GCSE Biology Specification

OCR B J257

Section B1.1: What is the genome and what does it do?

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#B1.1.1

a) explain how the nucleus and genetic material of eukaryotic cells (plants and animals) and the genetic material, including plasmids, of prokaryotic cells are related to cell functions

b) describe how to use a light microscope to observe a variety of plant and animal cells

PAG1

#B1.1.2

describe the genome as the entire genetic material of an organism

#B1.1.3

describe DNA as a polymer made up of nucleotides, forming two strands in a double helix

#B1.1.4

describe simply how the genome and its interaction with the environment influence the development of the phenotype of an organism, including the idea that most characteristics depend on instructions in the genome and are modified by interaction of the organism with its environment

Learners are not expected to describe epigenetic effects

#B1.1.5

explain the terms chromosome, gene, allele, variant, genotype and phenotype

#B1.1.6

explain the importance of amino acids in the synthesis of proteins, including the genome as instructions for the polymerisation of amino acids to make proteins

#B1.1.7

describe DNA as a polymer made from four different nucleotides, each nucleotide consisting of a common sugar and phosphate group with one of four different bases attached to the sugar

#B1.1.8

explain simply how the sequence of bases in DNA codes for the proteins made in protein synthesis, including the idea that each set of three nucleotides is the code for an amino acid

#B1.1.9

recall a simple description of protein synthesis, in which:
- a copy of a gene is made from messenger RNA (mRNA)
- the mRNA travels to a ribosome in the cytoplasm
- the ribosome joins amino acids together in an order determined by the mRNA

Learners are not expected to recall details of transcription and translation

#B1.1.10

recall that all genetic variants arise from mutations

#B1.1.11

describe how genetic variants in coding DNA may influence phenotype by altering the activity of a protein

#B1.1.12

describe how genetic variants in non-coding DNA may influence phenotype by altering how genes are expressed