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Bio Chapter 18 Flashcards

campbell's biology, 9th edition --Regulation of Gene Expression

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5644714271) The role of a metabolite that controls a repressible operon is to A) bind to the promoter region and decrease the affinity of RNA polymerase for the promoter. B) bind to the operator region and block the attachment of RNA polymerase to the promoter. C) increase the production of inactive repressor proteins. D) bind to the repressor protein and inactivate it. E) bind to the repressor protein and activate it.E
5644714282) The tryptophan operon is a repressible operon that is A) permanently turned on. B) turned on only when tryptophan is present in the growth medium. C) turned off only when glucose is present in the growth medium. D) turned on only when glucose is present in the growth medium. E) turned off whenever tryptophan is added to the growth medium.E
5644714293) Which of the following is a protein produced by a regulatory gene? A) operon B) inducer C) promoter D) repressor E) corepressorD
5644714304) A lack of which molecule would result in the cell's inability to "turn off" genes? A) operon B) inducer C) promoter D) ubiquitin E) corepressorE
5644714315) Which of the following, when taken up by the cell, binds to the repressor so that the repressor no longer binds to the operator? A) ubiquitin B) inducer C) promoter D) repressor E) corepressorB
5644714326) Most repressor proteins are allosteric. Which of the following binds with the repressor to alter its conformation? A) inducer B) promoter C) RNA polymerase D) transcription factor E) cAMPA
5644714337) A mutation that inactivates the regulatory gene of a repressible operon in an E. coli cell would result in A) continuous transcription of the structural gene controlled by that regulator. B) complete inhibition of transcription of the structural gene controlled by that regulator. C) irreversible binding of the repressor to the operator. D) inactivation of RNA polymerase by alteration of its active site. E) continuous translation of the mRNA because of alteration of its structure.A
5644714348) The lactose operon is likely to be transcribed when A) there is more glucose in the cell than lactose. B) the cyclic AMP levels are low. C) there is glucose but no lactose in the cell. D) the cyclic AMP and lactose levels are both high within the cell. E) the cAMP level is high and the lactose level is low.D
5644714359) Transcription of the structural genes in an inducible operon A) occurs continuously in the cell. B) starts when the pathway's substrate is present. C) starts when the pathway's product is present. D) stops when the pathway's product is present. E) does not result in the production of enzymes.B
56447143610) For a repressible operon to be transcribed, which of the following must occur? A) A corepressor must be present. B) RNA polymerase and the active repressor must be present. C) RNA polymerase must bind to the promoter, and the repressor must be inactive. D) RNA polymerase cannot be present, and the repressor must be inactive. E) RNA polymerase must not occupy the promoter, and the repressor must be inactive.C
56447143711) Allolactose, an isomer of lactose, is formed in small amounts from lactose. An E. coli cell is presented for the first time with the sugar lactose (containing allolactose) as a potential food source. Which of the following occurs when the lactose enters the cell? A) The repressor protein attaches to the regulator. B) Allolactose binds to the repressor protein. C) Allolactose binds to the regulator gene. D) The repressor protein and allolactose bind to RNA polymerase. E) RNA polymerase attaches to the regulator.B
56447143812) Altering patterns of gene expression in prokaryotes would most likely serve the organism's survival in which of the following ways? A) organizing gene expression so that genes are expressed in a given order B) allowing each gene to be expressed an equal number of times C) allowing the organism to adjust to changes in environmental conditions D) allowing young organisms to respond differently from more mature organisms E) allowing environmental changes to alter the prokaryote's genomeC
56447143913) In response to chemical signals, prokaryotes can do which of the following? A) turn off translation of their mRNA B) alter the level of production of various enzymes C) increase the number and responsiveness of their ribosomes D) inactivate their mRNA molecules E) alter the sequence of amino acids in certain proteinsB
56447144014) If glucose is available in the environment of E. coli, the cell responds with a very low concentration of cAMP. When the cAMP increases in concentration, it binds to CAP. Which of the following would you expect to be a measurable effect? A) decreased concentration of the lac enzymes B) increased concentration of the trp enzymes C) decreased binding of the RNA polymerase to sugar metabolism-related promoters D) decreased concentration of alternative sugars in the cell E) increased concentrations of sugars such as arabinose in the cellE
56447144115) In positive control of several sugar-metabolism-related operons, the catabolite activator protein (CAP) binds to DNA to stimulate transcription. What causes an increase in CAP? A) increase in glucose and increase in cAMP B) decrease in glucose and increase in cAMP C) increase in glucose and decrease in cAMP D) decrease in glucose and increase in repressor E) decrease in glucose and decrease in repressorB
56447144216) There is a mutation in the repressor that results in a molecule known as a super-repressor because it represses the lac operon permanently. Which of these would characterize such a mutant? A) It cannot bind to the operator. B) It cannot make a functional repressor. C) It cannot bind to the inducer. D) It makes molecules that bind to one another. E) It makes a repressor that binds CAP.C
56447144317) Which of the following mechanisms is (are) used to coordinate the expression of multiple, related genes in eukaryotic cells? A) Genes are organized into clusters, with local chromatin structures influencing the expression of all the genes at once. B) The genes share a common intragenic sequence, and allow several activators to turn on their transcription, regardless of location. C) The genes are organized into large operons, allowing them to be transcribed as a single unit. D) A single repressor is able to turn off several related genes. E) Environmental signals enter the cell and bind directly to promoters.A
56447144418) If you were to observe the activity of methylated DNA, you would expect it to A) be replicating nearly continuously. B) be unwinding in preparation for protein synthesis. C) have turned off or slowed down the process of transcription. D) be very actively transcribed and translated. E) induce protein synthesis by not allowing repressors to bind to it.C
56447144519) Genomic imprinting, DNA methylation, and histone acetylation are all examples of A) genetic mutation. B) chromosomal rearrangements. C) karyotypes. D) epigenetic phenomena. E) translocation.D
56447144620) When DNA is compacted by histones into 10-nm and 30-nm fibers, the DNA is unable to interact with proteins required for gene expression. Therefore, to allow for these proteins to act, the chromatin must constantly alter its structure. Which processes contribute to this dynamic activity? A) DNA supercoiling at or around H1 B) methylation and phosphorylation of histone tails C) hydrolysis of DNA molecules where they are wrapped around the nucleosome core D) accessibility of heterochromatin to phosphorylating enzymes E) nucleotide excision and reconstructionB
56447144721) Two potential devices that eukaryotic cells use to regulate transcription are A) DNA methylation and histone amplification. B) DNA amplification and histone methylation. C) DNA acetylation and methylation. D) DNA methylation and histone modification. E) histone amplification and DNA acetylation.D
56447144822) During DNA replication, A) all methylation of the DNA is lost at the first round of replication. B) DNA polymerase is blocked by methyl groups, and methylated regions of the genome are therefore left uncopied. C) methylation of the DNA is maintained because methylation enzymes act at DNA sites where one strand is already methylated and thus correctly methylates daughter strands after replication. D) methylation of the DNA is maintained because DNA polymerase directly incorporates methylated nucleotides into the new strand opposite any methylated nucleotides in the template. E) methylated DNA is copied in the cytoplasm, and unmethylated DNA is copied in the nucleus.C
56447144923) In eukaryotes, general transcription factors A) are required for the expression of specific protein-encoding genes. B) bind to other proteins or to a sequence element within the promoter called the TATA box. C) inhibit RNA polymerase binding to the promoter and begin transcribing. D) usually lead to a high level of transcription even without additional specific transcription factors. E) bind to sequences just after the start site of transcription.B
56447145024) Steroid hormones produce their effects in cells by A) activating key enzymes in metabolic pathways. B) activating translation of certain mRNAs. C) promoting the degradation of specific mRNAs. D) binding to intracellular receptors and promoting transcription of specific genes. E) promoting the formation of looped domains in certain regions of DNA.D
56447145125) Transcription factors in eukaryotes usually have DNA binding domains as well as other domains that are also specific for binding. In general, which of the following would you expect many of them to be able to bind? A) repressors B) ATP C) protein-based hormones D) other transcription factors E) tRNAD
56447145226) Gene expression might be altered at the level of post-transcriptional processing in eukaryotes rather than prokaryotes because of which of the following? A) Eukaryotic mRNAs get 5' caps and 3' tails. B) Prokaryotic genes are expressed as mRNA, which is more stable in the cell. C) Eukaryotic exons may be spliced in alternative patterns. D) Prokaryotes use ribosomes of different structure and size. E) Eukaryotic coded polypeptides often require cleaving of signal sequences before localization.C
56447145327) Which of the following experimental procedures is most likely to hasten mRNA degradation in a eukaryotic cell? A) enzymatic shortening of the poly-A tail B) removal of the 5' cap C) methylation of C nucleotides D) methylation of histones E) removal of one or more exonsB
56447145428) Which of the following is most likely to have a small protein called ubiquitin attached to it? A) a cyclin that usually acts in G1, now that the cell is in G2 B) a cell surface protein that requires transport from the ER C) an mRNA that is leaving the nucleus to be translated D) a regulatory protein that requires sugar residues to be attached E) an mRNA produced by an egg cell that will be retained until after fertilizationA
56447145529) In prophase I of meiosis in female Drosophila, studies have shown that there is phosphorylation of an amino acid in the tails of histones of gametes. A mutation in flies that interferes with this process results in sterility. Which of the following is the most likely hypothesis? A) These oocytes have no histones. B) Any mutation during oogenesis results in sterility. C) All proteins in the cell must be phosphorylated. D) Histone tail phosphorylation prohibits chromosome condensation. E) Histone tails must be removed from the rest of the histones.D
56447145630) The phenomenon in which RNA molecules in a cell are destroyed if they have a sequence complementary to an introduced double-stranded RNA is called A) RNA interference. B) RNA obstruction. C) RNA blocking. D) RNA targeting. E) RNA disposal.A
56447145731) At the beginning of this century there was a general announcement regarding the sequencing of the human genome and the genomes of many other multicellular eukaryotes. There was surprise expressed by many that the number of protein-coding sequences was much smaller than they had expected. Which of the following could account for most of the rest? A) "junk" DNA that serves no possible purpose B) rRNA and tRNA coding sequences C) DNA that is translated directly without being transcribed D) non-protein-coding DNA that is transcribed into several kinds of small RNAs with biological function E) non-protein-coding DNA that is transcribed into several kinds of small RNAs without biological functionD
56447145832) Among the newly discovered small noncoding RNAs, one type reestablishes methylation patterns during gamete formation and block expression of some transposons. These are known as A) miRNA. B) piRNA. C) snRNA. D) siRNA. E) RNAi.B
56447145933) Which of the following best describes siRNA? A) a short double-stranded RNA, one of whose strands can complement and inactivate a sequence of mRNA B) a single-stranded RNA that can, where it has internal complementary base pairs, fold into cloverleaf patterns C) a double-stranded RNA that is formed by cleavage of hairpin loops in a larger precursor D) a portion of rRNA that allows it to bind to several ribosomal proteins in forming large or small subunits E) a molecule, known as Dicer, that can degrade other mRNA sequencesA
56447146034) One way scientists hope to use the recent knowledge gained about noncoding RNAs lies with the possibilities for their use in medicine. Of the following scenarios for future research, which would you expect to gain most from RNAs? A) exploring a way to turn on the expression of pseudogenes B) targeting siRNAs to disable the expression of an allele associated with autosomal recessive disease C) targeting siRNAs to disable the expression of an allele associated with autosomal dominant disease D) creating knock-out organisms that can be useful for pharmaceutical drug design E) looking for a way to prevent viral DNA from causing infection in humansC
56447146135) Which of the following describes the function of an enzyme known as Dicer? A) It degrades single-stranded DNA. B) It degrades single-stranded mRNA. C) It degrades mRNA with no poly-A tail. D) It trims small double-stranded RNAs into molecules that can block translation. E) It chops up single-stranded DNAs from infecting viruses.D
56447146236) In a series of experiments, the enzyme Dicer has been inactivated in cells from various vertebrates so that the centromere is abnormally formed from chromatin. Which of the following is most likely to occur? A) The usual mRNAs transcribed from centromeric DNA will be missing from the cells. B) Tetrads will no longer be able to form during meiosis I. C) Centromeres will be euchromatic rather than heterochromatic and the cells will soon die in culture. D) The cells will no longer be able to resist bacterial contamination. E) The DNA of the centromeres will no longer be able to replicate.C
