BEWARE: This game alone will not prepare you for all topics on the exam. Also, use the midterm sem1...

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BEWARE: This game alone will not prepare you for all topics on the exam. Also, use the midterm sem1 2015 jeopardy parts 2 and 3.

Note that the jeopardy games do not cover topics of enzymes or DNA expression. These are covered in a second jeopardy game.

Midterm Exam Review, 2015: Jeopardy, Double & Final Jeopardy

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Kingdoms & Life Cells Transport

DNA structure

FINAL ROUND

Cell Energy

SWK/Life:

$100 Question

The statement “If the students are given candy then they will do well on the final exam” is an example of this.

BACK TO GAME

ANSWER

SWK/Life:

$100 Answer

BACK TO GAME

If/then prediction

(hypothesis would state: Students knowing candy will be given as a reward for a passing test score will earn passing scores more often than students NOT being told about a reward.)

SWK/Life:

$200 Question

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ANSWER

These are the 7 characteristics of life.

SWK/Life:

$200 Answer

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Reproduction

Heredity/presence of DNA

Evolution/adaptation

Growth and Development

Metabolism/chemical reactions & energy conversions

Homeostasis

Cellular Organization

SWK/Life:

$300 Question

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ANSWER

This characteristic describes when a population of a species of organisms changes over time due to highest rates of reproduction of best adapted individuals.

Passive :

$300 Answer

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Evolution

SWK/Life:

$400 Question

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ANSWER

Which two Kingdoms contain prokaryotic cells?

SWK/Life:

$400 Answer

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Eubacteria and Archaebacteria

SWK/Life:

$500 Question

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ANSWER

List the four Kingdoms that have eukaryotic cells.

SWk/Life:

$500 Answer

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Fungi, Plant, Animal, Protist

Cells:

$100 Question

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ANSWER

This is the part of a eukaryotic cell where DNA is stored.

Cells:

$100 Answer

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The Nucleus

Cells:

$200 Question

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ANSWER

Which organelle is responsible for protein synthesis in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes?

Cells:

$200 Answer

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Ribosomes ( on the rough ER and loose in the cytoplasm)

Cells:

$300 Question

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ANSWER

Which organelle contains digestive enzymes and cleans up the cell by “eating” old dead cell parts so that they can be recycled?

Cells:

$300 Answer

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Lysosomes

Cells:

$400 Question

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ANSWER

Which eukaryotic cell organelle modifies proteins or lipids, then packages them into transport vesicles that are often transported to the cell membrane for export?

Cells:

$400 Answer

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Golgi Apparatus

Cells:

$500 Question

What theory attempts to explain how eukaryotic cells developed? Describe the

fundamentals of the theory.

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ANSWER

DNA:

$500 Answer

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Endosymbiosis - prokaryotic cells combined (through endocytosis or through symbiosis) and ended up forming the membrane bound organelles (especially mitochondria and chloroplasts) in eukaryotic cells.

Cell Energy:

$100 Question

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ANSWER

This is the source of all energy in

our food chain.

Cell Energy:

$100 Answer

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Sunlight

Cell Energy:

$200 Question

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ANSWER

This is the most important reason that all

Organisms must carry out cell respiration,

Even autotrophs.

Cell Energy:

$200 Answer

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Making or charging ATP

Cell Energy:

$300 Question

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ANSWER

These are the balanced chemical equations for photosynthesis and

cellular respiration.

Cell Energy:

$300 Answer

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Cellular Respiration:

C6H12O6 + 6O2 -> 6CO2 + 6H2O + ATP

Photosynthesis:

6CO2 + 6H2O + Sunlight -> C6H12O6 + 6O2

Cell Energy:

$400 Question

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ANSWER

These are the reactants and products of the light-independent reactions (also called dark reactions or the Calvin Cycle) of photosynthesis.

Cell Energy:

$400 Answer

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Reactants: NADPH, CO2 and ATP

NADPH carries electrons & protons that combine with carbon dioxide to produce sugars; producing sugars is endothermic, so ATP provides the energy that must be absorbed.

Products: carbohydrates, NADP+, ADP, Phosphate

NADP+ will be recharged during the next light reaction cycle when it accepts electrons & protons released when water is split; energy of sunlight is used in the endotermic regeneration of ATP from ADP & phosphate

Cell Energy500

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ANSWER

This process allows the human muscle cells to produce ATP when there is not enough oxygen for aerobic respiration.

