Biochemistry WGU C785 - Module 1
Hydrophilic Correct Answer: Having an affinity for water.
Hydrophobic Correct Answer: substances that are not soluble in water. Hydrophobic substances include large, uncharged par
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Biochemistry WGU C785 - Module 1
Hydrophilic Correct Answer: Having an affinity for water.
Hydrophobic Correct Answer: substances that are not soluble in water. Hydrophobic substances include large, uncharged particles like fats and oils
solvent Correct Answer: A liquid substance capable of dissolving other substances
Solute Correct Answer: A substance that is dissolved in a solution.
Adhesive Correct Answer: Having the ability to stick to other surfaces.
Cohesive Correct Answer: having the ability to stick together
Heat of Vaporization Correct Answer: The amount of energy required for the liquid at its boiling point to become a gas
Anticodon Correct Answer: Three-base sequence in a transfer RNA molecule base that pairs with a complementary codon in mRNA
Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Correct Answer: DNA -> RNA -> Protein
This paradigm was formulated by Grancis Crick: First, a portion of the DNA, a gene, is transcribed to produce a complementary strand of RNA; then RNA is translated into protein
Codon Correct Answer: A specific sequence of three adjacent bases on a strand of DNA or RNA that provides genetic code information for a particular amino acid
DNA Correct Answer: deoxyribonucleic acid, a self-replicating material present in nearly all living organisms as the main constituent of chromosomes. It is the carrier of genetic information.
Dominant Allele Correct Answer: an allele that dominates or masks the presence of another allele and is fully expressed
Dominant trait Correct Answer: the trait that is expressed from a dominant allele
Recessive allele Correct Answer: the trait that is completely masked and is not expressed
Recessive trait Correct Answer: a genetic factor that is blocked by the presence of a dominant factor
Epigenetics Correct Answer: the study of environmental influences on gene expression that occur without a DNA change
Exons Correct Answer: expressed sequence of DNA; codes for a protein
Gene Expression Correct Answer: process by which a gene produces its product and the product carries out its function
Histones Correct Answer: they are the chief protein components of chromatin, acting as spools around which DNA winds, and playing a role in gene regulation
Inheritance Correct Answer: is the passage of hereditary traits from one generation to the next
Introns Correct Answer: Non-coding segments of nucleic acid that lie between coding sequences.
Intervening sequences in a newly made mRNA molecule that are removed by splicing before the mRNA is released into the cytoplasm for protein synthesis
mRNA Correct Answer: messenger RNA; type of RNA that carries instructions from DNA in the nucleus to the ribosome
Peptide Bond Correct Answer: covalent bond formed between amino acids
Polypeptides Correct Answer:
Promoter Correct Answer: specific region of a gene where RNA polymerase can bind and begin transcription
Ribosome Correct Answer: Cytoplasmic organelles at which proteins are synthesized.
RNA Correct Answer: ribonucleic acid; a nucleic acid that plays an important role in the production of proteins
RNA polymerase Correct Answer: the primary enzyme involved in transcription that reads the DNA sequence of a gene and produces a complementary mRNA molecule.
rRNA Correct Answer: Ribosomal RNA
part of the ribosome
Splicing Correct Answer: the process of removing introns and reconnecting exons in a pre-mRNA
Transcription bubble Correct Answer: the region of locally unwound DNA that allows for transcription of mRNA
Transcription Factors Correct Answer: Collection of proteins that mediate the binding of RNA polymerase and the initiation of transcription.
Transcription start site Correct Answer: is at the beginning (5' end) of a gene and is the location where RNA polymerase begins transcription of that gene
Translation Correct Answer: The synthesis of protein by the ribosome using the sequence of messenger RNA as a template. The codons of the mRNA are matched up to their corresponding transfer RNA molecules, which carry the amino acid encoded by the coon. The ribosome then connects the amino acids together using peptide bonds. The resulting protein is also known as a polypetide.
tRNA Correct Answer: transfer RNA; type of RNA that carries amino acids to the rib
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