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== Chapter 1: The Cell as a Unit of Health and Disease== | == Chapter 1: The Cell as a Unit of Health and Disease== | ||
{{hidden|Short Answer Questions| | |||
{{hidden|How much of the human genome is coding and what does it code?|Of the 3.2b basepairs, there are 20,000 genes that comprise about 1.5% of the genome that code for proteins (enzymes, structural components, and signaling molecules used to assemble and maintain all the cells in the body}} | {{hidden|How much of the human genome is coding and what does it code?|Of the 3.2b basepairs, there are 20,000 genes that comprise about 1.5% of the genome that code for proteins (enzymes, structural components, and signaling molecules used to assemble and maintain all the cells in the body}} | ||
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{{hidden|List three non-fibrillar collagens.|Type IV -basement membrane, Type IX - Fibrillar associated collagen with interrupted triple helices (FACIT), Type VII (provides anchoring fibrils to basement membrane beneath skin)}} | {{hidden|List three non-fibrillar collagens.|Type IV -basement membrane, Type IX - Fibrillar associated collagen with interrupted triple helices (FACIT), Type VII (provides anchoring fibrils to basement membrane beneath skin)}} | ||
{{hidden|Which structural protein is associated with Marfan syndrom?|Fibrillin synthetic defects, which wrap the elastin core. }} | {{hidden|Which structural protein is associated with Marfan syndrom?|Fibrillin synthetic defects, which wrap the elastin core. }}}} | ||
== Chapter 2: Cellular Responses to Stress and Toxic Insults: Adaptation, Injury and Death == | == Chapter 2: Cellular Responses to Stress and Toxic Insults: Adaptation, Injury and Death == |