![]() ![]() Any term not in the document but in aamc practice tests/passages should be added to your list of terms to absolutely know. Judge what you know by the practice you do - especially aamc stuff. If you are struggling to understand something in the document then watch the respective video on Khan academy. I personally liked the 100 page one because even that was a lot to go through for me. See for yourself what you like as everyone will give you different answers. Some people prefer the 300 one because they like details and others like 100 one. /r/GAMSAT - Australian & UK Medical school Admission Test.P/S = Psychological, Social, and Biological Foundations of Behavior (Tentative) AAMC Sample FL Score ConversionĬ/P = Chemical and Physical Foundations of Biological SystemsĬARS = Critical Analysis and Reasoning Skillsī/B = Biological and Biochemical Foundations of Living Systems # Correct -> Scaled Score Converter for AAMC Material These posts will be removed and the user banned without warning, subject to the discretion of the mod team Learn MoreĪll of the above rules are subject to moderator discretion High Yield MCAT Links ![]() You have signed an examinee agreement, and it will be enforced on this subreddit.ĭo not intentionally advertise paid or free products or services of any sort. We have one "stickied" post for each exam and score release day, contain all test day discussion/reactions to that thread only.ĭo not discuss any specific information from your actual MCAT exam. For an example format for submitting pictures of questions from practice material click hereĭo not link to content that infringes on copyright laws (MCAT torrents, third party resources, etc).ĭo not post repeat "GOOD LUCK", "TEST SCORE", or test reaction posts. These are considered spoilers and should be marked as such. Be nice to each other, hating on other users won't help you get extra points on the MCAT, so why do it?ĭo not post any question information from any resource in the title of your post. Rudeness or trolling will not be tolerated. Please message the moderators with your skills/ideas! MCAT RESOURCES & INFO Study Groups Want to help us improve this subreddit or tell us about a new resource we can add to the sidebar? Below you will find our forum rules, resources, and more. We request that you read the sidebar COMPLETELY before you post. r/MCAT is a place for support, discussion, advice, social networking, news, study tips and more. The MCAT (Medical College Admission Test) is offered by the AAMC and is a required exam for admission to medical schools in the USA and Canada. Did you know that 98.7% of exon/intron sequences contain AG-GU? Which means that 1.3% have different canonical sequence.Welcome to the BEST place for MCAT prep and practice materials. The splicing mutation may occur in both introns and exons and disrupt existing splice sites or splicing regulatory sequences (intronic and exonic splicing silencers and enhancers), create new ones, or activate the cryptic ones. If original DNA sequence does not have GU in the middle of intron, than it is mutation. Hmmm but don't AG-GU is kind of marker used to determine the beginning and ending of intron? While it can be, if mutation happened and let's say changed AA into AG and CU into GU – it accidentally shortened intron which could be recognized by spliceosome but original noncoding region still leaves. As for the 'sticky ends' hanging in there in the processed mRNA while being translated will end up in faulty protein again. Well what is in between would be excised. ![]() I'd rephrase question, WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF SPLICE ACCEPTOR SITE APPEARED IN THE MIDDLE OF FIRST INTRON INSTEAD OF in the 5' region of intron? Imagine, what if AG-GU is in the middle of intron? Second, what do you mean by if 'new' appeared? New cannot appear if existing donor and acceptor sites already exist because it means that intron is excised already and does not bother mRNA anymore. So what would happen if new acceptor site appears on the first intron? First of all, first intron has to gets excised. These nucleotides are part of the splicing sites. At the 5' end the DNA nucleotides are GT at the 3' end they are AG. Splicing occurs at those specific sites just like on the photo labelled. Usually every intron has donor (splicing site at beginning of intron – 5') and acceptor (splicing site at the end of intron 5') sites. ![]()
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