What is a neoplasm or tumor?
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A neoplasm or tumor is a mass of cells that results from uncontrolled cell division, which is a distinguishing feature of cancer cells.
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What is a neoplasm or tumor?
A neoplasm or tumor is a mass of cells that results from uncontrolled cell division, which is a distinguishing feature of cancer cells.
What is the function of catalase in peroxisomes?
Catalase is an enzyme in peroxisomes that decomposes hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), protecting other parts of the cell from its toxic effects.
What are nuclear pores?
Nuclear pores are openings in the nuclear envelope that control the movement of substances between the nucleus and the cytoplasm. They consist of a circular arrangement of proteins surrounding a large central opening.
What is the role of genomic medicine?
Genomic medicine aims to design new drugs and provide screening tests to enable physicians to offer more effective counseling and treatment for disorders with significant genetic components.
What is gene expression?
Gene expression is the process where a gene’s DNA is used as a template for the synthesis of a specific protein.
What is reproductive cell division?
Reproductive cell division is the mechanism that produces gametes, involving a special two-step division process called meiosis.
What is the function of ribosomal RNA (rRNA)?
Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) joins with ribosomal proteins to make ribosomes.
What happens during prophase?
During prophase, chromatin fibers condense and shorten into visible chromosomes, and the mitotic spindle begins to form.
What is the function of the large and small ribosomal subunits in protein synthesis?
The large and small ribosomal subunits join to form a functional ribosome that facilitates the translation of mRNA into a protein. They separate once protein synthesis is complete.
What is the nucleus?
The nucleus is a spherical or oval-shaped structure that usually is the most prominent feature of a cell. It is separated from the cytoplasm by a double membrane called the nuclear envelope and contains the cell's hereditary units, called genes.
What was the Human Genome Project?
The Human Genome Project was an effort that began in 1990 to sequence all of the nearly 3.2 billion nucleotides of the human genome, completed in April 2003.
What is the proteome?
Proteome refers to all of an organism’s proteins.
What is somatic cell division?
Somatic cell division is the process by which a somatic cell undergoes nuclear division (mitosis) and cytoplasmic division (cytokinesis) to produce two genetically identical cells.
What is transcription?
Transcription is the process that occurs in the nucleus where the genetic information represented by the sequence of base triplets in DNA serves as a template for copying the information into a complementary sequence of codons in RNA.
What is the mitotic spindle?
The mitotic spindle is a football-shaped assembly of microtubules that forms during prophase and is responsible for separating chromosomes during cell division.
What are the components of cytoplasm?
The cytoplasm consists of cellular contents between the plasma membrane and nucleus, including cytosol and organelles.
What is cytokinesis?
Cytokinesis is the division of a cell's cytoplasm and organelles into two identical cells. It begins in late anaphase with the formation of a cleavage furrow and is completed after telophase.
What are introns?
Introns are regions within a gene that do not code for parts of proteins and are removed from pre-mRNA during processing.
What are mitochondria?
Mitochondria are organelles that generate most of the ATP through aerobic (oxygen-requiring) respiration and are referred to as the 'powerhouses' of the cell.
What happens when the ribosome shifts by one codon during protein synthesis?
When the ribosome shifts by one codon, the tRNA previously at the P site moves to the E site and is released, while the tRNA at the A site moves to the P site.
What is autophagy?
Autophagy is the process by which lysosomes digest worn-out organelles within a cell.
What are nucleoli?
Nucleoli are spherical bodies within the nucleus that function in producing ribosomes. They are clusters of protein, DNA, and RNA and are the sites of synthesis of rRNA and assembly of rRNA and proteins into ribosomal subunits.
What occurs during transcription?
During transcription, the information encoded in a specific region of DNA is transcribed (copied) to produce a specific molecule of RNA.
What is recombinant DNA?
Recombinant DNA is a combination of DNA from different sources, created by inserting genes from other organisms into a host cell, causing the host to produce proteins it normally does not synthesize.
What is an anticodon?
An anticodon is a triplet of nucleotides in tRNA that pairs with a complementary codon in mRNA during protein synthesis.
What forms a pair of chromatids?
Two identical DNA molecules and their histones form a pair of chromatids, which are held together by a centromere.
What is the function of cilia and flagella?
Cilia move fluids over the cell’s surface, while flagella move the entire cell.
What is the role of initiator tRNA in protein synthesis?
