carbon compounds.61
8575874733chlorophyllthe green pigment located within chloroplasts. It absorbs light energy to drive the synthesis of food molecules in the chloroplast.62
8575874734mesophyllthe tissue in the interior of the leaf, contains 30-40 chloroplasts63
8575874735stromathick fluid contained in the inner membrane of a chloroplast, surrounding thylakoids membranes.64
8575874736photosynthesisprocess by which plants and some other organisms use light energy to convert water and carbon dioxide into oxygen and high-energy carbohydrates such as sugars and starches 6CO₂ + 12H₂O + Light Energy → C₆H₁₂O₆ + 6O₂ + 6H₂O65
8575874737splitting of waterphotolysis66
8575874738photophosphorylationThe process of generating ATP from ADP and phosphate by means of a proton-motive force generated by the thylakoid membrane of the chloroplast during the light reactions of photosynthesis.67
8575874739carbon fixationincorporating CO₂ from the atmosphere into organic molecules from the chloroplast68
8575874740rubiscoRibulose biphosphate carboxylase, an enzyme that fixes CO₂ together with RuBP.69
8575874741RuBPribulose biphosphate70
8575874742electromagnetic spectrumthe entire range of radiation71
8575874743spectrometera machine that measures the ability of a pigment to absorb various wavelengths of light72
8575874744reaction centerwhere the first light-driven chemical reaction of photosynthesis occurs, e⁻ goes in, gets excited and jumps up, grabbed by PEA73
8575874745primary electron acceptorgrabs the e⁻ when it gets excited and dumps it into ETC74
8575874746photosystem IIfirst photosystem, center is p680, takes in H₂O, splits and leaves out 1/2 O₂ and takes 2 e⁻, excites electrons and sends to primary acceptor75
8575874747photosystem Itakes e⁻ from ETC and excites them (uses light), gives them to primary acceptor in noncyclic, go down ETC again76
8575874748noncyclic electron flowA route of electron flow during the light reactions of photosynthesis that involves both photosystems and produces ATP, NADPH, and oxygen. The net electron flow is from water to NADP+.77
8575874749G3Pglyceraldehyde-3-phosphate, the threecarbon sugar formed in the Calvin cycle78
8575874750mesophyll cellmore loosely arranged between bundle-sheath and leaf surface. takes in CO₂, fixed by PEP carboxylase79
8575874751PEP carboxylaseadds CO₂ to PEP, higher affinity to CO₂ than rubisco80
8575874752CAM plants(crassulacean acid metabolism) temporal adaptation, open stomata during the night, closed during day. store organic acids made during night in vacuoles81