56447146337) Since Watson and Crick described DNA in 1953, which of the following might best explain why the function of small RNAs is still being explained? A) As RNAs have evolved since that time, they have taken on new functions. B) Watson and Crick described DNA but did not predict any function for RNA. C) The functions of small RNAs could not be approached until the entire human genome was sequenced. D) Ethical considerations prevented scientists from exploring this material until recently. E) Changes in technology as well as our ability to determine how much of the DNA is expressed have now made this possible.E
56447146438) You are given an experimental problem involving control of a gene's expression in the embryo of a particular species. One of your first questions is whether the gene's expression is controlled at the level of transcription or translation. Which of the following might best give you an answer? A) You explore whether there has been alternative splicing by examining amino acid sequences of very similar proteins. B) You measure the quantity of the appropriate pre-mRNA in various cell types and find they are all the same. C) You assess the position and sequence of the promoter and enhancer for this gene. D) An analysis of amino acid production by the cell shows you that there is an increase at this stage of embryonic life. E) You use an antibiotic known to prevent translation.B
56447146539) In humans, the embryonic and fetal forms of hemoglobin have a higher affinity for oxygen than that of adults. This is due to A) nonidentical genes that produce different versions of globins during development. B) identical genes that generate many copies of the ribosomes needed for fetal globin production. C) pseudogenes, which interfere with gene expression in adults. D) the attachment of methyl groups to cytosine following birth, which changes the type of hemoglobin produced. E) histone proteins changing shape during embryonic development.A
56447146640) The fact that plants can be cloned from somatic cells demonstrates that A) differentiated cells retain all the genes of the zygote. B) genes are lost during differentiation. C) the differentiated state is normally very unstable. D) differentiated cells contain masked mRNA. E) differentiation does not occur in plants.A
56447146741) In animals, embryonic stem cells differ from adult stem cells in that A) embryonic stem cells are totipotent, and adult stem cells are pluripotent. B) embryonic stem cells are pluripotent, and adult stem cells are totipotent. C) embryonic stem cells have more genes than adult stem cells. D) embryonic stem cells have fewer genes than adult stem cells. E) embryonic stem cells are localized to specific sites within the embryo, whereas adult stem cells are spread throughout the body.A
56447146842) What is considered to be the first evidence of differentiation in the cells of an embryo? A) cell division occurring after fertilization B) the occurrence of mRNAs for the production of tissue-specific proteins C) determination of specific cells for certain functions D) changes in the size and shape of the cell E) changes resulting from inductionB
56447146943) Embryonic lethal mutations result in A) phenotypes that prevent fertilization. B) failure to express maternal effect genes. C) death during pupation. D) phenotypes that are never born/hatched. E) homeotic phenotype changes.D
56447147044) Your brother has just purchased a new plastic model airplane. He places all the parts on the table in approximately the positions in which they will be located when the model is complete. His actions are analogous to which process in development? A) morphogenesis B) determination C) induction D) differentiation E) pattern formationE
56447147145) The product of the bicoid gene in Drosophila provides essential information about A) lethal genes. B) the dorsal-ventral axis. C) the left-right axis. D) segmentation. E) the anterior-posterior axis.E
56447147246) If a Drosophila female has a homozygous mutation for a maternal effect gene, A) she will not develop past the early embryonic stage. B) all of her offspring will show the mutant phenotype, regardless of their genotype. C) only her male offspring will show the mutant phenotype. D) her offspring will show the mutant phenotype only if they are also homozygous for the mutation. E) only her female offspring will show the mutant phenotype.B
56447147347) Mutations in which of the following genes lead to transformations in the identity of entire body parts? A) morphogens B) segmentation genes C) egg-polarity genes D) homeotic genes E) inducersD
56447147448) Which of the following genes map out the basic subdivisions along the anterior-posterior axis of the Drosophila embryo? A) homeotic genes B) segmentation genes C) egg-polarity genes D) morphogens E) inducersB
56447147549) Gap genes and pair-rule genes fall into which of the following categories? A) homeotic genes B) segmentation genes C) egg-polarity genes D) morphogens E) inducersB
56447147650) The bicoid gene product is normally localized to the anterior end of the embryo. If large amounts of the product were injected into the posterior end as well, which of the following would occur? A) The embryo would grow to an unusually large size. B) The embryo would grow extra wings and legs. C) The embryo would probably show no anterior development and die. D) Anterior structures would form in both sides of the embryo. E) The embryo would develop normally.D
56447147751) What do gap genes, pair-rule genes, segment polarity genes, and homeotic genes all have in common? A) Their products act as transcription factors. B) They have no counterparts in animals other than Drosophila. C) Their products are all synthesized prior to fertilization. D) They act independently of other positional information. E) They apparently can be activated and inactivated at any time of the fly's life.A
56447147852) Which of the following statements describes proto-oncogenes? A) Their normal function is to suppress tumor growth. B) They are introduced to a cell initially by retroviruses. C) They are produced by somatic mutations induced by carcinogenic substances. D) They can code for proteins associated with cell growth. E) They are underexpressed in cancer cells.D
56447147953) Which of the following is characteristic of the product of the p53 gene? A) It is an activator for other genes. B) It speeds up the cell cycle. C) It causes cell death via apoptosis. D) It allows cells to pass on mutations due to DNA damage. E) It slows down the rate of DNA replication by interfering with the binding of DNA polymerase.A
56447148054) Tumor-suppressor genes A) are frequently overexpressed in cancerous cells. B) are cancer-causing genes introduced into cells by viruses. C) can encode proteins that promote DNA repair or cell-cell adhesion. D) often encode proteins that stimulate the cell cycle. E) do all of the above.C
56447148155) BRCA1 and BRCA2 are considered to be tumor-suppressor genes because A) they prevent infection by retroviruses that cause cancer. B) their normal products participate in repair of DNA damage. C) the mutant forms of either one of these promote breast cancer. D) the normal genes make estrogen receptors. E) they block penetration of breast cells by chemical carcinogens.B
56447148256) The cancer-causing forms of the Ras protein are involved in which of the following processes? A) relaying a signal from a growth factor receptor B) DNA replication C) DNA repair D) cell-cell adhesion E) cell divisionA
56447148357) Forms of the Ras protein found in tumors usually cause which of the following? A) DNA replication to stop B) DNA replication to be hyperactive C) cell-to-cell adhesion to be nonfunctional D) cell division to cease E) growth factor signaling to be hyperactiveE
56447148458) A genetic test to detect predisposition to cancer would likely examine the APC gene for involvement in which type(s) of cancer? A) colorectal only B) lung and breast C) small intestinal and esophageal D) lung only E) lung and prostateA
56447148559) At this point, the embryo is characterized as A) a first-stage larva. B) nuclei in the cortex that has not undergone cytokinesis. C) nuclei in the cortex forming a single-cell layer over the surface. D) an embryo with segmentation beginning to be apparent.B
56447148660) The four sequestered cells at one end are most probably destined to become A) the legs of the adult fly. B) the germ cells of the adult. C) mouthparts. D) antennae. E) wing primordial.B
56447148761) Formation of the pole cells (the four sequestered cells) demonstrates the role of A) segmentation genes. B) homeotic genes. C) maternal effect genes. D) zygotic genes. E) all of the above.C
56447148862) The next step after the embryo is formed would be A) division of the embryo into five broad regions. B) use of pair-rule genes to divide the embryo into stripes, each of which will become two segments. C) use of zygotic segment polarity genes to divide each segment into anterior and posterior halves. D) enclosure of the nuclei in membranes, forming a single layer over the surface. E) separation of head, thoracic, and abdominal segments of the embryo.D
56447148963) The developmental stages described for Drosophila illustrate A) a hierarchy of gene expression. B) homeotic developmental control. C) the blockage of cell-to-cell communication. D) homeotic developmental control and the blockage of cell-to-cell communication. E) a hierarchy of gene expression and the blockage of cell-to-cell communication.A
564471490Suppose an experimenter becomes proficient with a technique that allows her to move DNA sequences within a prokaryotic genome. 64) If she moves the promoter for the lac operon to the region between the beta galactosidase gene and the permease gene, which of the following would be likely? A) Three structural genes will no longer be expressed. B) RNA polymerase will no longer transcribe permease. C) The operon will no longer be inducible. D) Beta galactosidase will be produced. E) The cell will continue to metabolize but more slowly.D
564471491Suppose an experimenter becomes proficient with a technique that allows her to move DNA sequences within a prokaryotic genome. 65) If she moves the operator to the far end of the operon (past the transacetylase gene), which of the following would likely occur when the cell is exposed to lactose? A) The inducer will no longer bind to the repressor. B) The repressor will no longer bind to the operator. C) The operon will never be transcribed. D) The structural genes will be transcribed continuously. E) The repressor protein will no longer be produced.D
564471492Suppose an experimenter becomes proficient with a technique that allows her to move DNA sequences within a prokaryotic genome. 66) If she moves the repressor gene (lac I), along with its promoter, to a position at some several thousand base pairs away from its normal position, which will you expect to occur? A) The repressor will no longer be made. B) The repressor will no longer bind to the operator. C) The repressor will no longer bind to the inducer. D) The lac operon will be expressed continuously. E) The lac operon will function normally.E
564471493Suppose an experimenter becomes proficient with a technique that allows her to move DNA sequences within a prokaryotic genome. 67) If she moves the operator to a position upstream from the promoter, what would occur? A) The lac operon will function normally. B) The lac operon will be expressed continuously. C) The repressor will not be able to bind to the operator. D) The repressor will bind to the promoter. E) The repressor will no longer be made.B
564471494A geneticist introduces a transgene into yeast cells and isolates five independent cell lines in which the transgene has integrated into the yeast genome. In four of the lines, the transgene is expressed strongly, but in the fifth there is no expression at all. 68) Which of the following is a likely explanation for the lack of transgene expression in the fifth cell line? A) A transgene integrated into a heterochromatic region of the genome. B) A transgene integrated into a euchromatic region of the genome. C) The transgene was mutated during the process of integration into the host cell genome. D) The host cell lacks the enzymes necessary to express the transgene. E) A transgene integrated into a region of the genome characterized by high histone acetylation.A
564471495A geneticist introduces a transgene into yeast cells and isolates five independent cell lines in which the transgene has integrated into the yeast genome. In four of the lines, the transgene is expressed strongly, but in the fifth there is no expression at all. 69) Of the lines that express the transgene, one is transcribed but not translated. Which of the following is a likely explanation? A) no promoter B) no AUG in any frame C) no compatible ribosome D) high histone acetylation E) missing transcription factorB
564471496A researcher found a method she could use to manipulate and quantify phosphorylation and methylation in embryonic cells in culture. 70) In one set of experiments using this procedure in Drosophila, she was readily successful in increasing phosphorylation of amino acids adjacent to methylated amino acids in histone tails. Which of the following results would she most likely see? A) increased chromatin condensation B) decreased chromatin condensation C) abnormalities of mouse embryos D) decreased binding of transcription factors E) inactivation of the selected genesB
564471497A researcher found a method she could use to manipulate and quantify phosphorylation and methylation in embryonic cells in culture. 71) In one set of experiments she succeeded in decreasing methylation of histone tails. Which of the following results would she most likely see? A) increased chromatin condensation B) decreased chromatin condensation C) abnormalities of mouse embryos D) decreased binding of transcription factors E) inactivation of the selected genesA
564471498A researcher found a method she could use to manipulate and quantify phosphorylation and methylation in embryonic cells in culture. 72) One of her colleagues suggested she try increased methylation of C nucleotides in a mammalian system. Which of the following results would she most likely see? A) increased chromatin condensation B) decreased chromatin condensation C) abnormalities of mouse embryos D) decreased binding of transcription factors E) inactivation of the selected genesE
564471499A researcher found a method she could use to manipulate and quantify phosphorylation and methylation in embryonic cells in culture. 73) She tried decreasing the amount of methylation enzymes in the embryonic stem cells and then allowed the cells to further differentiate. Which of the following results would she most likely see? A) increased chromatin condensation B) decreased chromatin condensation C) abnormalities of mouse embryos D) decreased binding of transcription factors E) inactivation of the selected genesC
