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Module 3
89問 • 1ヶ月前
  • ユーザ名非公開
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    問題一覧

  • 1

    It was during this time when Mendel’s principles were awaiting rediscovery.

    1900

  • 2

    Some (1) human genes with know conseuqneces are listed Nearly (2) genetic diseases or phenotypes have been described, of which the molecular genetic basis is known in approximately (3)

    13000, 6500, 2650

  • 3

    Who proposed the Theory of Blending Inheritance

    Aristotle

  • 4

    It is the theory of mixing of parents traits in the offspring (e.g., Tall + Short = Medium-sized)

    Theory of Blending Inheritance

  • 5

    Who rediscovered Gregor Mendel’s principle

    Hugo De Vries, Carl Correns, Erich Von Tschermak

  • 6

    Who termed Genetics

    William Bateson

  • 7

    When was Genetics termed

    1905

  • 8

    Origin of the term Genetics

    Genesis

  • 9

    About 200,000 years ago, man was roaming (?). It is supposed that our early ancestors were curious in inheritance.

    East Africa

  • 10

    Engravings in (1) in Babylonia (Modern-day Iraq) dating back at least (2) documented horse’s mane.

    Chaldea, 6000 years ago

  • 11

    Who are the two Greek philosophers that concluded semen to be produced by the whole body. (Ancient Greeks)

    Aristotle, Hippocrates

  • 12

    During (?) century, the existence of sperm and ova was recognized.

    17th

  • 13

    Who are the Dutch scientists that recogonized the existence of sperm and ova?

    Leeuwenhoek, De Graaf

  • 14

    During the 18th and 19th centuries, who studied hereditary traits such as extra digits and lack of pigmentation?

    Pierre de Maupertuis

  • 15

    Extra digits

    Polydactyl

  • 16

    Lack of Pigmentation

    Albinism

  • 17

    During the 18th and 19th century, who published a Treatise on the Supposed Hereditary Properties of Diseases?

    Joseph Adams (1756-1818)

  • 18

    Gregor Mendel Lifespan

    1822-1884

  • 19

    When did Gregor Mendel presented theresults of his breeding experiments?

    1865

  • 20

    Where did Gregor Mendel ‘present’ his experiment?

    Natural History Society of Brünn in Bohemia

  • 21

    Who published Mendel’s breeding experiments?

    Transactions of the Society

  • 22

    Who coined the term gene (1) and when (2)

    Johannsen, 1909

  • 23

    What is the derived term for ‘gene’ (1) and who introduced it?

    Pangen, De Vries

  • 24

    Pangen is a derivative of the word (1), coined by (2) in (3)

    Pangenesis, Darwin, 1868

  • 25

    In acknowledgement of Mendel’s enourmous contribution, this term is now part of scientific vocabulary.

    Mendelian

  • 26

    Another term for allele

    Allelomorphs

  • 27

    The three main principes under Mendel’s breeding experiments

    Law of Uniformity, Law of Segregation, Law of Independent Assortment

  • 28

    This laws states that all offspring in the F1 generation are identical and heterozygous.

    Law of Uniformity

  • 29

    This law refers to the observation that each person possesses two genes for a particular characterstic, only one of which can be transmitted at any one time.

    The Law of Segregation

  • 30

    Failure of separation under the Law of Segregation at the first meiotic division

    Chromosome non-disjunction

  • 31

    Under the law of segregation, where do the ‘rare exception’ when two allelic genes fail to separate occur?

    First Meiotic Division

  • 32

    This refers to the fact that members of different gene pairs segregate to offspring independently of one another.

    Law of Independent Assortment

  • 33

    In reality, this law is not always true due to some genes being ‘linked’

    Law of Independent Assortment

  • 34

    They are threadlike structures in the nucleus of cells

    Chromosomes

  • 35

    In Greek, this means color

    Chroma

  • 36

    In Greek, this means Body

    Soma

  • 37

    Human Mitotic Figures were observed from the?

