Chapter 10 Pt 2 Flashcards

1
Q

A polymer made up of many nucleotides covalently bonded together.

A

Polynucleotide

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2
Q

An infectious form of protein that may multiply by converting related proteins into more ?. ? cause several related diseases in different animals, including scrapie in sheep and mad cow disease

A

Prion

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3
Q

A specific nucleotide sequence in DNA located at the start of a gene that is the binding site for RNA polymerase and the place where transcription begins.

A

Prometer

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4
Q

Phage DNA that has inserted by genetic recombination into the DNA of a prokaryotic chromosome.

A

Prophage

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5
Q

A bacterial plasmid that carries genes for enzymes that destroy particular antibiotics, thus making the bacterium resistant to the antibiotics.

A

R plasmid

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6
Q

The way in which a cell’s mRNA-translating machinery groups the mRNA nucleotides into codons.

A

Reading frame

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7
Q

An RNA virus that reproduces by means of a DNA molecule. It reverse-transcribes its RNA into DNA, inserts the DNA into a cellular chromosome, and then transcribes more copies of the RNA from the viral DNA. HIV and a number of cancer-causing viruses are ?.

A

Retrovirus

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8
Q

An enzyme used by retroviruses that catalyzes the synthesis of DNA on an RNA template.

A

Reverse Transcript

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9
Q

The type of ribonucleic acid that, together with proteins, makes up ribosomes; the most abundant type of RNA in most cells

A

Ribosomal RNA (rRNA)

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10
Q

An enzyme that links together the growing chain of RNA nucleotides during transcription, using a DNA strand as a template.

A

RNA polymerase

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11
Q

The removal of introns and joining of exons in eukaryotic RNA, forming an mRNA molecule with a continuous coding sequence; occurs before mRNA leaves the nucleus.

A

RNA splicing

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12
Q

Type of DNA replication in which the replicated double helix consists of one old strand, derived from the old molecule, and one newly made strand.

A

Semiconservative model

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13
Q

On mRNA, the specific three-nucleotide sequence (AUG) to which an initiator tRNA molecule binds, starting translation of genetic information.

A

Start codon

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14
Q

In mRNA, one of three triplets (UAG, UAA, UGA) that signal gene translation to stop

A

Stop codon

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15
Q

The alternating chain of sugar and phosphate to which the DNA and RNA nitrogenous bases are attached.

A

Sugar-phosphate backbone

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16
Q

A special sequence of nucleotides in DNA that marks the end of a gene. It signals RNA polymerase to release the newly made RNA molecule and then to depart from the gene.

A

Terminator

17
Q

A single-ring nitrogenous base found in DNA.

A

Thymine (T)

18
Q

The synthesis of RNA on a DNA template.

A

Transcription

19
Q

(1) The transfer of bacterial genes from one bacterial cell to another by a phage.

A

Transduction

20
Q

A type of ribonucleic acid that functions as an interpreter in translation. Each ? molecule has a specific anticodon, picks up a specific amino acid, and conveys the amino acid to the appropriate codon on mRNA.

A

Transfer RNA (tRNA)

21
Q

The incorporation of new genes into a cell from DNA that the cell takes up from the surrounding environment.

A

Transformation

22
Q

The synthesis of a polypeptide using the genetic information encoded in an mRNA molecule. There is a change of “language” from nucleotides to amino acids.

A

Translation

23
Q

A set of three-nucleotide-long “words” that specify the amino acids for polypeptide chains. See genetic code.

A

Triplet code

24
Q

A single-ring nitrogenous base found in RNA.

A

Uracil (U)

25
Q

A plant pathogen composed of molecules of naked, circular RNA several hundred nucleotides long.

A

Virod

26
Q

A microscopic particle capable of infecting cells of living organisms and inserting its genetic material. ? are generally not considered to be alive because they do not display all of the characteristics associated with life.

A

Virus