564471500A researcher introduces double-stranded RNA into a culture of mammalian cells, and can identify its location or that of its smaller subsections experimentally, using a fluorescent probe. 74) Within the first quarter hour, the researcher sees that the intact RNA is found in the cells. After 3 hours, she is not surprised to find that A) Dicer enzyme has reduced it to smaller double-stranded pieces. B) the RNA is degraded by 5' and 3' exonucleases. C) the double-stranded RNA replicates itself. D) the double-stranded RNA binds to mRNAs to prevent translation. E) the double-stranded RNA binds to tRNAs to prevent translation.A
564471501A researcher introduces double-stranded RNA into a culture of mammalian cells, and can identify its location or that of its smaller subsections experimentally, using a fluorescent probe. 75) Some time later, she finds that the introduced strand separates into single-stranded RNAs, one of which is degraded. What does this enable the remaining strand to do? A) attach to histones in the chromatin B) bind to complementary regions of target mRNAs C) bind to Dicer enzymes to destroy other RNAs D) activate other siRNAs in the cell E) bind to noncomplementary RNA sequencesB
564471502A researcher introduces double-stranded RNA into a culture of mammalian cells, and can identify its location or that of its smaller subsections experimentally, using a fluorescent probe. 76) In addition, she finds what other evidence of this single-stranded RNA piece's activity? A) She can measure the degradation rate of the remaining single strand. B) She can measure the decrease in the concentration of Dicer. C) The rate of accumulation of the polypeptide to be translated from the target mRNA is reduced. D) The amount of miRNA is multiplied by its replication. E) The cell's translation ability is entirely shut down.C
564471503A researcher has arrived at a method to prevent gene expression from Drosophila embryonic genes. The following questions assume that he is using this method. 77) The researcher in question measures the amount of new polypeptide production in embryos from 2—8 hours following fertilization and the results show a steady and significant rise in polypeptide concentration over that time. The researcher concludes that A) his measurement skills must be faulty. B) the results are due to building new cell membranes to compartmentalize dividing nuclei. C) the resulting new polypeptides are due to translation of maternal mRNAs. D) the new polypeptides were inactive and not measurable until fertilization. E) polypeptides were attached to egg membranes until this time.C
564471504A researcher has arrived at a method to prevent gene expression from Drosophila embryonic genes. The following questions assume that he is using this method. 78) The researcher continues to study the reactions of the embryo to these new proteins and you hypothesize that he is most likely to see which of the following (while embryonic genes are still not being expressed)? A) The cells begin to differentiate. B) The proteins are evenly distributed throughout the embryo. C) Larval features begin to make their appearance. D) Spatial axes (anterior → posterior, etc.) begin to be determined. E) The embryo begins to lose cells due to apoptosis from no further gene expression.D
56447150579) The researcher measures the concentration of the polypeptides from different regions in the early embryo and finds the following pattern (darker shading = greater concentration): SEE PICTURE Which of the following would be his most logical assumption? A) The substance has moved quickly from region 5 to region 1. B) Some other material in the embryo is causing accumulation in region 1 due to differential binding. C) The cytosol is in constant movement, dispersing the polypeptide. D) The substance is produced in region 1 and diffuses toward region 5. E) The substance must have entered the embryo from the environment near region 1.D
564471506One hereditary disease in humans, called xeroderma pigmentosum (XP), makes homozygous individuals exceptionally susceptible to UV-induced mutation damage in the cells of exposed tissue, especially skin. Without extraordinary avoidance of sunlight exposure, patients soon succumb to numerous skin cancers. 80) Which of the following best describes this phenomenon? A) inherited cancer taking a few years to be expressed B) embryonic or fetal cancer C) inherited predisposition to mutation D) inherited inability to repair UV-induced mutation E) susceptibility to chemical carcinogensD
564471507One hereditary disease in humans, called xeroderma pigmentosum (XP), makes homozygous individuals exceptionally susceptible to UV-induced mutation damage in the cells of exposed tissue, especially skin. Without extraordinary avoidance of sunlight exposure, patients soon succumb to numerous skin cancers. 81) Given the damage caused by UV, the kind of gene affected in those with XP is one whose product is involved with A) mending of double-strand breaks in the DNA backbone. B) breakage of cross-strand covalent bonds. C) the ability to excise single-strand damage and replace it. D) the removal of double-strand damaged areas. E) causing affected skin cells to undergo apoptosis.C
564471508A few decades ago, Knudsen and colleagues proposed a theory that, for a normal cell to become a cancer cell, a minimum of two genetic changes had to occur in that cell. Knudsen was studying retinoblastoma, a childhood cancer of the eye. 82) Two children are born from the same parents. Child one inherits a predisposition to retinoblastoma (one of the mutations) and child two does not. However, both children develop the retinoblastoma. Which of the following would you expect? A) an earlier age of onset in child one B) a history of exposure to mutagens in child one but not in child two C) a more severe cancer in child one D) increased levels of apoptosis in both children E) decreased levels of DNA repair in child oneA
564471509A few decades ago, Knudsen and colleagues proposed a theory that, for a normal cell to become a cancer cell, a minimum of two genetic changes had to occur in that cell. Knudsen was studying retinoblastoma, a childhood cancer of the eye. 83) In colorectal cancer, several genes must be mutated in order to make a cell a cancer cell, supporting Knudsen's hypothesis. Which of the following kinds of genes would you expect to be mutated? A) genes coding for enzymes that act in the colon B) genes involved in control of the cell cycle C) genes that are especially susceptible to mutation D) the same genes that Knudsen identified as associated with retinoblastoma E) the genes of the bacteria that are abundant in the colonB
564471510A few decades ago, Knudsen and colleagues proposed a theory that, for a normal cell to become a cancer cell, a minimum of two genetic changes had to occur in that cell. Knudsen was studying retinoblastoma, a childhood cancer of the eye. 84) Knudsen and colleagues also noted that persons with hereditary retinoblastoma that had been treated successfully lived on but then had a higher frequency of developing osteosarcomas (bone cancers) later in life. This provided further evidence of their theory because A) osteosarcoma cells express the same genes as retinal cells. B) p53 gene mutations are common to both tumors. C) both kinds of cancer involve overproliferation of cells. D) one of the mutations involved in retinoblastoma is also one of the changes involved in osteosarcoma. E) retinoblastoma is a prerequisite for the formation of osteosarcoma later in life.D
564471511A few decades ago, Knudsen and colleagues proposed a theory that, for a normal cell to become a cancer cell, a minimum of two genetic changes had to occur in that cell. Knudsen was studying retinoblastoma, a childhood cancer of the eye. 85) One of the human leukemias, called CML (chronic myelogenous leukemia), is associated with a chromosomal translocation between chromosomes 9 and 22 in somatic cells of bone marrow. Which of the following allows CML to provide further evidence of this multistep nature of cancer? A) CML usually occurs in more elderly persons (late age of onset). B) The resulting chromosome 22 is abnormally short; it is then known as the Philadelphia chromosome. C) The translocation requires breaks in both chromosomes 9 and 22, followed by fusion between the reciprocal pieces. D) CML involves a proto-oncogene known as abl. E) CML can usually be treated by chemotherapy.C
564471512Epstein Bar Virus (EBV) causes most of us to have an episode of sore throat and swollen glands during early childhood. If we first become exposed to the virus during our teen years, however, EBV causes the syndrome we know as mononucleosis. However, in special circumstances, the same virus can be carcinogenic. 86) In areas of the world in which malaria is endemic, notably in sub-Saharan Africa, EBV can cause Burkitt's lymphoma in children, which is usually associated with large tumors of the jaw. Which of the following is consistent with these findings? A) EBV infection makes the malarial parasite able to produce lymphoma. B) Malaria's strain on the immune system makes EBV infection worse. C) Malaria occurs more frequently in those infected with EBV. D) Malarial response of the immune system prevents an individual from making EBV antibodies. E) A cell infected with the malarial parasite is more resistant to the virus.D
564471513Epstein Bar Virus (EBV) causes most of us to have an episode of sore throat and swollen glands during early childhood. If we first become exposed to the virus during our teen years, however, EBV causes the syndrome we know as mononucleosis. However, in special circumstances, the same virus can be carcinogenic. 87) In a different part of the world, namely in parts of southeast Asia, the same virus is associated with a different kind of cancer of the throat. Which of the following is most probable? A) Viral infection is correlated with a different immunological reaction. B) The virus infects the people via different routes. C) The virus only infects the elderly. D) The virus mutates more frequently in the Asian population. E) Malaria is also found in this region.A
564471514Epstein Bar Virus (EBV) causes most of us to have an episode of sore throat and swollen glands during early childhood. If we first become exposed to the virus during our teen years, however, EBV causes the syndrome we know as mononucleosis. However, in special circumstances, the same virus can be carcinogenic. 88) A very rare human allele of a gene called XLP, or X-linked lymphoproliferative syndrome, causes a small number of people from many different parts of the world to get cancer following even childhood exposure to EBV. Given the previous information, what might be going on? A) The people must have previously had malaria. B) Their ancestors must be from sub-Saharan Africa or southeast Asia. C) They must be unable to mount an immune response to EBV. D) They must have severe combined immune deficiency (SCID). E) Their whole immune system must be overreplicating.C
564471515Epstein Bar Virus (EBV) causes most of us to have an episode of sore throat and swollen glands during early childhood. If we first become exposed to the virus during our teen years, however, EBV causes the syndrome we know as mononucleosis. However, in special circumstances, the same virus can be carcinogenic. 89) What must characterize the XLP population? A) They must have severe immunological problems starting at birth. B) They must all be males with affected male relatives. C) They must all be males with affected female relatives. D) They must all inherit this syndrome from their fathers. E) They must live in sub-Saharan Africa.C
56447151690) If a particular operon encodes enzymes for making an essential amino acid and is regulated like the trp operon, then A) the amino acid inactivates the repressor. B) the enzymes produced are called inducible enzymes. C) the repressor is active in the absence of the amino acid. D) the amino acid acts as a corepressor. E) the amino acid turns on transcription of the operon.D
56447151791) Muscle cells differ from nerve cells mainly because they A) express different genes. B) contain different genes. C) use different genetic codes. D) have unique ribosomes. E) have different chromosomes.A
56447151892) The functioning of enhancers is an example of A) transcriptional control of gene expression. B) a post-transcriptional mechanism to regulate mRNA. C) the stimulation of translation by initiation factors. D) post-translational control that activates certain proteins. E) a eukaryotic equivalent of prokaryotic promoter functioning.A
56447151993) Cell differentiation always involves A) the production of tissue-specific proteins, such as muscle actin. B) the movement of cells. C) the transcription of the myoD gene. D) the selective loss of certain genes from the genome. E) the cell's sensitivity to environmental cues, such as light or heat.A
56447152094) Which of the following is an example of post-transcriptional control of gene expression? A) the addition of methyl groups to cytosine bases of DNA B) the binding of transcription factors to a promoter C) the removal of introns and alternative splicing of exons D) gene amplification contributing to cancer E) the folding of DNA to form heterochromatinC
56447152195) What would occur if the repressor of an inducible operon were mutated so it could not bind the operator? A) irreversible binding of the repressor to the promoter B) reduced transcription of the operon's genes C) buildup of a substrate for the pathway controlled by the operon D) continuous transcription of the operon's genes E) overproduction of catabolite activator protein (CAP)D
56447152296) Absence of bicoid mRNA from a Drosophila egg leads to the absence of anterior larval body parts and mirror-image duplication of posterior parts. This is evidence that the product of the bicoid gene A) is transcribed in the early embryo. B) normally leads to formation of tail structures. C) normally leads to formation of head structures. D) is a protein present in all head structures. E) leads to programmed cell death.C
56447152397) Which of the following statements about the DNA in one of your brain cells is true? A) Most of the DNA codes for protein. B) The majority of genes are likely to be transcribed. C) Each gene lies immediately adjacent to an enhancer. D) Many genes are grouped into operon-like clusters. E) It is the same as the DNA in one of your heart cells.E
56447152498) Within a cell, the amount of protein made using a given mRNA molecule depends partly on A) the degree of DNA methylation. B) the rate at which the mRNA is degraded. C) the presence of certain transcription factors. D) the number of introns present in the mRNA. E) the types of ribosomes present in the cytoplasm.B
56447152599) Proto-oncogenes can change into oncogenes that cause cancer. Which of the following best explains the presence of these potential time bombs in eukaryotic cells? A) Proto-oncogenes first arose from viral infections. B) Proto-oncogenes normally help regulate cell division. C) Proto-oncogenes are genetic "junk." D) Proto-oncogenes are mutant versions of normal genes. E) Cells produce proto-oncogenes as they age.B