Campbell Biology Chapter 17- AP Flashcards

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8257052550A Siteone of a ribosome's three binding sites for tRNA during translation; the A site holds the tRNA carrying the next amino acid to be added to the polypeptide chain. (A stands for aminoacyl tRNA.)0
8257052551Alternative RNA Splicinga type of eukaryotic gene regulation at the RNA-processing level in which different mRNA molecules are produced from the same primary transcript, depending on which RNA segments are treated as exons and which as introns1
8257052552Anticodona nucleotide triplet at one end of a tRNA molecule that base-pairs with a particular complementary codon on an mRNA molecule2
8257052553Codona three-nucleotide sequence of DNA or mRNA that specifies a particular amino acid or termination signal; the basic unit of the genetic code3
8257052554Exona sequence within a primary transcript that remains in the RNA after RNA processing; also refers to the region of DNA from which this sequence was transcribed4
8257052555Frameshift MutationA mutation occurring when nucleotides are inserted in or deleted from a gene and the number inserted or deleted is not a multiple of three, resulting in the improper grouping of the subsequent nucleotides into codons5
8257052556Gene Expressionthe process by which information encoded in DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or, in some cases, RNAs that are not translated into proteins and instead function as RNAs6
8257052557Insertiona mutation involving the addition of one or more nucleotide pairs to a gene7
8257052558Introna noncoding, intervening sequence within a primary transcript that is removed from the transcript during RNA processing; also refers to the region of DNA from which this sequence was transcribed8
8257052559Messenger RNA (mRNA)a type of RNA, synthesized using a DNA template, that attaches to ribosomes in the cytoplasm and specifies the primary structure of a protein. (In eukaryotes, the primary RNA transcript must undergo RNA processing to become mRNA.)9
8257052560Missense Mutationa nucleotide-pair substitution that results in a codon that codes for a different amino acid10
8257052561Mutagena chemical or physical agent that interacts with DNA and can cause a mutation (Ex: UV light, tanning bed)11
8257052562Mutationa change in the nucleotide sequence of an organism's DNA or in the DNA or RNA of a virus12
8257052563Nonsense Mutationa mutation that changes an amino acid codon to one of the three stop codons, resulting in a shorter and usually nonfunctional protein13
8257052564Substitutiona type of point mutation in which one nucleotide in a DNA strand and its partner in the complementary strand are replaced by another pair of nucleotides14
8257052565P Siteone of a ribosome's three binding sites for tRNA during translation; the P site holds the tRNA carrying the growing polypeptide chain. (P stands for peptidyl tRNA.)15
8257052566Point Mutationa change in a single nucleotide pair of a gene16
8257052567Poly-A Taila sequence of 50-250 adenine nucleotides added onto the 3′ end of a pre-mRNA molecule17
8257052569Primary Transcriptan initial RNA transcript from any gene; also called pre-mRNA when transcribed from a protein-coding gene. This is what you get right after the slicing occurs.18
8257052570Reading Frameon an mRNA, the triplet grouping of ribonucleotides used by the translation machinery during polypeptide synthesis19
8257052571Ribosomal RNA (rRNA)RNA molecules that, together with proteins, make up ribosomes; the most abundant type of RNA20
8257052572Ribosomea complex of rRNA and protein molecules that functions as a site of protein synthesis in the cytoplasm; consists of a large and a small subunit. In eukaryotic cells, each subunit is assembled in the nucleolus; see also nucleolus21
8257052573RNA Processingmodification of RNA primary transcripts, including splicing out of introns, joining together of exons, and alteration of the 5′ and 3′ ends22
8257052574RNA Splicingafter synthesis of a eukaryotic primary RNA transcript, the removal of portions of the transcript (introns) that will not be included in the mRNA and the joining together of the remaining portions (exons)23
8257052575Silent Mutationa nucleotide-pair substitution that has no observable effect on the phenotype; for example, within a gene, a mutation that results in a codon that codes for the same amino acid24
8257052576TATA Boxa DNA sequence in eukaryotic promoters crucial in forming the transcription initiation complex25
8257052577Template Strandthe DNA strand that provides the pattern, or template, for ordering, by complementary base pairing, the sequence of nucleotides in an RNA transcript26
8257052578Transcriptionthe synthesis of RNA using a DNA27
8257052579Transfer RNA (tRNA)an RNA molecule that functions as a translator between nucleic acid and protein languages by carrying specific amino acids to the ribosome, where they recognize the appropriate codons in the mRNA28
8257052580TranslationThe synthesis of a polypeptide using the genetic information encoded in an mRNA molecule; there is a change of "language" from nucleotides to amino acids29
8257052581Triplet Codea genetic information system in which sets of three-nucleotide-long words specify the amino acids for polypeptide chains30
8257052582Wobbleflexibility in the base-pairing rules in which the nucleotide at the 5′ end of a tRNA anticodon can form hydrogen bonds with more than one kind of base in the third position (3′ end) of a codon31
8363982307Silent mutationsusually found in noncoding regions of DNA32