    Late 1880s

  • 38

    Who proposed that chromosomes could be the bearers of heredity?

    Theodour Boveri, Walter Sutton

  • 39

    Thomas Morgan transformed (1) chromosome theory into the theory of the (2)

    Sutton’s, Gene

  • 40

    Who observed the formation of chiasmats between homologous chromosomes at meiosis?

    Alfons Janssens

  • 41

    Who during the late 1920s and 1930s helped clarify chromosome mechanics?

    Cyril Darlington

  • 42

    What did Cyril Darlington used for his clarification of chromosome mechanics

    Tulips

  • 43

    Where did Cyril Darlington conduct his experiments?

    Pesia

  • 44

    Genome is a fusion of Gen (1) and ome from (2)

    German for Gen, Chromosome

  • 45

    It was thought that normal chromosome number in humas might be (?)

    48

  • 46

    (1) is an American cytologist who had been a student of (2) who settled the number (3) in (4) [Chromosome]

    Theophilus Painter, Boveri, 48, 1921

  • 47

    When was it when the correct number of chromosomes was established?

    1956

  • 48

    Who established the correct number of chromosomes?

    Tijo, Levan

  • 49

    Whilst (1) and (2) are justifiably created with discovering the structure of DNA in (3).

    James Watson , Francis Crick, 1953

  • 50

    Before the discovery of DNA, it was formerly believed that hereditary characterstics were transmitted by (?)

    Proteins

  • 51

    Nucleic acids were actually discovered in (?)

    1849

  • 52

    In (1) Fred Griffith worked on two strains of (2) realized that characteristucs of one strain could be conferred on the other by something that he called the (3)

    1928, Streptococcus, Transforming principle

  • 53

    Who identified DNA as the genetic material while worning on the pneumococcus?

    Oswald Avery, Maclyn McCarty, Colin MacLeod

  • 54

    When was DNA identified as the genetic material?

    1944

  • 55

    What did Wilkins and Franklin discover?

    X-ray crystallography

  • 56

    Who discovered x-ray crystallography work?

    Maurice Wilkins, Rosalind Franklin

  • 57

    Where was x-ray crystallography work discovered?

    King’s College, London

  • 58

    Issues instructions for the precise assembly of proteins

    Genes

  • 59

    The sequence of bases in DNA, and the sequence of amino acids in proteins, the genetic code was unraveled in the (?)

    1960s

  • 60

    They identified tRNA

    Francis Crick, Paul Zamecnik, Mahlon Hoagland

  • 61

    Directs genetic instructions via amino acids to intracellular ribosomes, where protein chains are produced.

    tRNA

  • 62

    What are produced in tRNA?

    Protein Chains

  • 63

    (1) is the first genetic trait to be characterized at the molecular level in the year (2)

    Sickle-cell Anemia, 1957

  • 64

    The genetic trait wherein the mutation affects the amino-acid sequence of the blood protein hemoglobin.

    Sickle-cell Anemia

  • 65

    The Fruit Fly scientific name

    Drosophila Melanogaster

  • 66

    Immature stage of the Fruit Fly

    Drosophila Larvae

  • 67

    Fruit advantages 1. It can be (1) easily in a laboratory 2. It (2) rapidly and (3) at a rate of (4) generations per annum 3. It has a number of easily (5), such as curly wings and a yellow body. 4. They only have (6) pairs of chromosomes 5. The chromosomes in the (7) of (8) are among the largest known in nature, being at least (9) than those in other body cells.