Cell Energy 500

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Lactic Acid Fermentation

this process regenerates NAD+ necessary to allow repeated cycles of anaerobic glycolysis—fermentation DOES NOT allow the cell to extract any more

energy than glycolysis alone

Transport:

$100 Question

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ANSWER

These molecules are the main building blocks of the cell membrane. They are both polar and non-polar.

Transport:

$100 Answer

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Phospholipids

Phosphate Head – Polar, Hydrophilic

Lipid Tail – Nonpolar, Hydrophobic

Transport:

$200 Question

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ANSWER

This is the passive transport of water from an area of higher to lower water concentration across a semi-permeable membrane. Another way to think of this is movement of water from a region where solute concentration is higher to where it is lower.

Transport:

$200 Answer

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Osmosis

Transport:

$300 Question

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ANSWER

This is the hydrophobic part of the cell membrane. Explain…

Transport: $300 Answer

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The lipid tails of the phospholipids in the center of the phospholipid bilayer are non-polar, making them hydrophobic.

Transport:

$400 Question

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ANSWER

Refer to the dual nature of the phospholipid bilayer to explain why water doesn’t freely flow across the membrane, but rather requires passage through aquaporin channels.

Transport:

$400 Answer

BACK TO GAME

Water is a polar molecule (unequal distribution of electrons). This means water molecules are unable to pass through the non-polar fatty acid lipid tails in the cell membrane. Aquaporins (protein channels) are integrated into the cell membrane and allow water to pass without requiring contact with the hydrophobic membrane core..

Transport: $500 Question

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ANSWER

A cell has 10% solute in its cytoplasm. If it is bathed in an environment solution having 5% solute, is the environment:

a hypotonic environment

b isotonic environment

c hypertonic environment

Transport: $500 Answer

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A) Hypotonic – there is more water (95%) outside than inside the cell (90%). Therefore water will flow into the cell.

remember hypo- means “too little”& –tonic means “solute to be at equilibrium” 5% Solute

95% Water 10% Solute90% Water

DNA:

$100 Question

BACK TO GAME

ANSWER

What is the name of the monomer that makes up DNA, as well as the type of polymers than include DNA?

DNA:

$100 Answer

BACK TO GAME

Monomer: deoxyribonucleotide

Polymer: Nucleic Acid

DNA / Protein Synth:

$200 Question

BACK TO GAME

ANSWER

What are the three parts of every deoxyribonucleotide in deoxyribonucleic acid?

DNA: $200 Answer

BACK TO GAME

Deoxyribose sugar, phoshate group, and nitrogenous base

DNA:

$300 Question

BACK TO GAME

ANSWER

What are the names of the 4 possible nitrogenous bases in deoxyribonucleotides?

DNA: $300 Answer

BACK TO GAME

Adenine (A), Thymine (T), Guanine (G), cytosine (C)

DNA:

$400 Question

BACK TO GAME

ANSWER

What parts of DNA make up the covalently bonded backbone of each side of the double helix? What parts center rungs where the two halves of the helix are joined by weaker hydrogen bonds?

DNA:

$400 Answer

BACK TO GAME

alternating deoxyribose sugars and phosphate groups make up the backbone, while complementary base paired nitrogen bases form the rungs

DNA:

$500 Question

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ANSWER

The double stranded DNA molecule is “anti-parallel” in orientation and held together by “complementary base pairing”. What does this mean?

DNA:

$500 Answer

BACK TO GAME

Anti-parallel means that One strand is oriented with the phosphate on the same end where the other strand ends in a deoxyribose sugar (they face opposite directions; complementary base pairing means that A pairs with T, while C pairs with G.

FINAL ROUND Question

BACK TO GAME

ANSWER

Draw and label a diagram that shows how photosynthesis and cell respiration are interdependent within the biosphere.

FINAL ROUND, Jeopardy, Question

BACK TO GAME

Double Jeopardy Midterm December, 2015, Review

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Kingdoms & Life Cells Transport

DNA structure

FINAL ROUND

Cell Energy

SWK/Life:

$200 Question

What is the difference between everyday use of the word theory versus the scientific use of the word theory.?