The initiator tRNA attaches to the start codon and fits into the P site of the ribosome, initiating the process of protein synthesis.
What are proteasomes?
Proteasomes are complexes found in the cytosol and nucleus that contain proteases, enzymes that cut proteins into small peptides for degradation and recycling.
What is chromatin?
Chromatin is a complex of DNA, proteins, and some RNA found in the nucleus. In cells that are not dividing, it appears as a diffuse, granular mass.
What is meiosis?
Meiosis is a type of cell division in which the number of chromosomes in the nucleus is reduced by half.
What is a base triplet?
A base triplet is a sequence of three nucleotides in DNA.
What is the function of proteasomes?
Proteasomes degrade unneeded, damaged, or faulty proteins by cutting them into small peptides.
What is a chromatid?
A chromatid is one of the two identical strands of a chromosome that are joined together by a centromere during prophase of cell division.
What occurs during the S phase of interphase?
During the S phase of interphase, DNA replication occurs, doubling the amount of DNA in preparation for cell division.
What occurs during anaphase?
During anaphase, the centromeres split, separating the two members of each chromatid pair, which then move toward opposite poles of the cell. Once separated, the chromatids are termed chromosomes.
What is the G2 phase of interphase?
The G2 phase involves cell growth, continued enzyme and protein synthesis, and the completion of centrosome replication.
How are proteasomes linked to diseases like Parkinson's and Alzheimer's?
Proteasomes may fail to degrade abnormal proteins, leading to the accumulation of misfolded proteins in brain cells, which is observed in diseases like Parkinson's and Alzheimer's.
What is a nucleosome?
A nucleosome is a structural unit of chromatin, consisting of double-stranded DNA wrapped twice around a core of eight proteins called histones.
What are homologous chromosomes?
Homologous chromosomes are pairs of chromosomes that contain similar genes arranged in the same (or almost the same) order, with one member of each pair inherited from each parent.
What is a codon?
A codon is a complementary sequence of three nucleotides transcribed from a DNA base triplet.
What is the function of the nucleus?
The nucleus controls the movement of substances between the nucleus and cytoplasm, produces ribosomes, and contains chromosomes that control cellular structure and direct cellular functions.
What is a kinetochore?
A kinetochore is a protein complex located at the outside of each centromere, where microtubules of the mitotic spindle attach during cell division.
What is cytokinesis?
Cytokinesis is the division of the cytoplasm that usually occurs during late anaphase of the mitotic phase, resulting in the formation of two separate cells.
What is the function of mitochondrial cristae?
Mitochondrial cristae are folds in the internal mitochondrial membrane that increase the surface area for chemical reactions of aerobic cellular respiration, thereby enhancing ATP production.
What are chromatids?
Chromatids are each of the two thread-like strands into which a chromosome divides longitudinally during cell division. Each contains a double helix of DNA.
What occurs during the S phase?
During the S phase, DNA replication occurs, ensuring that the two identical cells formed during cell division will have the same genetic material.
What is the function of peroxisomes?
Peroxisomes oxidize amino acids and fatty acids and detoxify harmful substances such as hydrogen peroxide and associated free radicals.
What is the base pairing rule during transcription?
During transcription, the bases pair in a complementary manner: cytosine (C) pairs with guanine (G), guanine (G) pairs with cytosine (C), and thymine (T) pairs with adenine (A) in the RNA strand.
What is the function of the plasma membrane?
The plasma membrane protects cellular contents, makes contact with other cells, contains channels, transporters, receptors, enzymes, cell-identity markers, and linker proteins, and mediates the entry and exit of substances.
What is the centrosome composed of?
The centrosome is composed of a pair of centrioles plus the pericentriolar matrix.
What occurs at the A site of the ribosome during protein synthesis?
At the A site, the anticodon of the incoming tRNA pairs with the next mRNA codon, allowing the amino acid it carries to be added to the growing peptide chain.
What is genomics?
Genomics is the study of the relationships between the genome and the biological functions of an organism.
What is the cell cycle?
The cell cycle is an orderly sequence of events in which a somatic cell duplicates its contents and divides in two.
What is the G2 phase?
The G2 phase is the interval between the S phase and the mitotic phase, during which cell growth continues, enzymes and other proteins are synthesized, and replication of centrosomes is completed.
What is the function of mitochondria?
Mitochondria are the site of aerobic cellular respiration reactions that produce most of a cell’s ATP and play an important early role in apoptosis.