    Bred, Reproduces, Prolifically, 20 to 25, Recognizable Characterstics, Four, Salivary Glands, Drosophila Larvae, 100 times bigger

  • 68

    Seven Characterstics of Pea Plants from Gregor Mendel

    Seed Color, Seed Shape, Seed Coat Color, Pod Color, Pod Shape, Plant Height, Flower Position

  • 69

    Under mating of plants, this is equivalent to sperm

    Pollen

  • 70

    Under mating of plants, these are hidden inside the pistil and are connected to the outside world by stigma

    Ovaries

  • 71

    Under mating in plants, (1) is the part that produces eggs in a process called (2)

    Ovaries, Pollination

  • 72

    Two ways of fertilization

    Out-crossing, Self-pollination

  • 73

    Type of fertilization where two plants are crossed

    Out-crossing

  • 74

    Way of fertilization wherein flower may fertilize its own eggs

    Self-pollination

  • 75

    This kind of inheritance explains how one trait is transmitted from one generation to the next

    Simple Inheritance

  • 76

    Under mating in plants, this is the pollen-receiving part

    Stigma

  • 77

    Crosses of parent organisms that differ by only one trait

    Monohybrid crosses

  • 78

    This means that one ractor masks the presence of another

    Dominance

  • 79

    Ahlelele?

    Ahlelas

  • 80

    Term used when things get separated from each other

    Segregation

  • 81

    The general term for sex cells/pollen

    Gametes

  • 82

    It is when any individual with an unknown genotype is crossed with a true-breeding with the recessive phenotype.

    Testcross

  • 83

    A consequence of Meiosis

    Law of independent assortment

  • 84

    This tells you that alleles at the same locus on pairs of chromosomes separate and that each offspring has the same opportunity of a particular allele being inherited.

    Segregation

  • 85

    It means that every offspring alsi has the same opportunity to inherit annu allele at any other locus.

    Independent Assortment

  • 86

    Two important rules of probability

    Multiplication Rule, Addition Rule

  • 87

    This rule of probability is used when you want to know the probability of one event

    Addition rule

  • 88

    This rule of probability is used when the probabilities of events are independent of each other

    Multiplication Rule

  • 89

    This rule of probability is used if you want to know the probability of X and Y happening at the same time.

    Multiplication Rule

  • Medical Terminology (Abbreviations)

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    pmls

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    問題一覧

  • 1

    It was during this time when Mendel’s principles were awaiting rediscovery.

    1900

  • 2

    Some (1) human genes with know conseuqneces are listed Nearly (2) genetic diseases or phenotypes have been described, of which the molecular genetic basis is known in approximately (3)

    13000, 6500, 2650

  • 3

    Who proposed the Theory of Blending Inheritance

    Aristotle

  • 4

    It is the theory of mixing of parents traits in the offspring (e.g., Tall + Short = Medium-sized)

    Theory of Blending Inheritance

  • 5

    Who rediscovered Gregor Mendel’s principle

    Hugo De Vries, Carl Correns, Erich Von Tschermak

  • 6

    Who termed Genetics

    William Bateson

  • 7

    When was Genetics termed

    1905

  • 8

    Origin of the term Genetics

    Genesis

  • 9

    About 200,000 years ago, man was roaming (?). It is supposed that our early ancestors were curious in inheritance.

    East Africa

  • 10

    Engravings in (1) in Babylonia (Modern-day Iraq) dating back at least (2) documented horse’s mane.

    Chaldea, 6000 years ago

  • 11

    Who are the two Greek philosophers that concluded semen to be produced by the whole body. (Ancient Greeks)

    Aristotle, Hippocrates

  • 12

    During (?) century, the existence of sperm and ova was recognized.

    17th

  • 13

    Who are the Dutch scientists that recogonized the existence of sperm and ova?

    Leeuwenhoek, De Graaf

  • 14

    During the 18th and 19th centuries, who studied hereditary traits such as extra digits and lack of pigmentation?

    Pierre de Maupertuis

  • 15

    Extra digits

    Polydactyl

  • 16

    Lack of Pigmentation

    Albinism

  • 17

    During the 18th and 19th century, who published a Treatise on the Supposed Hereditary Properties of Diseases?

