Cell Biology

Cell structure and organelles, cell division (mitosis, meiosis), DNA replication, transcription, translation, gene regulation, chromosomal aberrations, chromosome numbers in major crop plants.

10 Lessons
PRO
Cell Biology

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells?

Prokaryotic cells (bacteria, cyanobacteria) lack a membrane-bound nucleus and organelles — genetic material floats freely as a nucleoid. Eukaryotic cells (plants, animals, fungi) have a true nucleus enclosed in a double membrane and membrane-bound organelles like mitochondria, chloroplasts, and ER. For exams: all crop plants are eukaryotes; Rhizobium and Azotobacter (soil bacteria) are prokaryotes.

How many stages are in mitosis and meiosis?

Mitosis has 4 stages — Prophase, Metaphase, Anaphase, Telophase (PMAT) — producing 2 genetically identical daughter cells with the same chromosome number as the parent. Meiosis has 2 divisions (Meiosis I and II) with 8 sub-stages, producing 4 haploid gametes. Meiosis I is the reductional division (homologs separate); Meiosis II is the equational division (chromatids separate).

Which enzymes are involved in DNA replication?

Key enzymes: DNA Helicase (unwinds double helix), Primase (synthesises RNA primer), DNA Polymerase III (main enzyme, adds nucleotides 5'→3'), DNA Polymerase I (removes RNA primer), DNA Ligase (joins Okazaki fragments on lagging strand). Topoisomerase relieves supercoiling ahead of the replication fork. For IBPS AFO: DNA Ligase is the enzyme that seals nicks — tested frequently.

What is the operon model of gene regulation?

The operon model (Jacob-Monod, 1961) explains gene regulation in prokaryotes. A structural operon consists of: Promoter (RNA polymerase binding), Operator (repressor binding site), and Structural genes (coding sequences). In the Lac operon (E. coli), lactose acts as an inducer — it inactivates the repressor protein, allowing RNA polymerase to transcribe lac genes. This model is the basis of inducible and repressible operons.

What are chromosomal aberrations?

Chromosomal aberrations are changes in chromosome number (aneuploidies) or structure. Structural: deletion, duplication, inversion, translocation. Numerical: monosomy (2n-1), trisomy (2n+1), nullisomy (2n-2). Colchicine induces polyploidy by inhibiting spindle fibre formation (prevents chromosome separation). Important for ICAR JRF: Down syndrome = trisomy 21; Turner syndrome = 45,X (monosomy X).

What are the chromosome numbers of major crop plants?

Rice: 2n=24; Wheat (hexaploid): 2n=42; Maize: 2n=20; Cotton (tetraploid): 2n=52; Sugarcane: 2n=80 (highly polyploid); Groundnut (tetraploid): 2n=40; Tomato: 2n=24; Potato (tetraploid): 2n=48; Banana: 2n=22 (usually triploid in cultivated forms). These numbers are tested directly in ICAR JRF and IBPS AFO.