AP Biology: Big Idea 4 Flashcards

AP Biology

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6716234114activation energyThe amount of energy needed to push the reactants over an energy barrier.0
6716234115enzyme-substrate complexWhen an enzyme binds to its substrate, it forms:1
6716234116active siteA pocket or groove on the surface of the enzyme.2
6716234117competitive inhibitorsReduce the productivity of enzymes by blocking substrates from entering active sites.3
6716234118noncompetitive inhibitorsImpede enzymatic reactions by binding to another part of the enzyme (other than the active site).4
6716234119allosteric regulationWhen a protein's function at one site is affected by the binding of a regulatory molecule to a separate site.5
6716234120feedback inhibitionA metabolic pathway is switched off by the inhibitory binding of its end product to an enzyme that acts early in the pathway.6
6716234121keystone speciesA plant or animal that plays a unique and crucial role in the way an ecosystem functions.7
6716234122celluloseCarbohydrate component of plant cell walls.8
6716234123starchStorage polysaccharide of plants.9
6716234124glycogenExtremely branched polymer of glucose.10
6716234125-oseSuffix of a sugar.11
6716234126steroidsMade of 4 rings of carbon.12
6716234127peptide bondBonds that connect amino acids.13
6716234128disulphide bridgesReinforce tertiary structure.14
6716234129primary structureChain of amino acids.15
6716234130secondary structureEither an alpha helix or beta pleated sheet.16
6716234131tertiary structureResults from interactions between side chains.17
6716234132quaternary structureResults from 2 or more polypeptide subunits.18
6716234133phosphodiester bondsBonds between phosphate group and pentose sugar in nucleic acids.19
6716234134dehydration synthesisCondensation reaction where molecules are connected by loss of a water molecule.20
6716234135hydrolysisBreaking down complex molecules by the chemical addition of water.21
6716234136glycosidic linkageA covalent bond formed between two monosaccharides by a dehydration reaction.22
6716234137species richnessThe number of different species in a community.23
6716234138species diversityThe number and relative abundance of species in a community.24
6716234139exponential growthGrowth of a population in an ideal, unlimited environment, represented by a J-shaped curve.25
6716234140logistic growthGrowth pattern in which a population's growth rate slows or stops following a period of exponential growth, forming an S-shaped curve.26
6716234141carrying capacity (K)Maximum population of a particular species that a given habitat can support over a given period.27
6716234142limiting factorsAny biotic or abiotic factor that restricts the existence, numbers, reproduction, or distribution of organisms.28
6716234143density dependent factorsA limiting factor of a population wherein large, dense populations are more strongly affected than small, less crowded ones.29
6716234144density independent factorsLimiting factor that affects all populations in similar ways, regardless of population size.30
6716234145r-selectionAlso called density-independent selection. Characterized by many offspring with little or no parental care.31
6716234146K-selectionAlso called density-dependent selection. Characterized by few offspring with little or much parental care.32
6716234147type I survivorshipUsually experience high survival in early and middle life, followed by a rapid decline in later life. Usually K-selected33
6716234148type II survivorshipExperience roughly a constant mortality rate regardless of age. Prey animals such as birds can follow this pattern of survival.34
6716234149type III survivorshipExperience the greatest mortality early on in life, with relatively low rates of death for those surviving. Usually r-selected.35
6716234150age distributionA model used in population geography that describes the ages and number of males and females within a given population.36

