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Vocabulary Review Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and DNA, RNA, and Protein Protein Synthesis Synthesis
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Page 1: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

Vocabulary Vocabulary ReviewReview

Chapter 10 – Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, DNA, RNA, and Protein and Protein SynthesisSynthesis

Page 2: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

Describes a microorganism that causes disease and

that is highly infectious; refers to

viruses that reproduce by the lytic cycle

Virulent

Page 3: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

The transfer of genetic material in

the form of DNA fragments from one

cell to another or from one organism

to another

Transformation

Page 4: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

A virus that infects bacteria

Bacteriophage

Page 5: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

In a nucleic-acid chain, a subunit

that consists of a sugar, a

phosphate, and a nitrogenous base

Nucleotide

Page 6: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

A five-carbon sugar that is a

component of DNA nucleotides

Deoxyribose

Page 7: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

An organic base that contains

nitrogen, such as a purine or

pyrimidine; a subunit of a

nucleotide in DNA and RNANitrogenous

base

Page 8: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

A nitrogenous base that has a double-ring structure; one of the

two general categories of nitrogenous bases

found in DNA and RNA; either adenine or

guaninePurine

Page 9: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

A nitrogenous base that has a single-ring structure; one of the two general catgories of nitrogenous bases

found in DNA and RNA; thymine, cytosine, or

uracilPyrimidine

Page 10: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

The rules stating that cytosine pairs with

guanine and adenine pairs with thymine in

DNA, and that adenine pairs with uracil in RNA

Base-pairing rules

Page 11: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

The nucleotide bases in one strand of DNA

or RNA that are paired with those of another strand; adenine pairs

with thymine or uracil; guanine pairs with

cytosine

Complementary base pair

Page 12: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

The process of making a copy of

DNA

DNA replication

Page 13: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

An enzyme that separates DNA

strands

Helicase

Page 14: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

A Y-shaped point that results when the two

strands of a DNA double helix separate

so that the DNA molecule can be

replicated

Replication fork

Page 15: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

An enzyme that catalyzes the

formation of the DNA molecule

DNA polymerase

Page 16: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

In each new DNA double helix, one strand is from the original molecule, and one strand is

newSemi-

conservative replication

Page 17: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

A change in the nucleotide-base sequence of a gene or DNA

molecule

Mutation

Page 18: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

A natural polymer that is present in all living cells and that plays a role in protein synthesis

Ribonucleic acid (RNA)

Page 19: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

The process of forming a nucleic acid by using

another molecule as a template; particularly the process of synthesizing RNA by using one strand of a DNA molecule as a

template

Transcription

Page 20: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

The portion of protein synthesis that takes

place at ribosomes and that uses the codons in

mRNA molecules to specify the sequence

of amino acids in polypeptide chains

Translation

Page 21: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

The formation of proteins by using

information contained in DNA

and carried by mRNA

Protein synthesis

Page 22: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

A five-carbon sugar present in

RNA

Ribose

Page 23: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

A single-stranded RNA molecule that

encodes the information to make a protein

Messenger RNA (mRNA)

Page 24: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

An RNA molecule that transfers

amino acids to the growing end of a polypeptide chain during translation

Transfer RNA (tRNA)

Page 25: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

An enzyme that starts the

formation of RNA by using a strand of a DNA molecule

as a template

RNA polymerase

Page 26: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

A nucleotide sequence on a DNA molecule to

which an RNA polymerase molecule binds, which initiates the transcription of a

specific gene

Promoter

Page 27: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

A specific sequence of

nucleotides that marks the end of a

gene

Termination signal

Page 28: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

The rule that describes how a sequence of

nucleotides, read in groups of three

consecutive nucleotides that corresponds to specific amino acids,

specifies the amino acid sequence of a protein

Genetic code

Page 29: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

In DNA, a three-nucleotide

sequence that encodes an amino acid or signifies a start signal or a

stop signalCodon

Page 30: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

A region of tRNA that consists of

three bases complementary to

the codon of mRNA

Anticodon

Page 31: Vocabulary Review Chapter 10 – DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis.

The complete genetic material contained in an

individual

Genome