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molecules that have same chemical formula, but different arrangement |
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breakdown of polymers -> monomers, H2O split up and added to monomers |
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catalytic proteins that speed up biochemical reactions |
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recognize and respond to non-self substances |
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hormonal/regulatory proteins |
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control physiological processes (insulin) |
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receive and respond to molecular signals from outside and inside organism |
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store amino acids for later use |
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provide stability and movement |
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carry substances w/i organism (hemoglobin) |
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genetic regulatory proteins |
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regulate when, how and to what extent a gene is expressed |
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right-handed coil that turns in same direction as standard wood screw |
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formed from 2 or more polypeptide chains that are almost completely extended and aligned |
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nice folded form of protein |
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phospholipid bilayer serves as a lake where proteins float |
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Definition
genetic transformation of eukaryotic cells by DNA |
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organism that has taken up DNA |
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semiconservative replication |
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Definition
each new copy of DNA has one strand from original copy after replication |
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add nucleotides to growing chain |
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links okazaki fragments together |
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RNA --> amino acid sequence |
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Definition
catalyze synthesis of RNA from DNA |
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Definition
-A (amino acid site where charged tRNA anticodon binds to mRNA codon, lining up correct AA to growing chain -P (polypeptide site) where tRNA adds amino acid to polypeptide chain -E (exit) where uncharged tRNA resides before being released from ribosome and going back to cytosol to pick up another AA |
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cutting of polypeptide chain |
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addition of sugars to proteins to form glycoproteins |
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addition of phosphate groups to proteins, and is catalyzed by protein kinases |
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occur in body cells, not passed on to children |
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occur in cells that give rise to gametes, passed on to offspring |
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don't affect protein function |
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loss of function mutations |
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Definition
affect protein funcion
usually recessive, as one functional allele will still produce a working protein |
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gain of function mutation |
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Definition
leads to protein with altered function
usually dominant, as normal allele doesn't stop mutant from functioning |
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only display phenotypes under restrictive conditions (ie. high temperature) |
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results from gain, loss, or substitution of a single nucleotide |
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can change position/orientation of DNA segment, or cause segment to be duplicated or simply lost |
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things that cause mutations |
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Term
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genetic code changed so that one AA is switched with another in a protein |
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causes a stop codon to form in mRNA --> short proteins |
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result from insertion/ deletion --> screwed up codon reading |
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-bases can have 2 structures, rare structure pairs with wrong base -bases may change bc of chemical reaction -DNA polymerase can make errors in replication -meiosis not perfect |
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-chemicals can alter bases -some chemicals add groups to bases -radiation damages genetic material |
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totality of chemical reactions |
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Term
1st law of thermodynamics |
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Definition
energy is neither created nor destroyed |
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2nd law of thermodynamics |
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Definition
disorder tends to increase |
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Definition
break down reactants, release energy (exergonic reactions) |
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make a single product out of many smaller reactants, consume free energy (endergonic) |
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reactants in enzyme-catalyzed reaction |
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distinctive, non-amino acid atoms or molecular groupings that are permanently bound to their enzymes |
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Definition
inorganic ions such as copper, zinc, and iron that bind to certain enzymes |
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Definition
distinctive, non-amino acid atoms or molecular groupings that are permanently bound to their enzymes |
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Definition
inorganic ions such as copper, zinc, and iron that bind to certain enzymes |
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carbon-containing molecule that is required for the action of one or more enzymes |
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control their activity by changing shape |
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occurs when effector molecule binds to site other than active site --> enzyme changes shape |
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