What is a centromere?
A centromere is a constricted region of a chromosome that holds the two chromatids together.
What is a chromosome?
A chromosome is a highly coiled and folded DNA molecule that is combined with protein molecules.
What are cyclins?
Cyclins are cellular proteins that regulate the cell cycle by switching cyclin-dependent protein kinases (Cdk's) on and off. Their levels rise and fall during the cell cycle, and the joining of a specific cyclin and Cdk molecule triggers various events that control cell division.
What is telophase?
Telophase is the final stage of mitosis, where chromosomal movement stops, chromosomes uncoil and revert to chromatin form, a nuclear envelope forms around each chromatin mass, nucleoli reappear, and the mitotic spindle breaks up.
What is alternative splicing?
Alternative splicing is a process in which pre-mRNA is spliced in different ways to produce several different mRNAs, allowing one gene to code for multiple proteins.
What are some side effects of chemotherapy?
Side effects of chemotherapy include nausea, diarrhea, hair loss, fatigue, and decreased resistance to disease, as the drugs also kill all types of rapidly dividing cells in the body.
What is Tay-Sachs disease?
Tay-Sachs disease is an inherited condition characterized by the absence of a lysosomal enzyme called Hex A, leading to the accumulation of ganglioside GM2 in nerve cells, causing seizures, muscle rigidity, blindness, dementia, and early death.
What is chromatin?
Chromatin is a complex of DNA and protein found in the nucleus of cells, which condenses to form chromosomes during cell division.
What is interphase?
Interphase is the period in the cell cycle when a cell is not dividing but is replicating its DNA, producing additional organelles, and growing.
What is the function of the Golgi complex?
The Golgi complex accepts proteins from the rough ER, forms glycoproteins, glycolipids, and lipoproteins, and sorts and packages molecules for transport to their destinations.
What is the role of transfer RNA (tRNA) in protein synthesis?
Transfer RNA (tRNA) binds to an amino acid and holds it in place on a ribosome until it is incorporated into a protein during translation. One end of the tRNA carries a specific amino acid, and the opposite end consists of a triplet of nucleotides called an anticodon.
What is the cytosol composed of?
The cytosol is composed of water, solutes, suspended particles, lipid droplets, and glycogen granules.
What is the function of the rough endoplasmic reticulum (ER)?
The rough ER synthesizes glycoproteins and phospholipids that are transferred to cellular organelles, inserted into the plasma membrane, or secreted during exocytosis.
What is the function of the P site in a ribosome?
The P (peptidyl) site binds the tRNA carrying the growing polypeptide chain during translation.
What is pre-mRNA?
Pre-mRNA is the initial transcript that includes both introns and exons, which is processed to form functional mRNA by removing introns.
What are the functions of lysosomes?
Lysosomes digest substances that enter a cell via endocytosis, transport final products of digestion into the cytosol, carry out autophagy, implement autolysis, and accomplish extracellular digestion.
What are genes?
Genes are the cell’s hereditary units that control cellular structure and direct cellular activities. They are arranged along chromosomes.
What happens during translation?
During translation, the RNA attaches to a ribosome, where the information contained in RNA is translated into a corresponding sequence of amino acids to form a new protein molecule.
What is genetic engineering?
Genetic engineering is the technology that arises from the manipulation of genetic material, allowing for the production of therapeutic substances like human growth hormone, insulin, interferon, and erythropoietin.
What is a promoter in the context of DNA transcription?
A promoter is a special nucleotide sequence located near the beginning of a gene where RNA polymerase attaches to the DNA to start the transcription process.
What are cyclin-dependent protein kinases (Cdk's)?
Cyclin-dependent protein kinases (Cdk's) are enzymes that can transfer a phosphate group from ATP to a protein to activate the protein; other enzymes can remove the phosphate group from the protein to deactivate it. The activation and deactivation of Cdk's are crucial in the initiation and regulation of DNA replication, mitosis, and cytokinesis.
What is the function of the cytoskeleton?
The cytoskeleton maintains the shape and general organization of cellular contents and is responsible for cell movements.
What is the function of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum (ER)?
The smooth ER synthesizes fatty acids and steroids, inactivates or detoxifies drugs, removes phosphate groups from glucose-6-phosphate, and stores and releases calcium ions in muscle cells.
What is a terminator in the context of transcription?
