Foundations of Biological Science I (BioSci 150)
C
Cells. Structure and Function
It is the cell that is alive! Therefore. study cells to study life.
Foundations of Biological Science I (BioSci 150)
C
A typical bacterium
Prokaryotes lack organel
Structure of the human genome
Genome contains 3000 megabasepairs (3x109 bp) of DNA Estimated 65,000-80,000 genes- turns out to be more like 30,000-40,000! DNA is contained on 24 distinct chromosomes (22 autosomes, X and Y) Chromosome 1 has the mo
REVIEW GUIDE FOR BIOG 110 PRELIM #2 You have a number of resources to help you prepare for Prelim #2. Each of the following is posted on the BioG110 Blackboard site. Potential Prelim essay question written by Professor Wayne The pre & post lecture
Chromosome packing
Chr 1 ~ 8 cm long, compacted to 8 m Chr 17 shown here
8,00010,000x 7x
50x
BISC 471/02-3 Lecture 4
146 bp DNA/nucleosome
1
Human chromosomes
Studies carried out with cells grown in tissue culture Cells are fixed and stained a
C rvation Biology onse
Fall 2007
What is C rvation Biology? onse
Applie inte d, rdisciplinary scie de lope in re nce ve d sponseto rapid m rn loss of spe s & habitats. ode cie 3 goals:
e rsity of organism on Earth s o Docum nt dive tudy hum im an
Some things to consider
What if: A child dies and one parent wants to clone it and the other doesn't. Who owns the rights to the dead person's DNA? People don't want to be cloned after they die? It becomes acceptable to clone a person once. Or 10
LEARNING MODULE 3: PROMOTERS, REPORTER GENES AND METHODS FOR ANALYZING TRANSGENE EXPRESSION IN PLANT HOSTS
LEARNING OBJECTIVES (next 2 lectures): Understand the major reporter gene systems used in plant transformation work and their specific advanta
Eukaryotic Diversity, Protists: Protozoa, Slime Molds and Algae
Chapter 28
How Many Kingdoms?
In recent years, major efforts to revise systematics of the "lower" eukaryotes
Revisions have been stimulated by a mass of new data, especially from molecu
Mapping the genome
Genetic maps versus physical maps
Genetic maps
Recombination frequencies between markers (must be variable between individuals) Linkage Map disease genes with respect to neutral markers
Physical maps
Describe location of DN
BSCI 442, Plant Physiology
Why study plants? What are plants? What is plant physiology? Goals of the course Introductions Organization of the course
Life on earth depends on plants
Primary producers: Green plants provide the world's supply of
Foundations of Biological Science I (BioSci 150)
C
Replication (DNA Synthesis) catalyzed semiconservative bi-directional
Foundations of Biological Science I (BioSci 150)
C
A Reminder
Dehydration
Foundations of Biological Science I (BioSci 150)
BIO 220 Midterm 2 Review Sunday, March 8, 2009 bisc220sileaders@gmail.com
Dr. McClure Brenda, Diana, Sarah & TJ http:/www.usc.edu/si
Chapter 8: Metabolism Thermodynamics is the movement of _. The first law of thermodynamics states that __ _. The se
MACROMOLECULES
Steroids and Information
Lecture 06
Cole Gilbert
SEPTEMBER 05, 2007
What: A mandatory informational meeting about being part of Cornells Varsity Equestrian Team Where: Teagle Hall Multipurpose Room When: Friday, September 7th at 7:
Initial Education Program Course and Field Experience Alignment with Praxis II Content Table x.xx Course and Field Experience Alignment with Praxis II Content: Biology Content Knowledge Subject Area:
I. Basic Principles of Science (History and Natura
FRESHMEN CONNECTION 2008 CORE COURSES
Fundamental Studies
ENGL101: Introduction to Writing MATH 110: MATH 111: MATH 113: MATH 115: Elementary Mathematical Models Introduction to Probability (Also fulfills CORE Code: MS) College Algebra with Applicati