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Standard B-5 - Wando High School
Standard B-5 - Wando High School

...  The specificity of proteins is determined by the order of the nitrogenous bases found in DNA. ○ In order to construct the specific proteins needed for each specific purpose, cells must have a blueprint that reveals the correct order of amino acids for each protein found in the organism (thousands ...
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... • “Informatics” techniques from applied math, computer science and statistics were adapted for biological sequences ...
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Biology Study Guide and Checklist

Behavioral Genetics
Behavioral Genetics

... shown to have a mutation of the D4DR receptor allele, found on chromosome 11. • All addictions involve affecting the release, reuptake, or regulation of dopamine. • Reuptake: the transporting of a neurotransmitter back inside a dendrite by means of transporter protein. ...
Unit 3 Biochemistry
Unit 3 Biochemistry

... Mitosis Type of cells produced ...
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... nucleus is the part of the cell that holds the DNA. DNA is used to make proteins in the cell. Proteins carry out cell function. These cells also have an endoplasmic reticulum (transport), golgi apparatus (packaging) and ribosome (manufacturing) that are all organelles involved in the function of pro ...
AP Biology Thought Questions – 1st Semester SHIELDS Why do
AP Biology Thought Questions – 1st Semester SHIELDS Why do

... mitochondrial genes in the nucleus and carrying out all of the metabolic functions of mitochondria within the cytoplasm? ...
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Unit 3 Biochemistry

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Cancer genes

Chapter 14 Reading Guide
Chapter 14 Reading Guide

... What are traits that are controlled by two or more genes? What organism did American geneticist Thomas Hunt Morgan decide to study in order to advance the study of genetics? Why were Morgan’s organisms ideal for studying genetics? What are homologous chromosomes? What are cells that contain both set ...
Inferring Gene Ontology Category Membership via Gene Expression and Sequence Similarity Data Analysis
Inferring Gene Ontology Category Membership via Gene Expression and Sequence Similarity Data Analysis

... November 8, 2006, Baltimore, Maryland, USA ...
Answer Key DNA Review - John Bowne High School
Answer Key DNA Review - John Bowne High School

... 24. Researchers have found that formaldehyde and asbestos can alter DNA base sequences. Based on this research, the use of these chemicals has been greatly reduced because they A) may act as fertilizers, increasing the growth of algae in ponds B) have been replaced by more toxie compounds C) are cap ...
Biotechnology - MRS PITOC
Biotechnology - MRS PITOC

... 2. Recognize the relation between the structure of the cell and the functions it can do. 2.1. Relate the processes that the cell performs with its structures. II. Cell Division: Mitosis and Meiosis 1. Appreciate the importance of cell division to the survival of the cell, the organism and the specie ...
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... sex-linked pattern of inheritance, since females have two copies of many genes (located on X chromosomes) while males have just one. In females, most of the genes in one of the X chromosomes are inactivated in each cell. ...
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practice questions

... 5. Which of the following traits is not common to many cancer cells? a. uncontrolled growth and division b. abnormal numbers of chromosomes c. increased mobility d. absence of a cytoskeleton e. decreased adhesion to other cells 6. "Ras" is a. a G protein b. a tyrosine kinase c. a phosphatase d. a tr ...
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number: BIMA52 HT 2014 Re-exam Developmental Biology 2014

... 4d) Briefly outline how the first cell lineage decision is made in the inner cell mass of the mammalian blastocyst (2p) ...
Advances in Genetics
Advances in Genetics

... allowed this for human clinical trials. ...
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Genetics SHOW

... * Cells are the basic units of structure and function of an organisms *Living cells come from other living cells Schleiden Schwann Virchow ...
Chapter 37—Test A
Chapter 37—Test A

... are normal and have responded to such signals. Diagram A shows cells that have divided until they have formed a mass of cells, or a tumor. The cancer cells are dividing uncontrollably and are disrupting nearby normal cells. 28. They can break loose from the tumor they are now a part of and spread th ...
B5: Growth and Development
B5: Growth and Development

... Why some genes are switched off? The nucleus of each body contains exact copy of the DNA of the original zygote so every cell contains the same genes. But not all these genes are active in every cell. Each cell makes only the proteins that is need to be a particular type of cell. Genes that give in ...
Chapter 2: Epigenetics of mammalian parenting
Chapter 2: Epigenetics of mammalian parenting

... • Decrease hippocampal plasticity – reduced learning and memory capacity • All these effects are traceable to changes in neurotransmitter receptor and activity levels in the brain. ...
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... In a group of N genes there are K “special” ones If we sample n genes out of N (without replacement), and found k “special” ones, would that be considered a random outcome? Mathematically, we use the hypergeometric distribution to compute the probability of obtaining k or more “special” ones in a sa ...
human oct-1 gene located on chromosome 1
human oct-1 gene located on chromosome 1

... identified a complex set of factors with distinct expression patterns. The largest of these proteins is a generally expressed sequence-specific transcription factor that has been purified to homogeneity (1) and its cDNA cloned (2). This protein, when detected through its DNA binding properties, has ...
Signal Processing in Single Cells
Signal Processing in Single Cells

... individual gene and would cause identical copies of the same gene to express at different levels. – ~20% of the total noise ...
GENETICS
GENETICS

... before it completes translation of that gene, another ribosome may attach itself and begin translation of the same mRNA strand • Several ribosomes moving simultaneously in tandem along the same mRNA molecule permit the translation of a single mRNA strand into several identical proteins simultaneousl ...
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Polycomb Group Proteins and Cancer

The Polycomb-group proteins (PcGs) are a family of proteins that use epigenetic mechanisms to maintain or repress expression of their target genes. They were originally discovered in Drosophila (fruit flies), though they've been shown to be conserved in many species due to their vital roles in embryonic development. These proteins' ability to alter gene expression has made them targets of investigation for research groups seeking to understand disease pathology and oncology.
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