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CST Review
CST Review

... BI5. a. Students know the general structures and functions of DNA, RNA, and protein. BI1. d. Students know the central dogma of molecular biology outlines the flow of information from transcription of ribonucleic acid (RNA) in the nucleus to translation of proteins on ribosomes in the cytoplasm. BI2 ...
File - Miss Jenkins
File - Miss Jenkins

...  A big problem is the possibility of making designer babies – people may want there child to be perfect and not carry diseases, need to wear glasses, have the perfect nose etc.  Changing the genetic make-up of any organisms may effect ecosystems in ways laboratory tests can’t ...
Chapter 21 Regulation of the Eukaryotic Cell Cycle
Chapter 21 Regulation of the Eukaryotic Cell Cycle

... and Its Control  There are ordered series of events that eukaryotic cells proceed through, which constitutes the cell cycle.  During the cell cycle the cells chromosomes are duplicated and one copy of each of the chromosomes segregates into two daughter cells.  The regulation of the cell cycle is ...
Biology Professor, Robert Osuna, Receives National Science
Biology Professor, Robert Osuna, Receives National Science

... RNA (necessary for the synthesis of proteins in the cell) and of numerous other genes involved in a variety of important cellular processes. DksA differs from most bacterial gene regulators in that it functions by binding directly to the RNA polymerase enzyme (the enzyme responsible for carrying out ...
Proto-oncogenes normally regulate cell division, but can
Proto-oncogenes normally regulate cell division, but can

... the organism is not harmed because the mutation will not be carried forward. If a cell cannot reproduce, the mutation is not propagated and the damage is minimal. Occasionally, however, a gene mutation causes a change that increases the activity of a positive regulator. For example, a mutation that ...
Cell Station
Cell Station

... 8. Blue, yellow, and green frogs exist. A blue frog (BB) mate with a green frog (BY). What type of inheritance pattern does this follow? What percent of their offspring will be green? Incomplete dominance: 50% 9. What is a lethal allele? A version of an allele that causes the person to die (kept in ...
Viruses, Jumping Genes and Other Unusual Genes
Viruses, Jumping Genes and Other Unusual Genes

... they are only copied when the DNA is copied; they are not copied apart from the DNA of the cell. ...
Drosophila
Drosophila

... Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) must be capable of both self-renewal and production of progenitor cells that give rise to all of the blood cell types, the two basic principles of stem cell biology. Investigations into gene networks controlling HSC response to stress have been conducted using model o ...
Reading Guide_08_EB_TandT
Reading Guide_08_EB_TandT

... 3. Do bacteria and humans use the same or different chemical language for their genes? 4. What are the letters of that chemical language? 5. How many letters might an average-sized gene have? 6. What are the examples of some instructions that a gene might be translated into? 7. What is the entire “b ...
Gene Section MIR449A (microRNA 449a)  Atlas of Genetics and Cytogenetics
Gene Section MIR449A (microRNA 449a) Atlas of Genetics and Cytogenetics

... (Noonan et al., 2009; Yang et al., 2009; Lizé et al., 2010; Noonan et al., 2010; Bou Kheir et al., 2011). It is also involved in mucociliary differentiation (Lizé et al., 2010; Marcet et al., 2011). miR-449 regulates several pathways (reviewed in Lizé et al., 2011) including Notch (Capuano et al., 2 ...
Chapter 15
Chapter 15

Slide 1
Slide 1

... qRT-PCR data with weight loss are shown. The PCR and array data were scaled to make them comparable and each dataset is plotted against % weight loss. For each dataset the least squares line is also shown. P-values for the correlations ranged from 0.03 to below 0.01. All genes excepts SGK1 validated ...
DNA - heredity2
DNA - heredity2

... • The different traits for a specific gene are called alleles – e.g. Blue, green and brown eyes are different alleles for eye colour. ...
Elucidating the essentiality of essential genes in E. coli K-12
Elucidating the essentiality of essential genes in E. coli K-12

... metabolic networks. We have performed a comparison between essential and non-essential genes within an interaction network of E. coli and found that essential genes have significantly more links than the non-essential genes, validating earlier findings in budding yeast [3]. Furthermore, other topolo ...
The Living World
The Living World

... The inner cell mass consists of embryonic stem cells  These are pluripotent  Capable of forming the entire organism As development proceeds, cells lose their pluripotency  They become committed to one type of tissue  They are then called adult stem cells ...
animal science genetics
animal science genetics

... variation into a specie which can be beneficial in the long run Gives some species a better opportunity to adapt to new environments. ...
Learning Guide: Origins of Life
Learning Guide: Origins of Life

... o Describe what controls the cell cycle (study Figure 12.14), the role of checkpoints o The cell cycle is controlled by a multitude of factors. Explain the role of each of the following in ensuring that cells divide appropriately.  G1, G2 and M checkpoints, also explain G0 phase  Cdk’s and cyclins ...
Clicker review
Clicker review

... A male hormones such as testosterone often interact with X linked alleles B female hormones like estrogen compensate for mutations on the X C X chromosomes in males generally have more mutations than X chromosomes in females. D Males are hemizygous for the X chromosome and don't have a back up X E m ...
Cell Cycle 1
Cell Cycle 1

... Properties Required for Transmission of Chromosomes During Cell Division 1. One and only one centromere ...
Chromosome
Chromosome

... • In contrast, a mutant gene on an X chromosome in a female is usually covered up by the normal allele on the other X. Most mutations are recessive. So, most people with sex-linked genetic conditions are male. • Another fact about sex-linked genes. Males produce ½ their sperm with their X chromosome ...
Bacterial Genetic
Bacterial Genetic

... • Does not depend on complementary base pairing between homologous regions of the chromosome. • Transposons move to regions that the gene has never been (ex. plasmid  chromosome) ...
Microbial genetics (Ch. 7) Part 3
Microbial genetics (Ch. 7) Part 3

... • Occurs cross-species and cross-genera, i.e., can pass genes to unrelated organisms • Transformation, transduction and conjugation all cause horizontal gene transfer • Many factors that contribute to pathogenesis may be transferred via these processes ...
The Cell Cycle
The Cell Cycle

... spends the majority of its time and performs the majority of its purposes including preparation for cell division. It begins to grow, develop, function. Also, it duplicates its DNA and organelles. 4 The final step of the Cell Cycle, it is the cytoplasmic division of a cell at the end of mitosis or m ...
Lecture 8: Transgenic Model Systems and RNAi
Lecture 8: Transgenic Model Systems and RNAi

... Random vs. Targeted Gene Insertion The early vectors used for gene insertion could, and did, place the gene (from one to 200 copies of it) anywhere in the genome. However, if you know some of the DNA sequence flanking a particular gene, it is possible to design vectors that replace that gene. The r ...
Evolution and Development
Evolution and Development

... Rapid evolution of an allometric threshold in one species of dung beetle • Large males that reach a threshold size develop horns for male-male combat Rapid evolution of an allometric threshold in the dung beetle • Size at which horns develop has diverged in two introduced populations Developmental c ...
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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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