Campbell Biology: Ninth Edition - Chapter 3: Water and Life Flashcards

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507980137polar 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
507980138polar moleculea molecule (such as water) with an uneven distribution of charges in different regions of the molecule
507980139cohesionthe linking together of like molecules, often by hydrogen bonds
507980140adhesioncling of one substance to another, such as water to plant cell walls by means of hydrogen bonds
507980141surface tensiona measure of how difficult it is to stretch or break the surface of a liquid. Water has a high surface tension because of the hydrogen bonding of surface molecules
507980142kinetic energythe energy associated with the relative motion of objects. Moving matter can perform work by imparting motion to other matter.
507980143heatthe total amount of kinetic energy due to the random motion of atoms or molecules in a body of matter; also called thermal energy. Heat is energy in its most random form.
507980144temperaturea measure of the intensity of heat in degrees, reflecting the average kinetic energy of the molecules
507980145Celsius scalea temperature scale equal to 5/9 (F-32) that measures the freezing point of water at ) degrees Celsius and the boiling point of water at 100 degrees celsius
507980146calorie (cal)the amount of heat energy required to raise the temperature of 1 g of water by 1 degree Celsius; also the amount of heat energy that 1 g of water releases when it cools by 1 degree Celsius. The Calorie (with a capital C), usually used to indicate the energy content of food, is a kilocalorie.
507980147kilocalorie (kcal)a thousand calories; the amount of heat energy required to raise the temperature of 1 kg of water by 1 degree Celsius
507980148joule (J)a unit of energy; 1 J = 0.239 cal; 1 cal = 4.184 J
507980149specific heatthe amount of heat that must be absorbed of lost for 1 g of a substance to change its temperature by 1 degree Celsius
507980150heat of vaporizationthe quantity of heat a liquid must absorb for 1 g of it to be converted from the liquid to the gaseous state
507980151evaporative coolingthe process in which the surface of an object becomes cooler during evaporation, a result of the molecules with the greatest kinetic energy changing from the liquid to the gaseous state.
507980152solutiona liquid that is a homogenous mixture of two or more substances
507980153solventthe dissolving agent of a solution. Water is the most versatile solvent known
507980154solutea substance that is dissolved in a solution
507980155aqueous solutiona solution in which water is the solvent
507980156hydration shellthe sphere of the water molecules around a dissolved ion
507980157hydrophilichaving an affinity for water
507980158colloida mixture made up of a liquid and particles that (because of their large size) remain suspended rather than dissolved in that liquid
507980159hydrophobichaving no affinity for water; tending to coalesce and form droplets of water
507980160molecular massthe sum of the masses of all the atoms in a molecule; sometimes called molecular weight
507980161mole (mol)the number of grams of a substance that equals its molecular weight in daltons and contains Avogadro's number of molecules
507980162molaritya common measure of solute concentration, referring to the number of moles of solute per liter of solution
507980163hydrogen iona single proton with a charge of 1+. The dissociation of a water molecule (H2O) leads to the generation of a hydroxide ion (OH-) and a hydrogen ion (H+); in water, H+ is not found alone but associates with a water molecules to form a hydronium ion
507980164hydroxide iona water molecule that has lost a proton; OH-
507980165hydronium iona water molecule that has an extra proton bound to it; H3O+, commonly represented as H+
507980166acida substance that increases the hydrogen ion concentration of a solution
507980167basea substance that reduces the hydrogen ion concentration of a solution
507980168pHa measure of hydrogen ion concentration equal to -log [H+] and ranging in value from 0 to 14
507980169buffera solution that contains a weak acid and its corresponding base. A buffer minimizes changes in pH when acids or bases are added to the solution
507980170ocean acidificationdecreasing pH of ocean waters due to absorption of excess atmospheric CO2 from the burning of fossil fuels
507980171acid precipitationrain, snow, or fog that is more acidic than pH 5.2

Biology Chapter 2 (Prentice Hall 2008) Flashcards

Prentice Hall Biology (Miller/Levine 2008), chapter 2

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530490954atomthe basic unit of matter
530490955subatomic particlesprotons, neutrons and electrons
530490956protonspositively charged particles in the nucleus
530490957neutronsparticles with no charge in the nucleus
530490958electronsnegatively charged particles in constant motion outside the nucleus
530490959why atoms are unchargedatoms have equal numbers of protons and electrons
530490960chemical elementa pure substance that consists entirely of one type of atom
530490961atomic numberthe number of protons in an atom of an element
530490962isotopesatoms of the same element that differ in the number of neutrons
530490963compoundsubstances formed by the chemical combination of two or more elements in definite proportions
530490964chemical formulashorthand to show the chemical composition of a compound
530490965chemical bondshold atoms in compounds together; the main types are ionic and covalent
530490966ionic bonda bond formed when one or more electrons are transfered from one atom to another
530490967iona positively or negatively charged atom
530490968covalent bonda bond formed when electrons are shared between atoms
530490969moleculea structure that results when atoms are joined together by covalent bonds; the smallest unit of most compounds
530490970polar moleculesmolecules in which the charges are unevenly distributed; they can attract each other
530490971cohesionattraction between molecules of the same substance
530490972adhesionattraction between molecules of different substances
530490973mixturematerial composed of two or more elements or compounds that are physically mixed together but not chemically combined
530490974solutiona mixture in which all the components are evenly distributed throughout the mixture
530490975solutethe substance in a solution that is dissolved
530490976solventthe substance in a solution in which the solvent dissolves
530490977ions formed by water moleculeshydrogen ion (H+) and hydroxide ion (OH-)
530490978suspensionsmixtures of water and nondissolved material
530490979pH 7pH of pure water
530490980pH scalea measurement system to indicate the concentration of H+ ions in solution
530490981pH above 7bases
530490982pH below 7acids
530490983organic chemistrythe study of all compounds that contain bonds between carbon atoms
530490984organic compoundscarbon compounds
530490985macromoleculespolymers; molecules made from thousands or even hundreds of thousands of smaller molecules
530490986polymerizationa process that forms macromolecules by joining smaller compounds together to form larger ones
530490987monomerssmall units that join together to form macromolecules, or polymers
530490988four groups of organic compounds in living thingscarbohydrates, lipids, nucleic acids, proteins
530490989carbohydratesused as the main source of energy; used in structures for plants and some animals
530490990examples of carbohydratesstarches and sugars
530490991lipidsused in living things to store energy; in biological membranes and coverings
530490992examples of lipidsfats, oils and waxes
530490993fatty acids and glycerolcompounds that make up lipid molecules
530490994nucleic acidsstore and transmit hereditary (genetic) information
530490995elements in nucleic acidshydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, carbon, phosphorus
530490996elements in lipidscarbon and hydrogen
530490997elements in carbohydratescarbon, hydrogen, oxygen
530490998nucleotidesmonomers that make up nucleic acids
530490999nucleotides are made of5-carbon sugar; phosphate group; and nitrogenous base
530491000RNAribonucleic acid
530491001DNAdeoxyribonucleic acid
530491002sugarscan be broken down for immediate energy
530491003starchescomplex carbohydrates (polymers) where extra sugar is stored
530491004monosaccharidessimple sugars (glucose, galactose (from milk), fructose (from fruit))
530491005polysaccharideslarge macromolecules formed from monosaccharides
530491006glycogenanimal starch that can be released from the liver when blood glucose is low
530491007proteinspolymers of amino acid macromolecules that control the rate of reactions, regulate cell processes, form bone and muscles, transport substances in and out of cells, or help fight disease
530491008amino acidscompounds with an amino group (NH2) on one end and a carboxyl group (COOH) on the other
530491009chemical reactiona process that changes one set of chemicals (reactants) into another set of chemicals (products) by breaking bonds and forming new ones
530491010reactantsthe elements or compounds that enter into a chemical reaction
530491011productsthe elements or compounds produced by a chemical reaction
530491012spontaneous reactionsreactions that release energy
530491013nonspontaneous reactionsreactions that absorb energy and will not occur without a source of energy
530491014activation energythe energy that is needed to get a reaction started
530491015catalysta substance that speeds up the rate of a chemical reaction
530491016how catalysts workthey lower the activation energy for a reaction
530491017enzymesproteins that act as biological catalysts and speed up reactions by lowering activation energy
530491018substratesreactants in an enzyme-catalyzed reaction
530491019active sitea site on an enzyme where the substrate binds

