* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download BIOL212Experience1keyAPR2012
Epigenetics of diabetes Type 2 wikipedia , lookup
Non-coding DNA wikipedia , lookup
Genome evolution wikipedia , lookup
Pharmacogenomics wikipedia , lookup
Gene expression profiling wikipedia , lookup
Heritability of IQ wikipedia , lookup
Epigenetics of human development wikipedia , lookup
Point mutation wikipedia , lookup
Biology and consumer behaviour wikipedia , lookup
Genome (book) wikipedia , lookup
Gene expression programming wikipedia , lookup
Nutriepigenomics wikipedia , lookup
Koinophilia wikipedia , lookup
Human genetic variation wikipedia , lookup
Vectors in gene therapy wikipedia , lookup
Quantitative trait locus wikipedia , lookup
Site-specific recombinase technology wikipedia , lookup
Therapeutic gene modulation wikipedia , lookup
The Selfish Gene wikipedia , lookup
Helitron (biology) wikipedia , lookup
Group selection wikipedia , lookup
Genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup
Polymorphism (biology) wikipedia , lookup
Deoxyribozyme wikipedia , lookup
Dominance (genetics) wikipedia , lookup
Artificial gene synthesis wikipedia , lookup
Genetic drift wikipedia , lookup
Designer baby wikipedia , lookup
History of genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup
First Experience Key – April 2012 BIOL212 See separate .pdf for the answers to the multiple-choice questions. 47.) Explain the significance, if any, of Archaeopteryx lithographica to the Theory of Evolution. (10 points) A. lithographica was the first (and a very clear) example of an organism with both reptilian and avian characteristics. With feathers, “by definition” a bird, but otherwise skeletal structures looked reptilian. Often referred to as “the missing link” between reptiles (dinosaurs) and birds. (Discovered in 1861 and ~ 145 million year old.) Avian features: - (Asymmetrical) feathers curved claws on feet lacked major flight muscles (supercaracoidius muscle) fused bones Reptilian features: - single occipital condyle (cranium-vertebra joint) - single ear bone - multiple bones in lower jaws - tarsal ankle - similar scales {- yolked eggs - female birds & many reptiles hetero gametic sex - nucleated red blood cells} – not visible in Archaeopteryx (or other fossils)!! Looking for clear statement of intermediary with features both avian and reptilian – points off for feature not possibly visible in a fossil. 48.) What are the five (5) conditions necessary for Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium? (5 points) large population random mating no mutations no natural selection pressure no migration (or no gene flow) 49.) Explain why natural selection can or cannot make new genes. (5 points) Natural selection is a “pressure” that can only act on things (alleles) already present. It does not “make” anything. 50.) Explain the strengths and weaknesses of the biological species concept. (5 points) Strengths: - interbreed in nature - producing viable, - AND fertile offspring - do nor breed successfully with other populations “reproductively isolated” Weaknesses: - fossils - asexual organisms - gene flow between distant species - 51.) What is a lipid? (1 point) - fats, oils, waxes - long chain hydrophobic “energy storage” molecules First Experience Key – April 2012 BIOL212 52.) What is a carbohydrate? (1 point) Sugars & starches 53.) What is a protein? (1 point) long chain molecules (polypeptides) of amino acids, includes enzymes 54.) What is a nucleic acid? (2 points) The components (other than sugar backbone) of DNA & RNA (for the four above, key has minimum answers.) 55.) How does the concept of descent with modification explain both the unity and diversity of life? (10 points) Unity: all organisms have similar cell structure, protein synthesis, membrane transport, cell division mechanism, organelles, development, etc., etc., hence ~ 50% of genes are conserved, or very similar from bacteria to humans. The genetic code is stored in DNA. (Since diversity comes from alleles, DNA is especially important.) Diversity: natural selection (descent with modification) acts on the alleles present (DNA) allowing organisms to become more fit for their current environment (habitat, niche) allowing exploitation of all, or nearly all, available niches 56.) Explain how the following statement is inaccurate: “Antibiotics have created drug resistance in MRSA.” (5 points) Since natural selection can only put pressure on what is there, it cannot “create drug resistance”. What happens is, since only the individuals that already have drug resistance live to reproduce (most fit for the new environment – the presence of antibiotic - ) subsequent generations after exposure to antibiotic, the new population, all have the alleles for resistance to that antibiotic. First Experience Key – April 2012 BIOL212 Vocabulary: 57.) convergent evolution 58.) vestigial structures 59.) genetic variation 60.) cline 61.) gene pool 62.) genetic drift 63.) gene flow 64.) blastula 65.) cephalization 66.) founder effect 57.) d 58.) f 59.) a 60.) g 61.) b 62.) e 63.) j 64.) c 65.) h 66.) i a.) differences among individuals in the composition of their genes or other DNA segments. b.) all the copies of every type of allele at every locus in all members of a population c.) multicellular, usually a hollow ball, stage of development following cleavage d.) the independent evolution of similar features in different lineages e.) chance events cause allele frequency to fluctuate unpredictably between generations f.) remnants of features that served a function in an organism’s ancestors g.) a graded change in a character (trait) along a geographic axis h.) sensory organs concentrated at anterior end of organism incl. a central nervous system in the head i.) a few individuals become isolated from larger population and establish a new population j.) transfer of alleles into or out of a population due to the movement of fertile individuals or their gametes k.) a drastic change in environment that drastically reduces the size of a population Extra credit: 67.) Explain directional selection, disruptive selection and stabilizing selection (6 points) Directional: shifts the overall expression of a trait favoring one variant. Disruptive: shifts the expression of a trait toward to extremes. Stabilizing: favors the intermediate trait type removing extremes of the type from the population. (The intermediate type is “concentrated”!) (Important note: esp. when alleles are recessive, the absence of the expression of an phenotype does not mean an allele is lost from the population – remember, in another environment, that phenotype might be more fit and the other phenotype could become common again!)