A terminator is a special nucleotide sequence in DNA that specifies the end of a gene, causing RNA polymerase to detach from the transcribed RNA molecule and the DNA strand.
What is chemotherapy?
Chemotherapy is the use of anticancer drugs to treat cancer by stopping cell division, often by inhibiting the formation of the mitotic spindle.
What role do mitochondria play in apoptosis?
Mitochondria play an important early role in apoptosis, which is the process of programmed cell death.
What are proteasomes?
Proteasomes are tiny barrel-shaped structures consisting of four stacked rings of proteins around a central core that continuously destroy unneeded, damaged, or faulty proteins in the cytosol.
What is the nuclear envelope?
The nuclear envelope is a double membrane that separates the nucleus from the cytoplasm. Both layers are lipid bilayers similar to the plasma membrane, and the outer membrane is continuous with the rough ER.
What is the genome?
The genome is the total genetic information carried in a cell or an organism.
What are diploid (2n) cells?
Diploid (2n) cells are somatic cells that contain two sets of chromosomes.
What is the genetic code?
The genetic code is the set of rules that relate the base triplet sequence of DNA to the corresponding codons of RNA and the amino acids they specify.
What is the role of messenger RNA (mRNA)?
Messenger RNA (mRNA) directs the synthesis of a protein.
What is the mitotic (M) phase?
The mitotic (M) phase of the cell cycle consists of nuclear division (mitosis) and cytoplasmic division (cytokinesis), resulting in the formation of two identical cells.
What is apoptosis?
Apoptosis is an orderly, genetically programmed cell death. It involves a triggering agent causing 'cell-suicide' genes to produce enzymes that damage the cell, leading to cell shrinkage, DNA fragmentation, and eventual ingestion by phagocytes.
What is the composition of ribosomes?
Ribosomes are composed of two subunits containing ribosomal RNA and proteins; they may be free in the cytosol or attached to the rough ER.
What is the E site in a ribosome?
The E (exit) site binds tRNA just before it is released from the ribosome during translation.
What is the function of a stop codon?
A stop codon signals the termination of protein synthesis, causing the ribosome to release the newly formed protein and disassemble.
What is linker DNA?
Linker DNA is the string of DNA that holds adjacent nucleosomes together in the chromatin structure.
What happens during the G1 phase?
During the G1 phase, the cell is metabolically active, replicates most of its organelles and cytosolic components, and begins replication of centrosomes.
What is the function of lysosomes?
Lysosomes fuse with and digest contents of endosomes, phagosomes, and vesicles, and transport final products of digestion into the cytosol. They also digest worn-out organelles, entire cells, and extracellular materials.
What enzyme catalyzes the transcription of DNA?
The enzyme RNA polymerase catalyzes the transcription of DNA.
What is mitosis?
Mitosis is the process of nuclear division in which two sets of chromosomes are distributed into two separate nuclei, resulting in the exact partitioning of genetic information.
What is the G2 phase?
The G2 phase is a period in the cell cycle where cell growth continues, enzymes and other proteins are synthesized, and centrosome replication is completed.
What occurs during the S phase of interphase?
During the S phase, replication of DNA and centrosomes takes place.
What is the role of the A site in a ribosome?
The A (aminoacyl) site binds the tRNA carrying the next amino acid to be added to the growing polypeptide chain during translation.
What is the G1 phase?
The G1 phase is a period in the cell cycle where the cell is metabolically active, duplicates organelles and cytosolic components, and begins centrosome replication.
What happens during the G1 phase of interphase?
During the G1 phase, a metabolically active cell duplicates most of its organelles and cytosolic components, and replication of chromosomes begins. Cells that remain in the G1 phase for a very long time and possibly never divide again are said to be in the G0 phase.
What is a polyribosome?
A polyribosome is a complex of several ribosomes attached to the same mRNA molecule, allowing the simultaneous translation of one mRNA into several identical proteins.
What are exons?
Exons are regions within a gene that code for segments of a protein and are spliced together to form functional mRNA after introns are removed.
What happens during metaphase?
During metaphase, the microtubules of the mitotic spindle align the centromeres of the chromatid pairs at the exact center of the mitotic spindle, forming the metaphase plate.
What is the function of an initiator tRNA?
An initiator tRNA binds to the start codon (AUG) on mRNA, initiating translation and carrying the amino acid methionine.
What are small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs)?
Small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) are enzymes that cut out introns and splice together exons in pre-mRNA to form functional mRNA.