Viruses and Bacterias Flashcards

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135421370Epidemiologythe study of factors determining and influencing the frequency and distribution of disease and their causes in human populations
135421371virusnon-living parasitic particle that can only reproduce inside a host cell
135421372capsidprotein coat of a virus around a strand of genetic material
135421373envelopebilipid membrane around the capsid of a virus
135421374Lytic infectionvirus invades cell and replicates itseld over and over until the cell burst; virus is virulent because it destroys cells they infect
135421375Lysogenic infectionvirus inserts its DNA into the host, but does not replicate right away. temperate
135421376Retrovirusescontain RNA instead of DNA. once inside the cell they produce a DNA copy from their RNA with reverse transcriptase
135421377Vaccinationused to prevent diseases caused by viruses. no cure for viral infections. composed of weakened form of the virus
135421378canceroncogenic viruses disrupt the normal cell cycle
135421379EbolaHemorrhagic fever. liquefies the internal organs. blood seeps from body. fruit bat carries it
135421380Marburghemorrhagic fever. liquefies internal organs. monkeys had it
135421381HIVretrovirus thats causes AIDS. Blood pathogen that works against the immune system
135421382Coldrespiratory illness cause by viruses. adenovirus, mild, runny/stuffy nose
135421383Flurespiratory illness cause by viruses. influenza virus. can lead to hospitalization, pneumonia, death. fever, body aches, tiredness, dry cough
135421384Smallpoxeasily spread. vaccine eradicated the disease. victims are covered with yellow painful blisters.
135421385West Nile Virusspread by the bite of an infected mosquito. mosquitoes become infected by biting sick birds. victims get headaches, high fevers, convulsions, vision loss, or neurological problems
135421386Polioinfects spinal cord causing paralysis. mostly children and young adults.
135421387Chicken Pox/Shinglescaused by varicella-zoster herpesvirus. skin rash and fever. chicken pox only once, but can reappear as shingles.
135421388Severe Acute Respiratory SyndromeRNA virus in China
135421389Hantaviruscommon in rodents in the Southwest, USA. people who inhaled dried feces/urine became sick and some died
135421390Rabies Viruscarried in mammal saliva. works on central nervous system. fever,headache to depression, inability to swallow causing suffocation
135421391Hepatitusinflammation of the liver A,E-fecally contaminated food B,C,D- sexual contact/infected blood
135421392Swine Fluname comes from genes it shares with pig flu, avian and human genes. more problems for older people.
136007061methanogenesbacteria that convert hydrogen and CO2 into energy
136007062thermoacidophilesbacteria that live in acidic high temperatures
136007063halophilesbacteria that live in high salt content
136007064conjunctionharing of DNA between two bacteria
136007065transductiona virus carries DNA between bacteria
136007066Cocciround shaped bacteria
136007067Bacillirod shaped bacteria
136007068Spirillaspiral shaped bacteria
136007069Gram positiveabsorb purple stain in large peptidoglycan cell wall
136007070gram negativeabsorb pink stain have small complicated cell wall

Ch 17: From Gene to Protein Flashcards

Ch 17: From Gene to Protein, AP Biology, Campbell 7e

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559622234gene expressionthe process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or, in some cases, just RNAs
559622235transcriptionthe synthesis of RNA using a DNA template
559622236messenger RNAa type of RNA, synthesized using a DNA template, that attaches to ribosomes in the cytoplasm and specifies the primary structure of a protein
559622237translationthe synthesis of a polypeptide using the genetic information encoded in an mRNA molecule
559622238ribosomea complex of rRNA and protein molecules that functions as a site of protein synthesis in the cytoplasm
559622239primary transcriptan initial RNA transcript; also called pre-mRNA when transcribed from a protein-coding gene
559622240triplet codea set of three-nucleotide-long words that specify the amino acids for polypeptide chains
559622241template strandthe DNA strand that provides the pattern for ordering the sequence of nucleotides in an RNA transcript
559622242codona three nucleotide sequence of mRNA that specifies a particular amino acid or termination signal
559622243reading frameon the mRNA, the triplet grouping of ribonucleotides used by the translation machinery during polypeptide synthesis
559622244RNA polymerasean enzyme that links ribonucleotides into a growing RNA chain during transcription
559622245promotera specific nucleotide sequence in DNA that binds RNA polymerase, positioning it to start transcribing RNA at the appropriate place
559622246terminatora sequence of nucleotides in DNA that marks the end of a gene and signals RNA polymerase to release the newly made RNA molecule and detach from the DNA
559622247transcription unita region of DNA that is transcribed into an RNA molecule
559622248transcription factora regulatory protein that binds to DNA and affects transcription of specific genes
559622249transcription initiation complexthe completed assembly of transcription factors and RNA polymerase bound to the promoter
559622250TATA boxa DNA sequence in eukaryotic promoters crucial in forming the transcription initiation complex
559622251RNA processingmodification of RNA transcripts, including splicing out of introns, joining together of exons, and alteration of the 5' and 3' ends
5596222525' capa modified form of guanine nucleotide added onto the nucleotide at the 5' end of a pre-mRNA molecule
559622253poly A taila sequence of 50-250 adenine nucleotides added onto the 3' end of a pre-mRNA molecule
559622254RNA splicingafter synthesis of a eukaryotic primary RNA transcript, the removal of portions (introns) of the transcript that will not be included in the mRNA
559622255introna noncoding, intervening sequence within a primary transcript that is removed from the transcript during RNA processing
559622256exona sequence within a primary transcript that remains in the RNA after RNA processing
559622257spliceosomea large complex made up of proteins and RNA molecules that splices RNA by interacting with the ends of an RNA intron, releasing the intron and joining the two adjacent exons
559622258ribozymean RNA molecule that functions as an enzyme, catalyzing reactions during RNA splicing
559622259alternative 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 introns
559622260domainan independently folding part of a protein
559622261transfer RNAan RNA molecule that functions as an interpreter between nucleic acid and protein language by picking up specific amino acids and recognizing the appropriate codons in the mRNA
559622262anticodona nucleotide triplet at one end of a tRNA molecule that recognizes a particular complementary codon on an mRNA molecule
559622263wobbleflexibility 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 codon
559622264ribosomal RNAthe most abundant type of RNA, which together with proteins makes up ribosomes
559622265A sitethe place on a ribosome that holds the tRNA carrying the next amino acid to be added to the polypeptide chain
559622266P sitethe place on a ribosome that holds the tRNA carrying the growing polypeptide chain
559622267E sitethe place on a ribosome where discharged tRNAs leave the ribosome
559622268polyribosomea group of several ribosomes attached to, and translating, the same messenger RNA molecule
559622269signal peptidea sequence of about 20 amino acids at or near the leading (amino) end of a polypeptide that targets it to the endoplasmic reticulum or other organelles in a eukarytoic cell
559622270signal recognition particlea protein-RNA complex that recognizes a signal peptide as it emerges from a ribosome and helps direct the ribosome to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) by binding to a receptor protein on the ER
559622271mutationa change in the nucleotide sequence of an organism's DNA, ultimately creating genetic diversity
559622272point mutationa change in a gene at a single nucleotide pair
559622273base pair substitutiona type of point mutation where one nucleotide and its partner in the complementary DNA strand are replaced by another pair of nucleotides
559622274missense mutationa base-pair substitution that results in a codon that codes for a different amino acid
559622275nonsense mutationa mutation that changes an amino acid codon to one of the three stop codons, resulting in a shorter and usually nonfunctional protein
559622276insertiona mutation involving the addition of one or more nucleotide pairs to a gene
559622277deletiona mutational loss of one or more nucleotide pairs from a gene
559622278frameshift mutationa mutation occurring when the number of nucleotides inserted or deleted is not a multiple of three, resulting in the improper grouping of the subsequent nucleotides into codons
559622279mutagena chemical or physical agent that interacts with DNA and causes a mutation
559622280aminoacyl-tRNA synthetaseAn enzyme that joins each amino acid to the correct tRNA.

CH 17 Gene to Protein Flashcards

campbell

Terms : Hide Images
346748333Beadle and TatumShowed that each gene encodes a particular substance ("one gene, one enzyme" concept).
346748334one gene one polypeptide hypothesisthe hypothesis that every gene directs the synthesis of a particular polypeptide chain; originally called the one geneone enzyme hypothesis.
346748335transcriptionthe organic process whereby the DNA sequence in a gene is copied into mRNA
346748336mRNAmessenger RNA; type of RNA that carries instructions from DNA in the nucleus to the ribosome
346748337translationthe process whereby genetic information coded in messenger RNA directs the formation of a specific protein at a ribosome in the cytoplasm
346748338RNA processing..., Modification of RNA before it leaves the nucleus, a process unique to eukaryotes.
346748339primary transcriptAn initial RNA transcript; also called pre-mRNA.
346748340triplet codethe normal version of the genetic code in which a sequence of three nucleotides codes for the synthesis of a specific amino acid
346748341template strandThe DNA strand that provides the template for ordering the sequence of nucleotides in an RNA transcript.
346748342codonsA three-nucleotide sequence of DNA or mRNA that specifies a particular amino acid or termination signal; the basic unit of the genetic code.
346748343Nirenbergdetermined the first match: UUU coded for the amino acid phenylalanine.
346748344reading framethe way a cell's mRNA-translating machinery groups the mRNA nucleotides into codons
346748345RNA polymeraseenzyme similar to DNA polymerase that binds to DNA and separates the DNA strands during transcription
346748346terminatorA special sequence of nucleotides in DNA that marks the end of a gene. It signals RNA polymerase to release the newly made RNA molecule, which then departs from the gene
346748347promoterregion of DNA that indicates to an enzyme where to bind to make RNA
346748348TATA boxA promoter DNA sequence crucial in forming the transcription initiation complex.
346748349transcription factorsproteins that switch on genes by binding to DNA and helping the RNA polymerase to bind
346748350transcription initiation complexThe completed assembly of transcription factors and RNA polymerase bound to the promoter.
346748351poly(A) tailThe modified end of the 3' end of an mRNA molecule consisting of the addition of some 50 to 250 adenine nucleotides.
3467483525' capwhen pre-mRNA is modified the 5 primed end is synthesized first; it is a modified form of a guanine nucleotide
346748353intronsa non-coding, intervening sequence within a eukaryotic gene AKA junk DNA
346748354exonsexpressed sequence of DNA; codes for a protein
346748355RNA splicingprocess by which the introns are removed from RNA transcripts and the remaining exons are joined together
346748356spliceosomeA complex assembly that interacts with the ends of an RNA intron in splicing RNA, releasing the intron and joining the two adjacent exons.
346748357ribozynesa RNA molecule that acts as an enzyme
346748358alternative RNA splicing..., A type of 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 introns.
346748359domainsa taxonomic category above the kingdom level; the three domains of life are Archaea, Bacteria, and Eukarya
346748360tRNAshort-chain RNA molecules present in the cell (in at least 20 varieties, each variety capable of combining with a specific amino acid) that attach the correct amino acid to the protein chain that is being synthesized at the ribosome of the cell (according
346748361anticodongroup of three bases on a tRNA molecule that are complementary to an mRNA codon
346748362wobbleA violation of the base-pairing rules in that the third nucleotide (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 codon.
346748363rRNAribosomal RNA; type of RNA that makes up part of the ribosome
346748365P siteone of a ribosome's three binding sites for tRNA during translation. It holds the tRNA carrying the growing polypeptide chain.
346748368A siteholds the tRNA carrying the next amino acid to be added to the chain
346748370initiationDNA replication is initiated when helicase enzyme breaks the hydrogen bonds holding the base pairs together and the DNA uncoils. The initiation codon is methionine or AUG
346748372elongationaddition of amino acids to the polypeptide chain; continues until it reaches a stop codon
346748374terminationend of mRNA synthesis (i.e., transcription) at the terminator site
346748376polyribosomesAn aggregation of several ribosomes attached to one messenger RNA molecule.
346748378signal peptideA stretch of amino acids on a polypeptide that targets the protein to a specific destination in a eukaryotic cell.
346748381signal recognition particleA protein-RNA complex that recognizes a signal peptide as it emerges from the ribosome.
346748382base pair substitutionA point mutation; the replacement of one nucleotide and its partner in the complementary DNA strand by another pair of nucleotides.
346748383missense mutationThe most common type of mutation, a base-pair substitution in which the new codon makes sense in that it still codes for an amino acid.
346748384nonsense mutationA mutation that changes an amino acid codon to one of the three stop codons, resulting in a shorter and usually nonfunctional protein.
346748385insertionsA mutation involving the addition of one or more nucleotide pairs to a gene, i.e ATG -> ATTG
346748386deletionsone or more bases are removed from gene
346748387frameshift mutationsmutation that shifts the "reading" frame of the genetic message by inserting or deleting a nucleotide
346748388mutagensFactors in the environment that cause mutations.

