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MICR 271 Exam Questions| Already Answered| GRADED A+ Three domains of life - ANSWER-Bacteria, Archaea, Eukaryota If a eukaryote has a membrane-enclosed nucleus, a prokaryote has: - ANSWER-a nucleoid, not membrane enclosed If a eukaryote has lysosomes/peroxisomes, a prokaryote has: - ANSWER-not present If a eukaryote has an endoplasmic reticulum/golgi apparatus, a prokaryote has: - ANSWER-not present If a eukaryote has a mitochondria, a prokaryote has: - ANSWER-not present Bacteria - ANSWER-Domain of unicellular prokaryotes that have cell walls containing peptidoglycan Archaea - ANSWER-Domain of unicellular prokaryotes that have cell walls that do not contain peptidoglycan Eukaryota - ANSWER-Domain of organisms that contain a nucleus and other membrane enclosed organelles endosymbiont hypothesis - ANSWER-eukaryotes evolved from prokaryotes, based on the similarities found between bacteria and mitochondria Symbiosis - ANSWER-the living together to close association of two dissimilar organisms, each being known as a symbiont Differences between mitchondria+chloroplast and other organelles - ANSWER-contain their own DNA and have a distinct translation system

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MICR 271
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MICR 271 Exam Questions| Already
Answered| GRADED A+
Three domains of life - ANSWER-Bacteria, Archaea, Eukaryota



If a eukaryote has a membrane-enclosed nucleus, a prokaryote has: - ANSWER-a nucleoid, not
membrane enclosed



If a eukaryote has lysosomes/peroxisomes, a prokaryote has: - ANSWER-not present



If a eukaryote has an endoplasmic reticulum/golgi apparatus, a prokaryote has: - ANSWER-not present



If a eukaryote has a mitochondria, a prokaryote has: - ANSWER-not present



Bacteria - ANSWER-Domain of unicellular prokaryotes that have cell walls containing peptidoglycan



Archaea - ANSWER-Domain of unicellular prokaryotes that have cell walls that do not contain
peptidoglycan



Eukaryota - ANSWER-Domain of organisms that contain a nucleus and other membrane enclosed
organelles



endosymbiont hypothesis - ANSWER-eukaryotes evolved from prokaryotes, based on the similarities
found between bacteria and mitochondria



Symbiosis - ANSWER-the living together to close association of two dissimilar organisms, each being
known as a symbiont



Differences between mitchondria+chloroplast and other organelles - ANSWER-contain their own DNA
and have a distinct translation system

,a-proteobacteria - ANSWER-a subgroup of proteobacteria, which are a large group of eubacteria,
primarily Gram-negative, that 16S rRNA sequence comparisons show to be phylogenetically related



Archezoan Scenario - ANSWER-A primitive amitochondrial eukaryote cell phagocytosed as an a-
protobacterium - leading to the evolution of the mitochondrion



symbiogenesis scenario - ANSWER-A single endosymbiotic event involving the uptake of an a-
protobacterium by an archaeal cell led to the generation of the mitochondria, followed by the evolution
of the nucleus and compartmentalization of the eukaryotic cell



Phylogeny - ANSWER-the evolutionary history of a group of organisms



Phylogenetic tree of life - ANSWER-compares the rRNA sequences between organisms



Comparing the domains of life: nucleus - ANSWER-bacteria: no

archaea: no

eukaryota: yes



Comparing the domains of life: RNA polymerase - ANSWER-bacteria: 3-4 subunits

archaea: 8-12 subunits

eukaryota: 12-14 subunits



Comparing the domains of life: Ribosomes - ANSWER-bacteria: 70S

archaea: 70S

eukaryota: 80S



Comparing the domains of life: cell wall - ANSWER-bacteria: murein (peptidoglycan)

archaea: no murein

euakryota: no murein

, Phylogenomic tree of life - ANSWER-Tree of life based on complete genomes of organisms



horizontal gene transfer - ANSWER-the movement of genetic material between organisms other than via
vertical transmission (parent to child)



Obligate intracellular parasite - ANSWER-A parasite that cannot reproduce outside of a host cell; their
reproduction is entirely reliant on intracellular resources

- e.g. viruses



Virion - ANSWER-the form a virus takes when not inside the host - a complete virus particle



Composition of a virion - ANSWER-1. genetic material - DNA or RNA

2. capsid - the protein coat

3. envelope - some viruses have a layer of lipids surrounding the protein coat



Virus-first theory - ANSWER-viruses are ancestral to cells

- viruses evolved from mixtures of macromolecules before the first cells appeared on earth

- viruses existed as self-replicating units in a pre-cellular world



Escape theory - ANSWER-cells came before viruses

- viruses are derived from bits of cellular RNA and/or DNA fragments that leaked from cells

- when these fragments acquire a protein coat they can become independent entities with the ability to
interact with other cells



Reduction theory - ANSWER-cells came before viruses

- viruses come from small primordial cells that lost cellular elements over the course of evolution, but
maintained their genetic material and certain elements needed for replication



Viral genome integration or lysogeny - ANSWER-When a virus is capable of incorporating into the host
genome

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