BCMB 311 Study Guide - Midterm Guide: Plants And Animals, Bacteria, Intron

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Big Questions for Chapter 1
1. What are some differences between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells?
Eukaryotic
Prokaryotic
membrane bound organelles
not membrane bound
nucleus
no nucleus
mitochondria / chloroplasts
no mitochondria
Plants, Animals, Yeast
Eubacteria & Archaea
More complex
simple cells
Has introns, repetitive DNA and exons
Does not have introns and exons
Ex: Plants & Animals
Ex: Bacteria & Viruses
2. Both covalent and noncovalent bonds are needed to form macromolecular complexes.
- Covalent Bond: stable chemical link between two atoms produced by sharing one or
more pairs of electrons
- Noncovalent Bond: Weak bond that does not involve the sharing of electrons; Ex: Van
Der Waals, Hydrogen Bonds
- Macromolecules: polymers that are built from covalently linked subunits; ex: proteins,
nucleic acids, and polysaccharides
- Take Home Message: Macromolecules store energy in their bonds, so in order to
release energy the bonds must be broken
3. What are the building blocks of DNA, RNA, and proteins?
- Nucleotides
- DNA: phosphate group, deoxyribose, & Base pairs (A, G, T, C)
- RNA: phosphate group, ribose, & Base Pairs (A, U, G, C)
- Proteins: amino acids
4. What are the main energy sources in the cell?
- nTP (ATP, GTP, TTP, CTP)
- biggest form = ATP
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Document Summary

Prokaryotic membrane bound organelles not membrane bound nucleus no nucleus mitochondria / chloroplasts no mitochondria. Ex: bacteria & viruses: both covalent and noncovalent bonds are needed to form macromolecular complexes. Covalent bond: stable chemical link between two atoms produced by sharing one or more pairs of electrons. Noncovalent bond: weak bond that does not involve the sharing of electrons; ex: van. Macromolecules: polymers that are built from covalently linked subunits; ex: proteins, nucleic acids, and polysaccharides. Take home message: macromolecules store energy in their bonds, so in order to release energy the bonds must be broken. Dna: phosphate group, deoxyribose, & base pairs (a, g, t, c) Rna: phosphate group, ribose, & base pairs (a, u, g, c) Be familiar with different types of microscopy and their resolution (panel 1-1). Brightfield - type of light simplest form of light microscopy. 0. 2um (roygbiv); the light you see with your eyes is reflected at a lower wavelength.

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