Ubiquinone • A mobile electron carrier of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. Similar to plastoquinone found in chloroplasts.

Ubiquitin • A small protein that is covalently linked to other cellular proteins identified for breakdown by the proteosome.

Umbilical cord • Tissue made up of embryonic membranes and blood vessels that connects the embryo to the placenta in eutherian mammals.

Understory • The aggregate of smaller plants growing beneath the canopy of dominant plants in a forest.

Unicellular (yoon´ e sell´ yer ler) [L. unus: one + cella: chamber] • Consisting of a single cell; as for example a unicellular organism.

Uniport • A membrane transport process that carries a single substance. (Contrast with antiport, symport.)

Unsaturated hydrocarbon • A compound containing only carbon and hydrogen atoms, with one or more pairs of carbon atoms that are connected by double bonds.

Upwelling • The upward movement of nutrient-rich, cooler water from deeper layers of the ocean.

Uracil (U) • A pyrimidine base found in nucleotides of RNA.

Urea • A compound serving as the main excreted form of nitrogen by many animals, including mammals.

Ureotelic • Describes an organism in which the final product of the breakdown of nitrogen-containing compounds (primarily proteins) is urea. (Contrast with ammonotelic, uricotelic.)

Ureter (your´ uh tur) • A long duct leading from the vertebrate kidney to the urinary bladder or the cloaca.

Urethra (you ree´ thra) • In most mammals, the canal through which urine is discharged from the bladder and which serves as the genital duct in males.

Uric acid • A compound that serves as the main excreted form of nitrogen in some animals, particularly those which must conserve water, such as birds, insects, and reptiles.

Uricotelic • Describes an organism in which the final product of the breakdown of nitrogen-containing compounds (primarily proteins) is uric acid. (Contrast with ammonotelic, ureotelic.)

Urinary bladder • A structure structure that receives urine from the kidneys via the ureter, stores it, and expels it periodically through the urethra.

Urine (you´ rin) [Gk. ouron: urine] • In vertebrates, the fluid waste product containing the toxic nitrogenous by-products of protein and amino acid metabolism.

Uterus (yoo´ ter us) [L. utero: womb] • The uterus or womb is a specialized portion of the female reproductive tract in certain mammals. It receives the fertilized egg and nurtures the embryo in its early development.