BACK TO GAME

ANSWER

SWK/Life:

$200 Answer

BACK TO GAME

In everyday language, “theory” refers to an idea that has not been tested and is not supported by evidence; in science, “theory” refers to an idea that has been tested many times by many scientists and is supported by abundant, replicable evidence.

SWK/Life:

$400 Question

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ANSWER

Which characteristic of life is the requirement of every organism for chemical reactions and energy conversions?

SWK/Life:

$400 Answer

BACK TO GAME

Metabolism—the term metabolism also means all of the chemical reactions of a cell, some of which are energy releasing (exothermic) and some of which are energy absorbing (endothermic)

SWK/Life:

$600 Question

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ANSWER

Which characteristic of life refers to the genetically-controlled predictable changes that occur between birth and death?

Passive :

$600 Answer

BACK TO GAME

Growth and development

SWK/Life:

$800 Question

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ANSWER

Which two kingdoms contain cells having neither a nucleus or membrane bound organelles?

SWK/Life:

$800 Answer

BACK TO GAME

Eubacteria and Archaebacteria

SWK/Life:

$1000 Question

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ANSWER

Which kingdom contains eukaryotic heterotrophs whose cells contain neither chloroplasts, large central vacuoles, nor cell walls?

SWk/Life:

$1000 Answer

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Animalia (animal)

Cells:

$200 Question

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ANSWER

This is the part of autotrophic eukaryotic cells where photosynthesis occurs.

Cells:

$200 Answer

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chlorophlasts

Cells:

$400 Question

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ANSWER

What part of a cell provides a framework for it’s shape, allows it to move, and provides a system of highways along which transport vesicles and organelles are moved through the cytoplasm.?

Cells:

$400 Answer

BACK TO GAME

cytoskeletal proteins in the cytoplasm (and for cell movement, also those in the flagella and cilia of some cells)

Cells:

$600 Question

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ANSWER

Which organelle is located inside the nucleus and is the site of assembly of ribosome subunits that are later shipped to the cytoplasm?

Cells:

$600 Answer

BACK TO GAME

nucleolus

Cells:

$800 Question

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ANSWER

Name three organelles that are directly involved of synthesis, then modification and transport, of proteins—like hormones—that are exported out of the cell.

Cells:

$800 Answer

BACK TO GAME

1st the ribosome translates the messenger RNA,

2nd the rough endoplasmic reticulum packages some proteins into transport vesicles that will either be shipped to other organelles or to the golgi,

3rd some of the proteins in the RER produced transport vesicles are further processed in the golgi so that they will exit the cell via exocytosis

Cells:

$1000 Question

Which kingdom includes prokaryotic extremophiles, such as halophiles that live in very salty water, thermophiles that live in hot water, and acidophiles that live in

acid bogs?.

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ANSWER

DNA:

$1000 Answer

BACK TO GAME

Archaebacteria.

Cell Energy:

$200 Question

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ANSWER

Prokaryotes do not contain any membrane bound organelles, not ever chloroplasts and mitochondria.

Do heterotrophic bacteria carry out cell respiration?

Do autotrophic bacteria carry out cell respiration, photosynthesis, neither process or both processes?

Cell Energy:

$200 Answer

BACK TO GAME

All cells require ATP, so all cells carry out cell respiration; in prokaryotes, the process is a little different than in eukaryotes. All photosynthetic autotrophs require the chemical reactions of photosynthesis, but the process is a little different in prokaryotes; all autotrophic bacteria also require cell respiration, but again, the process is a little different versus eukaryotes.

Cell Energy:

$400 Question

BACK TO GAME

ANSWER

Describe the ATP cycle, showing how cells use it both to store energy in ATP and to release energy from ATP to do cell work.

Cell Energy:

$400 Answer

BACK TO GAME

ATP energy for cell work & some heat

+ ADP + phosphate

ADP + phosphate + energy released from organic compounds during cell respiration ATP

Cell Energy:

$600 Question

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ANSWER

Combustion is described by the same chemical reaction as aerobic cellular respiration. Why would cellular combustion kill cells, whereas aerobic cell respiration is required for cell survival?

Cell Energy:

$600 Answer

BACK TO GAME

Aerobic Cellular Respiration—many different chemical reactions serves as steps gradually releasing the chemical potential energy of organic compounds

C6H12O6 + 6O2 -> 6CO2 + 6H2O + 34ATP + some heat released gradually over several different steps

NOT enough heat is released to denature enzymes

Combustion—a single chemical reactions

C6H12O6 + 6O2 -> 6CO2 + 6H2O + heat only, all of which is released simultaneously

The temperature rises to above the point at which enzymes would denature, killing cells.