    Joseph Adams (1756-1818)

  • 18

    Gregor Mendel Lifespan

    1822-1884

  • 19

    When did Gregor Mendel presented theresults of his breeding experiments?

    1865

  • 20

    Where did Gregor Mendel ‘present’ his experiment?

    Natural History Society of Brünn in Bohemia

  • 21

    Who published Mendel’s breeding experiments?

    Transactions of the Society

  • 22

    Who coined the term gene (1) and when (2)

    Johannsen, 1909

  • 23

    What is the derived term for ‘gene’ (1) and who introduced it?

    Pangen, De Vries

  • 24

    Pangen is a derivative of the word (1), coined by (2) in (3)

    Pangenesis, Darwin, 1868

  • 25

    In acknowledgement of Mendel’s enourmous contribution, this term is now part of scientific vocabulary.

    Mendelian

  • 26

    Another term for allele

    Allelomorphs

  • 27

    The three main principes under Mendel’s breeding experiments

    Law of Uniformity, Law of Segregation, Law of Independent Assortment

  • 28

    This laws states that all offspring in the F1 generation are identical and heterozygous.

    Law of Uniformity

  • 29

    This law refers to the observation that each person possesses two genes for a particular characterstic, only one of which can be transmitted at any one time.

    The Law of Segregation

  • 30

    Failure of separation under the Law of Segregation at the first meiotic division

    Chromosome non-disjunction

  • 31

    Under the law of segregation, where do the ‘rare exception’ when two allelic genes fail to separate occur?

    First Meiotic Division

  • 32

    This refers to the fact that members of different gene pairs segregate to offspring independently of one another.

    Law of Independent Assortment

  • 33

    In reality, this law is not always true due to some genes being ‘linked’

    Law of Independent Assortment

  • 34

    They are threadlike structures in the nucleus of cells

    Chromosomes

  • 35

    In Greek, this means color

    Chroma

  • 36

    In Greek, this means Body

    Soma

  • 37

    Human Mitotic Figures were observed from the?

    Late 1880s

  • 38

    Who proposed that chromosomes could be the bearers of heredity?

    Theodour Boveri, Walter Sutton

  • 39

    Thomas Morgan transformed (1) chromosome theory into the theory of the (2)

    Sutton’s, Gene

  • 40

    Who observed the formation of chiasmats between homologous chromosomes at meiosis?

    Alfons Janssens

  • 41

    Who during the late 1920s and 1930s helped clarify chromosome mechanics?

    Cyril Darlington

  • 42

    What did Cyril Darlington used for his clarification of chromosome mechanics

    Tulips

  • 43

    Where did Cyril Darlington conduct his experiments?

    Pesia

  • 44

    Genome is a fusion of Gen (1) and ome from (2)

    German for Gen, Chromosome

  • 45

    It was thought that normal chromosome number in humas might be (?)

    48

  • 46

    (1) is an American cytologist who had been a student of (2) who settled the number (3) in (4) [Chromosome]

    Theophilus Painter, Boveri, 48, 1921

  • 47

    When was it when the correct number of chromosomes was established?

    1956

  • 48

    Who established the correct number of chromosomes?

    Tijo, Levan

  • 49

    Whilst (1) and (2) are justifiably created with discovering the structure of DNA in (3).

    James Watson , Francis Crick, 1953

  • 50

    Before the discovery of DNA, it was formerly believed that hereditary characterstics were transmitted by (?)

    Proteins

  • 51

    Nucleic acids were actually discovered in (?)

    1849

  • 52

    In (1) Fred Griffith worked on two strains of (2) realized that characteristucs of one strain could be conferred on the other by something that he called the (3)

    1928, Streptococcus, Transforming principle

  • 53

    Who identified DNA as the genetic material while worning on the pneumococcus?

    Oswald Avery, Maclyn McCarty, Colin MacLeod

  • 54

    When was DNA identified as the genetic material?