Waples Comparative Gov Killer List Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
59752476Legitimacythe belief that a regime is a proper one and that the government has the right to exercise authority
59752477Traditional Legitimacythe right to rule because "it has always been that way"
59752478Charismatic LegitimacyThe right to rule based on the personality of an individual.
59752479Rational-Legal LegitimacyLegitimacy based on the rule of law. Everyone knows the rules and they are applied fairly and evenly.
59752480SovereigntyA government's right to rule free of internal and external forces.
59752481RevolutionOverthrow of government with broad popular support. Happens when the government has lost legitimacy
59752482CorrelationApparent connection-can be positive (economy and democratic-ness) or negative (revolution and legitimacy)
59752483Causationproven link
59752484Political cleavageDivision in society
59752485crosscutting cleavage"good"-brings people from different groups together. Diverse Groups under a common belief
59752486Coinciding Cleavage"bad"- ethnic groups in Nigeria for example
59752487UnitaryCentral government has all the power.
59752488FederalMultiple layers of government-national and subgovernments.
59752489DemocratizationMove from authoritarian state to an illiberal/procedural democracy to a liberal/substantive democracy
59752490Common LawWhen law is developed through court case decisions
59752491Code LawLaw written by legislators
59752492CorporatismLarge groups/corporations are incorporated into government decisions
59752493Cooptationgranting favors in exchange for benefit; "buying off" critics
59752494TheocracyRule by religious elite
59752495Political ideologySomeone's beliefs about politics
59752496LiberalismLess government role in the economy and high value on individual freedom
59752497ConservatismDesire to maintain the current state
59752498LibertarianVery little government intervention. Liberalism to the extreme.
59752499ReactionaryWant to go back to a "better" time with previous institutions
59752500Radicalismrapid, revolutionary change
59752501NationalismPride in your people and belief they have a unique destiny
59752502Proportional RepresentationAn election system in which each party running receives the proportion of legislative seats corresponding to its proportion of the vote.
59752503FPTP-SMDThe candidate who wins the most votes wins the seat
59752504Political Economyrelationship between the economy and the state. how governments make decisions
59752505Post-materialismtheory that modern culture has moved beyond getting and spending
59752506Developed/Post industrial countriesHigh standard of living, service based economy
59752507Developing countriesrapid economic growth, low incomes, industry based countries
59752508under-developed countriespoor, agricultural countries
59752509Neoliberal economic reforms/Economic Liberalizationmove to a free market economy
59752510GDPTotal dollar value of all goods and services in a country
59752511GDP per capitavalue of goods and services in a country divided by population
59752512Human Development IndexStandard of living in a country
59752513Gini IndexMeasures income inequality, not a measure of development
59752514BicameralA legislature with 2 houses
59752515DevolutionOccurs only in unitary states. national government delgates some power to local governments.
59752516Market economysupply and demand, very little government intervention in the economy
59752517Welfare StateGovernment that gives money to people via social welfare programs
59752518Command economyGovernment makes all economic decisions
59752519ReferendumGovernment puts legislation on a ballot to see what the people think.
59752520Deductive ReasoningGoing from general to specific
59752521Inductive ReasoningGoing from specific to general
59752522Judicial reviewPower of the court to determine if a law is constitutional
59752523Dependency TheoryThe idea that farmer colonies are left with a legacy of economic dependence on their colonizers
59752524GlobalizationThe trend toward increased cultural and economic connectedness between people, businesses, and organizations throughout the world.
59752525TransparencyThe extent to which the workings and decision making of government are explained to citizens.
59752526StateA body of people living in a defined territory who have a government with the power to make and enforce law without the consent of any higher authority
59752527Nationa group of people with a common culture living in a territory and having a strong sense of unity
59752528Countrythe land of a group of people united under the same government
59752529Regimea government in power; a form or system of rule or management; a period of rule
59752530Governmentthe institution through which a society makes and enforces its public policies
59752531Institutionsorganizations where governmental power is exercised
59752532Political culturean overall set of values widely shared within a society
59752533Liberal DemocracyA political system that promotes participation, competition, and liberty and emphasizes individual freedom and civil rights.
59752534Illiberal democracyprocedural, holds elections but without civil rights and liberties
59752535Communisman economic system in which the central government directs all major economic decisions
59752536Authoritarianisma political system that denies the people participation in goverment

American Pageant 13th Edition Chapters 17-21 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
318151022Date of Mexican Cession1848
318151023Date Oregon Country is acquired1846
318151024Date of Gasden Purchase1853
318151025In the beginning of the war, what was Lincoln's goal?to preserve the Union
318151026Why did Britain refuse to provide aid to the South?1. Uncle Tom's Cabin; 2. Surpluses of Cotton; 3. Needed King Wheat and King Corn
318151027What was a result of lack of military volunteers?Both Union and Confederate governments pass conscription (draft) laws.
318151028The draft law favored the wealthy class. The law angered the working class and caused...Riots in New York
318151029How did the North pay for the war?1. excise tax; 2. income tax; 3. tariff; 4. paper money called greenback; 5. sell government bonds
318151030Printing paper money without gold to back it caused...Runaway inflation in the South
3181510314 Ways that the North prospered during the war.1. Economic Boom; 2. 2nd Industrial Revolution; 3. Millionaire class of people; 4. North dominance over the South
318151032Why did Lincoln issue the Emancipation Proclamation?To gain more Northern support for war; to damage Southern war effort; to turn the war into a war against slavery
318151033Who were the copperheads?Northern Democrats against the war and sympathized with the south
318151034Location and Date of First Bull RunVirginia; July 21, 1861
318151035Location and Date of AntietamMaryland; September 17. 1862
318409214Location and Date of GettysburgPennsylvania; July 1-3, 1863
318409215Location and Date of VicksburgMississippi; July 4, 1863
318409216Location and Date of Sherman's March to the SeaGeorgia through S. Carolina; Fall of 1864
318409217Location and Date of AppomattoxVirginia; April 9, 1865
318409218What was Lincoln's view of slavery and the Union?To do whatever it took to hold the Union together
318409219How did the War affect the North's and South's economy?Boosted the North's; Destroyed the South's
318409220Who was freed by the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863?Nobody
318409221What freed the slaves?The 13th Amendment
318409222What was Manifest Destiny?The belief that God had "manifestly" destined that the American People to spread their uplifting democratic institutions over the continent
318409223When did Manifest Destiny hit the US?The 1840s and 1850s
318409224Who ran in the election of 1844?Polk (Democrat) and Clay (Whig)
318409225Who won the election of 1844?Polk; took this as a sign to annex Texas
318409226Who did the US get Texas from?Texas
318409227Mexico became independent from who in 1821?Spain
318409228Why did Mexico want Americans to settle in Texas?They wanted a larger population and to convert them to Roman Catholicism
318409229Wh did Americans want to settle in Texas?Vast, cheap, fertile land
318409230Texas officially became known as...?Republic of Texas
318409231What brought American settlers into conflict with the Mexican government?Slavery laws; Religion; No Bill of Rights for Americans; Immigrants outlawed
318409232Texas declared independence from Mexico in...1836
318409233Three major battles caused by Texas declaring independenceAlamo; Goliad; San Jacinto (Santa Anna captured in this battle)
318409234Why did the US say no in 1837 to Texas's petition for annexation?The Americans were afraid that Texas would nourish the slave power and upset the balance
318629320When and how was Texas annexed by the US?Joint Resolution by Tyler; required only simple majority in both houses
318629321Who had joint ownership of Oregon with the US?Britain
318629322Who's slogan was "Fifty-four forty or fight"?Polk
318629323What was Fifty-four forty or fight?The US wanted Oregon to the 54 degrees 40 minute line; ended up only getting it to 49 degrees
318629324What were the dates of the war with Mexico?1846-1848
318629325What did the US and Mexico disagree about?The southern Texas boundary
318629326What did the US claim to be the southern boundary of Texas?Rio Grande
318629327What did Mexico claim to the the southern boundary of Texas?Nueces River
318629328What settled the Maine boundary dispute?Arstook War (Webster-Ashburton Treaty)
318629329Who is said to be the "man with no party"?Tyler
318629330Slidell was unsuccessful in purchasing what land from Mexico?California and New Mexico
318629331Who wanted to know the precise "spot" the American soldiers were killed by Mexico?Lincoln
318629332General Taylor's troops blockaded what river that made the Mexican soldiers angry enough to kill?Rio Grande
318629333General Kearney captured what city without bloodshed?Santa Fe, New Mexico
318629334American settlers in California overthrew the Mexican government and established...?The California Bear Flag Republic
318629335General Winfield Scott's nicknameOld Fuss & Feathers
318629336Who captured the capital of Mexico ending the war?General Winfield
318629337What treaty ended the war?Treaty of Guadelupe Hildago
318629338After the Mexican war, the US gained how much Mexican territory?half
318629339Who authorized the Gasden Purchase?President Pierce
318629340Who were the candidates in the election of 1848?Zack Taylor (Whig); Lewis Cass (Dem.); and Van Buren (Free Soil)
318629341Who were the "Immortal Trio"? What did they meet to discuss?Clay, Calhoun, and Webster; Califonia being added and the South threatening to secede
318629342Who comes up with the compromise of 1850?Clay, Calhoun, and Webster
318629343Who won the election of 1852?Pierce (Dem)
318629344What party died out as a result of the election of 1852?Whig
318629345Who proposed popular sovereignty first?Cass
318629346What is popular sovereignty?sovereign people of a territory decide about slavery
318629347Who likes popular sovereignty?Nobody
318629348What were the four border states?Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland, Delaware
318671459What is fanaticism?someone who holds an extreme point of view
318671460What was the ship from which two Confederate diplomats were removed creating crisis between London and Washington?Trent
318671461What was the civil liberty that was suspendd by Lincoln in defiance of the Constitution and the Supreme Court's chief justiceWrits of Habueus Corpus
318671462Financial arrangement set up by the federal government to sell government bonds and stabilize currencyNational Banking System
318671463Slippery Northern men who collected fees for enlisting in the Union army and then desertedBounty Jumper
318671464Vessel built in Britain that wreaked havoc on Northern shipping until it was finally sunk in 1864Alabama
318671465American envoy whose shrewd diplomacy helped keep Britain neutral during the Civil WarCharles Francis Adams
318671466An old world aristocrat, manipulated as a pupped in MexicoMaximilian
318671467An inexperienced leader in war but a genius at inspiring and directing his nation's causeLincoln
318671468Leader whose conflict with states' rights advocates and rigid personality harmed his ability to mobilize and direct nation's war effortJefferson Davis
318671469Nation whose upper classes hoped for a Confederate victory, while its working classes sympathized with the anti slavery NorthBritain
318671470Scene of the largest northern anti-draft riot in 1863New York
318671471Who set up the American Red Cross?Clara Barton
318671472Slippery French Dictator who ignored the Monroe doctrine by intervening in Mexican politicsNapoleon III
318671473First woman physician, organizer of the United States Sanitary CommissionElizabeth Blackwell
318671474Who had an organized government?The Union
318671475Who had Naval strength?The Union
318671476Who had brilliant military leaders?The Confederate
318671477Who gained international statues through recognition as a nation?The Union
318671478What was the North's military strategy?Total War with 6 parts: 1. Blockade 2. Liberate Slaves 3. Capture Mississippi River 4. Send Troops 5. Decapitate Capital 6. Try to engage enemy's strength and crush them
318671479What was the North's military plan often called?Anaconda Plan
318671480What was the South's military strategy?Fight a defensive war EXCEPT for the two invasions in Maryland and Pennsylvania
318671481What did the Wilmot Proviso propose?Land gained form the Mexican War would be free of slavery
318671482What was the significance of the Wilmot Proviso?Reopened the issue of slavery; North takes powerful stand against slavery
318671483Why did the Wilmot Proviso never pass?The south had equal say in the senate
318671484According to the Compromise of 1850, California was to enter as a --- state?free
318671485According to the Compromise of 1850, all other territory gained from Mexican would be organized on the basis of ...?Popular Sovereignty
318671486What happened to the slave trade and slavery in D.C. in the Compromise of 1850?The slave trade was illegal but slavery was not
318671487Who wrote Uncle Tom's Cabin?Harriet Beecher Stowe
318671488What was the significance of Uncle Tom's Cabin?It was a huge political force that helped start the Civil War
318671489What was the significance of the Compromise of 1850?It held the country together and gave the North the balance permanently tipped in their favor
318671490What did the Personal Liberty Laws do?they hampered enforcement of fugitive slave laws saying that jails did not have to house slaves
318671491What was the significance of the Personal Liberty Laws?The states found a way around federal laws and it awakened huge antagonism against the south
318671492What were the fugitive slave laws?Laws that stated that fleeing slaves could not testify and the north had to help catch runaway slaves
318671493What was repealed in the Kansas-Nebraska Act?The Missouri Compromise
318671494What was the Kansas-Nebraska Act?Organized Kansas and Nebraska territory on the basis of popular sovereignty
318686643Who supported the Kansas-Nebraska Act?the South
318686644What was the main plank in the platform for the Republican party?Keep slavery out of the territories
318686645Who proposed the Kansas-Nebraska Act?Steven Douglas
318686646What wrecked the Compromises of 1850 and 1820?The Kansas-Nebraska Act
318686647What were Lincoln and Douglas debating for?The senate seat
318686648What deemed the Missouri Compromise unconstitutional?Dred Scott Case
318686649What was Douglas's opinion on whether or not slavery could be excluded from a territory?"Friedport Doctrine"; If people vote it down it can't exist
318686650Who were the candidates in the election of 1860?Lincoln (Rep); Douglas (Dem); Bell (Constitutional Union Party); Breckinridge (South Dem.)
318686651Who won the election of 1860?Lincoln
318686652What was the main issue in the election of 1860?Should there be slavery in the territories?
318686653What is the significance of the election of 1860?South thinks they've lost all political voice and secede
318686654Who was the first state to secede?South Carolina
318686655When was the attack on Fort Sumpter?April 12, 1861
318686656Who attacked who at Fort Sumpter?Confederates attack Union
318686657Where is Fort Sumpter?South Carolina
318686658Who led a raid at Harper's Ferry to free the blacks and start their own state and was found guilty of treason?John Brown
318686659Where is Harper's Ferry?Virginia

