Term
the process of systematic gene-directed changes through which an organism forms the successive stages of its life cycle |
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Definition
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four subprocesses of development |
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Definition
growth (cell division)
differentiation
pattern formation
morphogenesis |
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Term
the period of rapid cell division following fertilization
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Definition
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Term
during cleavage, the enormous mass of the zygote is subdivided into a larger and larger number of smaller and smaller cells called.... |
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Definition
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can divide into any type of cell |
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Definition
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each major tissue is represented. as development proceeds, these .... persist, even in adults |
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Definition
tissue-specific stem cells |
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can become any type of cell |
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Definition
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can become many types of cells |
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what is the main difference between animal growth and plant growth |
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Definition
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the process of differentiation begins with signals that start the expression of certain regulatory protiens |
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Definition
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what starts the differentiation cascade |
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Definition
it can be started by either internal or external signals |
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Term
internal signals of differntiation |
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Definition
are often due to unequal inheritance of cytoplasmic contents during oogenesis |
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external signals of differentiation |
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Definition
are often diffusible protiens that are made by neighboring cells |
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Definition
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the acuisition of axial differences in developing stuctures |
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Definition
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can determination ever be reversed |
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Definition
yes it may be reversible, as shown by reproductive cloning in some vertebrates |
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Term
the acquisition of axial differences in developing structures |
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Definition
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Term
soluble molecules (protein) whose concentration gradient can specify different cell fates along an axis |
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Definition
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Term
becomes anchored in the cytoplasm at the end of the oocyte closest to the nurse cells, this end will develop inot the anterior end of the embryo |
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Definition
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Term
becomes anchored to the end of the oocyte that will become the posterior end of the embryo |
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Definition
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Term
binds to and inhibits the translation of caudal mRNA |
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Definition
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Term
binds to and inhibits the translation of hunchback mRNA |
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Definition
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Term
encode transcription factors which activate genes required for the formation of anterior and posterior structures respectively |
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Definition
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fixed in place by the cytoskeleton, unlike hunchback and caudal |
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Definition
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Term
bicoid induces the transcription and translation of gap genes |
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Definition
gap genes and pair-rule genes encode transcription factors. they regulate the expression of the next genes in the cascade. |
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Term
encode proteins that function in cell-to-cell signalling (induction) |
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Definition
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Term
regluate the expression of each other and of segment polarity genes such as engrailed |
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Definition
pair-rule proteins (transcription factors) |
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Term
map out the coarsest subdivision of the embryo along the A/P axix |
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Definition
gap genes (encode transcription factors) |
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Term
the DNA that encodes the domain homeodomain |
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Definition
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Term
all homeotic genes code for proteins that contain a conserved sequence that is a DNA-binding domain |
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Definition
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Term
homeo-box containing gene that specifies the identity of a body part. these genes encode transcription factors |
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Definition
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Term
do plants have homeotic genes |
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Definition
they have different homeotic genes (MADS-box genes) |
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Term
list the five processes used by animals to acheive morphogenesis |
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Definition
- the number, timing and orientation of cell divisions
-cell growth and expansion
-changes in cell shape
-cell migration
-cell death, called apoptosis
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Term
which of the 5 processes of morphogenesis cannot be used by plants |
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Definition
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