    1944

  • 55

    What did Wilkins and Franklin discover?

    X-ray crystallography

  • 56

    Who discovered x-ray crystallography work?

    Maurice Wilkins, Rosalind Franklin

  • 57

    Where was x-ray crystallography work discovered?

    King’s College, London

  • 58

    Issues instructions for the precise assembly of proteins

    Genes

  • 59

    The sequence of bases in DNA, and the sequence of amino acids in proteins, the genetic code was unraveled in the (?)

    1960s

  • 60

    They identified tRNA

    Francis Crick, Paul Zamecnik, Mahlon Hoagland

  • 61

    Directs genetic instructions via amino acids to intracellular ribosomes, where protein chains are produced.

    tRNA

  • 62

    What are produced in tRNA?

    Protein Chains

  • 63

    (1) is the first genetic trait to be characterized at the molecular level in the year (2)

    Sickle-cell Anemia, 1957

  • 64

    The genetic trait wherein the mutation affects the amino-acid sequence of the blood protein hemoglobin.

    Sickle-cell Anemia

  • 65

    The Fruit Fly scientific name

    Drosophila Melanogaster

  • 66

    Immature stage of the Fruit Fly

    Drosophila Larvae

  • 67

    Fruit advantages 1. It can be (1) easily in a laboratory 2. It (2) rapidly and (3) at a rate of (4) generations per annum 3. It has a number of easily (5), such as curly wings and a yellow body. 4. They only have (6) pairs of chromosomes 5. The chromosomes in the (7) of (8) are among the largest known in nature, being at least (9) than those in other body cells.

    Bred, Reproduces, Prolifically, 20 to 25, Recognizable Characterstics, Four, Salivary Glands, Drosophila Larvae, 100 times bigger

  • 68

    Seven Characterstics of Pea Plants from Gregor Mendel

    Seed Color, Seed Shape, Seed Coat Color, Pod Color, Pod Shape, Plant Height, Flower Position

  • 69

    Under mating of plants, this is equivalent to sperm

    Pollen

  • 70

    Under mating of plants, these are hidden inside the pistil and are connected to the outside world by stigma

    Ovaries

  • 71

    Under mating in plants, (1) is the part that produces eggs in a process called (2)

    Ovaries, Pollination

  • 72

    Two ways of fertilization

    Out-crossing, Self-pollination

  • 73

    Type of fertilization where two plants are crossed

    Out-crossing

  • 74

    Way of fertilization wherein flower may fertilize its own eggs

    Self-pollination

  • 75

    This kind of inheritance explains how one trait is transmitted from one generation to the next

    Simple Inheritance

  • 76

    Under mating in plants, this is the pollen-receiving part

    Stigma

  • 77

    Crosses of parent organisms that differ by only one trait

    Monohybrid crosses

  • 78

    This means that one ractor masks the presence of another

    Dominance

  • 79

    Ahlelele?

    Ahlelas

  • 80

    Term used when things get separated from each other

    Segregation

  • 81

    The general term for sex cells/pollen

    Gametes

  • 82

    It is when any individual with an unknown genotype is crossed with a true-breeding with the recessive phenotype.

    Testcross

  • 83

    A consequence of Meiosis

    Law of independent assortment

  • 84

    This tells you that alleles at the same locus on pairs of chromosomes separate and that each offspring has the same opportunity of a particular allele being inherited.

    Segregation

  • 85

    It means that every offspring alsi has the same opportunity to inherit annu allele at any other locus.

    Independent Assortment

  • 86

    Two important rules of probability

    Multiplication Rule, Addition Rule

  • 87

    This rule of probability is used when you want to know the probability of one event

    Addition rule

  • 88

    This rule of probability is used when the probabilities of events are independent of each other

    Multiplication Rule

  • 89

    This rule of probability is used if you want to know the probability of X and Y happening at the same time.

    Multiplication Rule