AP Psych Myers Unit 7A Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
463160163MemoryThe persistence of learning over time through the storage and retrieval of information.
463160164EncodingThe processing of information into the memory system.
463160165StorageThe retention of encoded information over time.
463160166RetrievalThe process of getting information out of memory storage.
463160167Sensory MemoryThe immediate, very brief recording of sensory information in the memory system.
463160168Short-Term MemoryActivated memory that holds a few items briefly, before the information is stored or forgotten.
463160169Long-Term MemoryThe relatively permanent and limitless storehouse of the memory system. Includes knowledge, skills, and experiences
463160170Working MemoryA newer understanding of short-term memory that involves conscious, active processing of incoming auditory and visual-spatial information, and of information retrieved from long-term memory.
463160171Parallel ProcessingThe processing of many aspects of a problem simultaneously; the brain's natural mode of information processing for many functions, including vision.
463160172Automatic ProcessingUnconscious encoding of incidental information, such as space, time, and frequency, and of well-learned information, such as word meanings.
463160173Effortful ProcessingEncoding that requires attention and conscious effort.
463160174RehearsalThe conscious repetition of information, either to maintain it or to encode it.
463160175Spacing EffectThe tendency for distributed study or practice to yield better long-term retention than is achieved through cramming.
463160176Serial Position EffectOur tendency to recall best the last and first items on a list
463160177Visual EncodingThe encoding of picture images.
463160178Acoustic EncodingThe encoding of sound, especially the sound of words.
463160179Semantic EncodingThe encoding of meaning, including the meaning of words.
463160180ImageryMental pictures; a powerful aid to effortful processing.
463160181MnemonicsMemory aids, especially those techniques that use vivid imagery and organizational devices.
463160182ChunkingOrganizing items into familiar, manageable units; often occurs automatically.
463160183Iconic MemoryA momentary sensory memory of visual stimuli.
463160184Echoic MemoryA momentary sensory memory of auditory stimuli.
463160185Tactile MemoryPart of sensory memory, sensory registry that holds encoded touch stimuli.
463160186Gustatory MemoryPart of sensory memory, sensory registry that holds encoded taste stimuli.
463160187Olfactory MemoryPart of sensory memory, sensory registry that holds encoded smell stimuli.
463160188Long-Term PotentiationAn increase in a synapse's firing potential after brief, rapid stimulation. Believed to be a neural basis for learning and memory.
463160189AmnesiaThe loss of memory.
463160190Implicit MemoryRetention independent of conscious recollection.
463160191Explicit MemoryMemory of facts and experiences that one can consciously know and "declare."
463160192HippocampusA neural center located in the limbic system that helps process explicit memories for storage.
463160193RecallA measure of memory in which the person must retrieve information learned earlier, as on a fill-in-the-blank test.
463160194RecognitionA measure of memory in which the person need only identify items previously learned, as on a multiple-choice test.
463160195PrimingThe activation, often unconsciously, of certain associations, thus predisposing one's perception, memory, or response.
463160196Mood-Congruent MemoryThe tendency to recall experiences that are consistent with one's current good or bad mood.
463160197Proactive InterferenceThe disruptive effect of prior learning on the recall of new information.
463160198Retroactive InterferenceThe disruptive effect of new learning on the recall of old information.
463160199Misinformation EffectIncorporating misleading information into one's memory of an event.
463160200MisattributionA memory fault that occurs when memories are retrieved but are associated with the wrong time, place, or person.