Cell Energy:

$800 Question

BACK TO GAME

ANSWER

Which phase of the process of photosynthesis splits water to release oxygen? _____ Which phase absorbs Carbon dioxide, then uses it to build carbohydrates? ______

Cell Energy:

$800 Answer

BACK TO GAME

Light dependent phase in thylakoids slits water, releases oxygen gas, loads energy rich electrons onto electron carrier NADP+, and traps energy of sunlight in ATP

Light independent/dark reactions/calvin cycle in stroma use energy of ATP, electrons and protons of NADPH, and Carbon dioxide to build sugars

Cell Energy$1000

BACK TO GAME

ANSWER

What are the two types of fermentation, and what type of organisms carry out each type?

Cell Energy $1000

BACK TO GAME

Lactic Acid Fermentation—bacteria and mammal muscle; alcoholic fermentation—yeasts which are unicelluar fungi

Transport:

$200 Question

BACK TO GAME

ANSWER

Name the three types of passive transport across cell membranes, and explain how these are similar and different.

Transport:

$200 Answer

BACK TO GAME

Simple diffusion Facilitated diffusion osmosis

Requires no transport protein

Moves small, uncharged solutes directly between phospholipid molecules in the bilayer

Moves solute down the concentration gradient, from higher to lower concentration

cell approaches equilibrium (= solute concentration cytoplasm,environment)

Concentration provides energy, not the cell

Requires solute-specific channel or pore protein

Moves large or charged solutes through openings inside transport proteins—each channel only fits a particular solute

Requires aquaporin channel proteins

Moves water only through the opening in aquaporin channel

Transport:

$400 Question

BACK TO GAME

ANSWER

Compare similarities and differences of active transport and facilitated diffusion.

Transport:

$400 Answer

BACK TO GAME

Active transport of solute Facilitated diffusion of solute

Requires a solute-specific membrane transport protein called a pump OR motor proteins for exocytosis and endocytosis

Cell expends its own energy to power the process, usually ATP

Moves cell away from conc equilibr

Solutes move from lower to higher concentrn, up/against conc gradient

Includes exocytosis that uses motor proteins/ATP to move vesicles filled w/ large amounts material (or large particles) for release out of cell OR endocytosis that pinches in vesicles filled with large amounts of material (or large particles) for entry into cell

Requires a solute-specific membrane transport protein called a channel or pore

Cell does not expend energy; conc gradient collapse fuels process

Moves cell towards conc equilibrium

Solutes move from higher to lower conc’n, Down/With conc’n gradient

Works only with solutes small enough to pass through a transport protein; is not a form of bulk transport

Transport:

$600 Question

BACK TO GAME

ANSWER

These are proteins that extend outwards from the cell membrane and into the surrounding environment; on their external surfaces, many of these proteins have attached carbohydrate chains.

Transport: $600 Answer

BACK TO GAME

Cell identification molecules

Transport:

$800 Question

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ANSWER

What is different about a peripheral membrane protein versus an integral membrane protein?

Transport:

$800 Answer

BACK TO GAME

Peripheral membrane proteins are attached to either the cytoplasmic or the extracellular face of the plasma membrane, whereas integral membrane proteins extend all the way from one face to the other.

Transport: $1000 Question

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ANSWER

Why is it necessary to define both the tonicity (relative solute concentrations) of the cell’s cytoplasm AND the solution in the cell’s environment unless the cell is at osmotic equilibrium?

Transport: $1000 Answer

BACK TO GAME

Unless cell is at osmotic equilibrium (isotonic, with equal internal & external solute concentrations), either the cell will be hypertonic & the environment hypotonic or visa versa (because osmosis is fueled by conversion of potential energy as solute moves down its concentration gradient)

5% Solute hypotonic environment95% Water

10% Solute90% WaterHypertonic cytoplasm

DNA:

$200 Question

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ANSWER

Long before the discovery of DNA’s structure, scientists had discovered that the nucleus contains the genetic material of a cell, as well as that nuclei contain both DNA and protein. What scientists discovered that the genetic material is DNA, not protein?