AP Biology Unit 8 Genetics Flashcards

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9297965470geneticsThe field of biology devoted to understanding how characteristics are transmitted from parents to offspring.0
9297965471heredityThe transmission of characteristics from parents to offspring.1
9297965472traitA genetically determined variant of a characteristic, such as yellow flower color.2
9297965473pollinationOccurs when pollen grains produced in the anthers, are transferred to the female reproductive part of a flower, called the stigma.3
9297965474self-pollinationOccurs when pollen is transferred from the anthers of a flower to the stigma of either that flower or another flower on the SAME plant.4
9297965475cross-pollinationPollination that occurs between flowers of two plants.5
9297965476true-breedingPure for a trait that always produces offspring with that trait when they self-pollinate.6
9297965477P generationThe true breeding parent generation in Mendel's experiment.7
9297965478F1 generationFirst filial generation; the offspring of the P generation by cross-pollination in Mendel's experiment.8
9297965479F2 generationSecond filial generation; the offspring of the F1 generation by self-pollination in Mendel's experiment.9
9297965480dominantMasks the factor for another trait in a pair of traits; represented by capital letters10
9297965481recessiveThe trait that sometimes has no observable effect on an organism's appearance (represented by lowercase letters)11
9297965482law of segregationStates that a pair of factors is segregated, or separated, during the formation of gametes.12
9297965483law of independent assortmentStates that factors separate independently of one another during the formation of gametes.13
9297965485alleleEach of two or more alternative forms of a gene.14
9297965486genotypeAn organism's genetic makeup (the alleles or letters)15
9297965487phenotypean organism's genetic makeup; the alleles or letters (e.g. BB, Bb, and bb)16
9297965488homozygousWhen both alleles of a pair are alike (e.g. BB and bb)17
9297965489heterozygousWhen the two alleles in a pair are different (e.g. Bb)18
9297965490probabilityThe likelihood that a specific event will occur.19
9297965491monohybrid crossa cross in which only one characteristic is tracked (e.g. only look at eye color); the Punnet square is 2 x 220
9297965492Punnett squarediagram used to aid biologists in predicting the probable distribution of inherited traits in the offspring; the parent alleles go on the outside and offspring inside21
9297965493genotypic ratioThe ratio of the genotypes that appear in offspring.22
9297965494phenotypic ratioThe ratio of the offspring's phenotypes.23
9297965495testcrossA cross in which an individual of unknown genotype is crossed with a homozygous recessive individual.24
9297965496complete dominanceA relationship in which one allele is completely dominant over the other.25
9297965497incomplete dominanceneither allele is completely dominant over the other (e.g. when a red and white flower make a pink flower)26
9297965498codominanceWhen both alleles for a gene are expressed in heterozygous offspring.27
9297965499dihybrid crossA cross in which two characteristics are tracked (e.g. eye color and hair color); the Punnet square is 4 by 428
9297965502MendelA monk who studied heredity in garden peas. He used statistics to discover dominant and recessive traits, the law of segregation, and the law of independent assortment.29
9297978529multiple allele traittrait controlled by one gene with more than two alleles30
9297981598pleiotropyA single gene having multiple effects on an individuals phenotype31
9297983864polygenic traitstraits controlled by two or more genes32
9297986790epistasisthe phenotypic expression of a gene at one locus alters that of a gene at a second locus33
9297990113locuslocation of a gene on a chromosome34
9297995237sex-linked traitspassed along the X chromosome; more common in males then females35
9297997331sex influenced traitscertain human traits that's expression is influenced by the presence of male or female sex hormones36
9298013167environmental effects on phenotypesomething in the environment influences that expression of a trait37
9298025939pedigree analysisChart showing one trait being carried over many generations38
9298028757autosomal dominant traitThe appearance of a trait in every generation is typical of a(n)39
9298033434autosomal recessive traitMay skip generations, neither parent may exhibit trait of affected offspring40
9298035865sex-linked recessive traitmore males than females affected41

AP Biology Heredity Test Review Flashcards

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6619670685final result of mitosis in humansgenetically identical 2n somatic cells0
6619718711kinetochore microtubules assist in the process of splitting centromeres bycreating tension and pulling toward opposite poles1
6619732074a cleavage furrowa groove in the plasma membrane between daughter nuclei2
6619741814cyclin dependent kinase (cdk) isenzyme that attaches phosphate groups to other proteins3
6619752776If the M-phase checkpoint does NOT happen correctly then,the cell would be stopped in metaphase4
6619758272homologous chromosomescarry information for the same traits5
6619768115sexual reproductionindividuals transmit half their nuclear genes to each of their offspring6
6619786808metaphase I7
6619793587anaphase II8
6619805669independent assortmentrandom way each pair of homologous chromosomes lines up at metaphase plate in meiosis I9
6619817272natural selection is related to sexual reproductionsexual reproduction results in many new gene combinations, some of which will lead to differential reproduction10
6619853283monohybrid cross11
6619855430dihybrid cross12
6619863526pleiotropysingle allele to have multiple phenotypic effects13
6619871649chromosome theory of inheritanceMendelian genes are at specific loci on the chromosome and in turn, segregate during meiosis14
6619887931Barr bodymammal females turn the extra X chromosome into a useless entity15
6619897078one map unita 1% frequency of recombination between two genes16
6619918844linked genesgenes that are generally inherited together17
6619922688epistasisphenotypic expression of one gene affects the expression of another gene18
6619924629polygenic inheritancea single phenotypic character is affected by two or more genes19
6619931515codominaceboth phenotypes expressed in heterozygous offspring20
6619935218incomplete dominanceheterozygous phenotype intermediate between two homozygous phenotypes21
6619950514prophase II22
6619977841pedigree chart23
6619989941MPFM phase promoting factor, triggers cell's passage into the M phase24
6620012425density dependent inhibitionphenomenon in which crowded cells stop dividing25
6620015168anchorage dependencefor cells to divide they must be attached to a substratum26

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