APUSH American Pageant (13th Edition) Chapter 16, 18, and 19 Flashcards

Mr. Harvey's APUSH Benedictine 11th grade notes KEY TERMS ONLY

Terms : Hide Images
550614769"Cotton is King"Cotton had become such a huge import by the time of the Civil War it was 60% of all American Imports. Southerners believed that it was so essential to Europeans that they would intervene in the Civil War. The term "Cotton is King" comes from Senator J. H. Hammond's fro South Carolina boast "Without firing a gun...should they make war on us, we could bring the whole world to our feet...What would happen if no cotton was furnished for three years?... England would topple headlong and carry the whole civilized world with her save the South. No, you dare not to make war on cotton. No power on the earth dares to make war upon it. Cotton is King."
550614770Sir Walter ScottAuthor, wrote of manors and castles, idealizing feudal society even though many economic activities were capitalistic
550614771King CottonExpression used by Southern authors and orators before Civil War to indicate economic dominance of Southern cotton industry, and that North needed South's cotton. Coined by James Hammond
550614772"Land butchery"excessive cultivation
550614773"Poor White Trash"slaves' name for least prosperous nonslave-holding whites
550614774Frederick Douglassformer slave (escaped), abolitionist, self-educated brilliant orator, several times mobbed and beaten by northern rowdies
550614775Harriet Beecher StoweWrote Uncle Tom's Cabin, a book about a slave who is treated badly, in 1852. The book persuaded more people, particularly Northerners, to become anti-slavery.
550614776"Black Belt"The area of the south where most slaves were held, stretching from South Carolina across to Louisiana
550614777Denmark Vesey, Nat Turner, Gabriel ProsserEach of these led attempted slave rebellions in South Carolina and Virginia, respectively
550614778American Colonization SocietyAbolitionist organization founded in 1817 with the purpose of transporting blacks back to Africa, forming the Republic of Liberia in 1822.
550614779Theodore Dwight WeldAmerican abolitionist whose pamphlet Slavery As It Is (1839) inspired Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel Uncle Tom's Cabin.
550614780William Lloyd Garrison1805-1879. Prominent American abolitionist, journalist and social reformer. Editor of radical abolitionist newspaper "The Liberator", and one of the founders of the American Anti-Slavery Society.
550614781American Antislavery SocietyFounded in 1833 by William Lloyd Garrison and other abolitionists. Garrison burned the Constitution as a proslavery document. Argued for "no Union with slaveholders" until they repented for their sins by freeing their slaves.
550614782Wendell PhillipsAn associate of William Lloyd Garrison, this man founded the American Antislavery Society in 1833. "Abolition's golden trumpet"
550614783David WalkerHe was a black abolitionist who called for the immediate emancipation of slaves. He wrote the "Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World." It called for a bloody end to white supremacy. He believed that the only way to end slavery was for slaves to physically revolt.
550614784Sojourner TruthUnited States abolitionist and feminist who was freed from slavery and became a leading advocate of the abolition of slavery and for the rights of women (1797-1883)
550614785Frederick DouglassOne of the most prominent African American figures in the abolitionist movement. Escaped from slavery in Maryland at age 21 in 1838. he was a great thinker and speaker. Published his own antislavery newspaper called the North Star and was "discovered" by abolitionists after impromptu speech at antislavery meeting
550614786Mason-Dixon Lineoriginally the southern boundary of colonial Pennsylvania, antislavery societies more numerous below it in 1820s
550614787Northern Wage Slaves"Wage Slaves" livelihood depends on wages and dependence is total and immediate. Working with jail-like form of Social Security
550614788Gag Resolution1836 required all antislavery appeals to be tabled without debate, direct attack on right of petition
550614789AbolitionismThe militant effort to do away with slavery. It began in the north in the 1700's. Becoming a major issue in the 1830's, it dominated politics by the 1840's. Congress became a battle ground between the pro and anti slavery forces
550614790Elijah P. LovejoyReverend from Illinois, impugned chastity of Catholic Women, killed by mob in 1837
550614791Oligarchya political system governed by a few people
550614792Lewis CassGeneral, veteran of War of 1812, senator of wide experience and considerable ability, pompous
550614793Popular Sovereigntysovereign people of territory under Constitution should themselves determine status of slavery
550614794Free Soil Partyformed from the remnants of the Liberty Party in 1848; adopting a slogan of "free soil, free speech, free labor, and free men," it opposed the spread of slavery into territories and supported homesteads, cheap postage, and internal improvements. It ran Martin Van Buren (1848) and John Hale (1852) for president and was absorbed into the Republican Party by 1856. ***Attracted democrats resentful of polk, "Conscience Whigs", Martin Van Buren, etc
550614795"Conscience Whigs"Anti-slavery whigs who opposed both the Texas annexation and the Mexican War on moral grounds.
550614796Underground Railroada system that helped enslaved African Americans follow a network of escape routes out of the South to freedom in the North
550614797Harriet TubmanUnited States abolitionist born a slave on a plantation in Maryland and became a famous conductor on the Underground Railroad leading other slaves to freedom in the North (1820-1913)
550614798Fugitive-Slave LawEnacted by Congress in 1793 and 1850, these laws provided for the return of escaped slaves to their owners. The North was lax about enforcing the 1793 law, with irritated the South no end. The 1850 law was tougher and was aimed at eliminating the underground railroad.
550614799Henry ClayDistinguished senator from Kentucky, who ran for president five times until his death in 1852. He was a strong supporter of the American System, a war hawk for the War of 1812, Speaker of the House of Representatives, and known as "The Great Compromiser." Outlined the Compromise of 1850 with five main points. Died before it was passed however.
550614800Stephen A. Douglassa Democratic Senator from Illinois who debated Abraham Lincoln during his run for Senator in the Lincoln-Douglass Debates. He was an avid supporter of the Compromise of 1850, supported popular sovereignty, he rescued Clay's faltering compromise, he divided the compromise into 5 parts to he could mobilize a majority for each issue separately. "The Little Giant"
550614801John C. CalhounSouth Carolina Senator - advocate for state's rights, limited government, and nullification. "The Great Nullifier," died in 1850
550614802Daniel WebsterUnited States politician and orator (1782-1817), Leader of the Whig Party, originally pro-North, supported the Compromise of 1850 and subsequently lost favor from his constituency
550614803Seventh of MarchAn address given to the US senate by D. webster. It was his last great speech in which he put aside his agreement with slavery in favor of his love for the Union.
550614804William H. Sewardantislaveryite from New York, he stated that on the issue of slavery, there was a higher law than the Constitution
550614805"Higher Law"Senator William Seward's doctrine that slavery should be excluded from the territories as contrary to a divine moral law standing above even the Constitution
550614806Millard Fillmoreelected Vice President and became the 13th President of the United States when Zachary Taylor died in office (1800-1874)
550614807Compromise of 1850Forestalled the Civil War by instating the Fugitive Slave Act , banning slave trade in DC, admitting California as a free state, splitting up the Texas territory, and instating popular sovereignty in the Mexican Cession
550614808Fugitive Slave Law of 1850came from the Compromise of 1850; federal commissioners were appointed and given authority to issue warrants, gather, posses and force citizens to help catch runaway slaves
550614809Franklin Piercean American politician and the fourteenth President of the United States. Pierce's popularity in the North declined sharply after he came out in favor of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, repealing the Missouri Compromise and reopening the question of the expansion of slavery in the West.
550614810Winfield Scottmilitary hero of the Mexican War who became the Whigs' last presidential candidate in 1852, "Old Fuss and Feathers"
550614811Clayton-Bulwer Treatybetween U.S. and Great Britain agreeing that neither country would try to obtain exclusive rights to canal across Isthmus of Panama; Abrogated by U.S. in 1881
550614812William Walkera proslavery American adventurer from the South, he led an expedition to seize control on Nicaragua in 1855. He wanted to petition for annexation it as a new slave state but failed when several Latin American countries sent troops to oust him before the offer was made.
550614813"Filibustering"Referring to adventurers who conduct a private war against a foreign country. "During 1850 - 1851 two 'filibustering' expeditions descended upon Cuba."
550614814Ostend ManifestoA declaration (1854) issued from Ostend, Belgium, by the U.S. ministers to England, France, and Spain, stating that the U.S. would be justified in seizing Cuba if Spain did not sell it to the U.S.
550614815Caleb CushingAmerican diplomat who negotiated the Treaty of Wanghia with China in 1844
550614816Treaty of WanghiaSigned by China; First formal diplomatic agreement between the United States and China; US got most favored nation status and extraterritoriality (meaning that Americans accused of crimes in China would be tried in America before Americans); allowed American trade with China to flourish and opened opportunity for American missionaries
550614817Tokugawa ShogunateJapanese ruling dynasty that strove to isolate it from foreign influences
550614818Matthew C. Perryhe opened Japan and persuaded it to sign the Treaty of Kanagawa establishing relations with the US
550614819Treaty of Kanagawaproper treatment of shipwrecked sailors, American coaling rights in Japan, establishment of consular relations
550614820"Meiji Restoration"The political program that followed the destruction of the Tokugawa Shogunate in 1868, in which a collection of young leaders set Japan on the path of centralization, industrialization, and imperialism.
550614821James GadsdenAmerican diplomat, politician, and railroad promoter who negotiated the Gadsden Purchase.
550614822Kansas-Nebraska ActThis Act set up Kansas and Nebraska as states. Each state would use popular sovereignty to decide what to do about slavery. People who were proslavery and antislavery moved to Kansas, but some antislavery settlers were against the Act. This began guerrilla warfare. Created by Stephen A. Douglass
550614823Harriet Beecher StoweWrote Uncle Tom's Cabin, a book about a slave who is treated badly, in 1852. The book persuaded more people, particularly Northerners, to become anti-slavery.
550614824Uncle Tom's CabinWritten by Harriet Beecher Stowe in 1853 that highly influenced england's view on the American Deep South and slavery. a novel promoting abolition. intensified sectional conflict.
550614825Hinton R. HelperWrote "The Impending Crisis of the South", a book about slavery. He said the non-slave holding whites were the ones who suffered the most from slavery. He was captured and killed by Southerners
550614826New England Emigrant Aid CompanyAntislavery organization in the North that sent out thousands of pioneers to the Kansas-Nebraska territory to thwart the Southerners and abolitionize the West.
550614827John BrownAn abolitionist who attempted to lead a slave revolt by capturing Armories in southern territory and giving weapons to slaves, was hung in Harpers Ferry after capturing an Armory
550614828Pottawatomie Creek MassacreIn reaction to the sacking of Lawrence by pro-slavery forces, John Brown and a band of abolitionist settlers killed five pro-slavery settlers north of Pottawatomie Creek in Franklin County, Kansas
550614829Lecompton ConstitutionProposed constitution for Kansas supported the existence of slavery in the proposed state and protected rights of slaveholders. It was rejected by Kansas, making Kansas an eventual free state.
550614830James BuchananThe 15th President of the United States (1857-1861). He tried to maintain a balance between proslavery and antislavery factions, but his moderate views angered radicals in both North and South, and he was unable to forestall the secession of South Carolina on December 20, 1860.
550614831"Bleeding Kansas"Term referring to bloodshed over popular sovereignty in a particular western territory
550614832Charles Sumnergave a speech in may 1856 called " the Crime Against Kansas" militant opponent of slavery, beat with a cane by Preston Brooks after the speech, collapsed unconscious and couldn't return to senate for 4 years, symbol throughout the north.
550614833John C. Fremontan American military officer, explorer, the first candidate of the Republican Party for the office of President of the United States, and the first presidential candidate of a major party to run on a platform in opposition to slavery.
550614834American (Know-Nothing) PartyDeveloped from the order of the Star Spangled Banner and was made up of nativists. This party was organized due to its secretiveness and in 1865 nominated the ex-president Fillmore. These super-patriots were antiforeign and anti-Catholic and adopted the slogan "American's must rule America!" Remaining members of the Whig party also backed Fillmore for President.
550614835Dred Scott DecisionA Missouri slave sued for his freedom, claiming that his four year stay in the northern portion of the Louisiana Territory made free land by the Missouri Compromise had made him a free man. The U.S, Supreme Court decided he couldn't sue in federal court because he was property, not a citizen.
550614836Dred ScottUnited States slave who sued for liberty after living in a non-slave state
550614837Chief Justice Roger B. TaneyAs chief justice, he wrote the important decision in the Dred Scott case, upholding police power of states and asserting the principle of social responsibility of private property. He was Southern and upheld the fugitive slave laws.
550614838Panic of 1857A notable sudden collapse in the economy caused by over speculation in railroads and lands, false banking practices, and a break in the flow of European capital to American investments as a result of the Crimean War. Since it did not effect the South as bad as the North, they gained a sense of superiority.
550614839Abraham Lincoln16th President of the United States
550614840Lincoln-Douglas Debates1858 Senate Debate, Lincoln forced Douglas to debate issue of slavery, Douglas supported pop-sovereignty, Lincoln asserted that slavery should not spread to territories, Lincoln emerged as strong Republican candidate
550614841Freeport DoctrineDoctrine developed by Stephen Douglas that said the exclusion of slavery in a territory could be determined by the refusal of the voters to enact any laws that would protect slave property. It was unpopular with Southerners, and thus cost him the election.
550614842Harper's Ferry RaidOccurred in October of 1859. John Brown of Kansas attempted to create a major revolt among the slaves. He wanted to ride down the river and provide the slaves with arms from the North, but he failed to get the slaves organized. Brown was captured. The effects of Harper's Ferry Raid were as such: the South saw the act as one of treason and were encouraged to separate from the North, and Brown became a martyr to the northern abolitionist cause.
550614843John C. Breckenridgebuchanan's vice president, nominated for president by breakaway southern democrats in 1860
550614844John BellPresidential candidate of the Constitutional Union Party. He drew votes away from the Democrats, helping Lincoln win.
550614845Jefferson Davisan American statesman and politician who served as President of the Confederate States of America for its entire history from 1861 to 1865
550614846James Henry CrittendenKentucky Senator who attempted to make compromises between the North and the South, took mantle of Henry Clay
550614847Crittenden CompromiseA last-ditch effort to resolve the secession crisis by compromise. It proposed to bar the government from intervening in the states' decision of slavery, to restore the Missouri Compromise, and to guarantee protection of slavery below the line. Lincoln rejected the proposal, causing the gateway to bloodshed to be open.
550614848Southern NationalismThis was the development of a specific southern identity independent of a larger national identity. This subculture was one of the largest justifications for the south to secede and subsequently go to war.
550614849Self-determinationthe ability of a government to determine their own course of their own free will

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