DNA:

$200 Answer

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Avery and his collaborators were able to transform (change the traits) of a species of bacteria, changing it from a harmless strain to one that kills mice due to pneumonia, simply by adding the killer cell DNA to live harmless cells. Adding the proteins of the killer cells did not transform the cells.

DNA / Protein Synth:

$400 Question

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ANSWER

What scientist contributed the knowledge that showed %C =%G, while %A=%T?

DNA: $400 Answer

BACK TO GAME

Chargaff isolated DNA, then analyzed it biochemically. He found that the DNA contained nitrogenous bases A, T, C, and G, the four of which comprised 100% of the Nitrogenous bases in DNA. He also found that if C is present at 30%, then G is present at 30%, and T will be present at 20% and A at 20%.

(other scientists who made major contributions to the discovery of DNA structure were:

Franklin—Xray of DNA showed that it was a double helix; Watson and Crick—built model matching today’s current description of DNA structure by synthesizing data generated by Chargaff, Franklin, and others)

DNA:

$600 Question

BACK TO GAME

ANSWER

Compare and contrast the structures of DNA and RNA.

DNA: $600 Answer

BACK TO GAME

DNA-deoxyribonucleic acid RNA-ribonucleic acid

Monomers—deoxyribonucleotides having the sugar deoxyribose, phosphate, and nitrogenous base

Nitrogenous bases: A T C G

Double stranded

One type

Contains introns in eukaryotes

Made by replication

Monomers—ribonucleotides having the sugar deoxyribose, phosphate, and nitrogenous base

Nitrogenous bases: A U C G

Single stranded

Several types, including mRNA, tRNA, rRNA

Does not contain introns

Made by transcription

DNA:

$800 Question

BACK TO GAME

ANSWER

Name the complementary base pairs of:

DNA bonded to DNA

DNA bonded to RNA

RNA bonded to RNA

DNA:

$800 Answer

BACK TO GAME

DNA bonded to DNA

A to T, C to G, T to A, G to C

DNA bonded to RNA

A to U, C to G, T to A, G to C

RNA bonded to RNA

U to A, C to G, A to U, G to C

DNA:

$1000 Question

BACK TO GAME

ANSWER

Describe 2 major classes of point mutations, and explain how each impacts the structure of DNA.

DNA:

$1000 Answer

BACK TO GAME

Point mutations are single nucleotide alterations in DNA’s deoxyribonucleotide sequence. These may arise due to errors during DNA replication OR due to DNA damage/faulty repair after exposure to mutagens. Substitution point mutations result in replacement of a nucleotide with another (like changing an A to a C), whereas frameshift mutations result from insertion of extra nucleotides OR deletion of nucleotides. These insertions and deletions alter the combination of nucleotides into codons.

FINAL ROUND Question

BACK TO GAME

ANSWER

Explain the difference between an “expressed mutation” and a silent mutation.

FINAL ROUND Answer

BACK TO GAME

Silent mutations Expressed mutations

Either result from changes in sequence in DNA lying between genes OR lying within noncoding introns of genes

OR

Due to substitution mutations that switch one codon for another codon that codes for the same amino acid.

In either case, then change in DNA does not result in the amino acid sequence of a protein; so the protein coded by the gene experiences no change in shape or function.

Result from changes in DNA sequence that alter the amino acid coding of the gene. So, the protein coded has the wrong amino acid sequence and therefore also the wrong shape and altered function.

Some expressed mutations affect noncoding parts of genes involved in regulating which cells express the gene, when cells make the protein, or how much protein they make.

$2000 question

Compare and contrast prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. List at least 4 similarities and 4 differences.

ANSWER

$2000 Answer

BACK TO GAME

Prokaryotes Eukaryotes BothEvolutionarily older—the ancestors of eukaryotes

•No nucleus

•Smaller and simpler cells

•No membrane bound organelles

Example: Eubacteria and Archaebacteria

Evolutionarily newer—descendents of prokaryotes

•Nucleus

•Larger and more complex cells

•Have membrane bound organelles

Examples:•Plants•Animals•Fungi•Protists

Grow & develop•Living thingsMade of cells•DNA is genetic or hereditary•Ribosomes•Cytoplasm•Cell membrane carry out metabolismReproduce by divisionRespond to stimuliMaintain homeostasisAdapt, evolve