DNA->RNA-> Protein
Transcription
Translation
Operons and Regulation
Eukaryotic Regulation
100

The process of copying DNA to RNA

What is transcription?

100

Section of DNA that signals RNA polymerase to begin.

What is a promoter?

100

First amino acid in every protein.

Methionine (AUG)

100

Repressors binds where?

Operator

100

Which modification increases transcription?

Histone acetylation

200

The enzyme that builds RNA

What is RNA polymerase?

200

Protein that helps RNA polymerase bind in bacteria.

What is sigma?

200
Site where peptide bonds form.

P-site

200

Inducer of lac operon

Lactose

200

Sequences that enhances transcription far from promoter

Enhancer

300

Where translation occurs in eukaryotes.

What is the cytoplasm?

300

Why can transcription and translation occur simultaneously in bacteria? 

No nucleus.

300

What type of tRNA is attached to an amino acid?

Charged or aminoacyl tRNA.

300

Glucose low+ lactose high--> operon

Fully on (CAP active+repressor off). 

300

RNA that prevents translation

miRNA

400

A mutation that causes early termination.

What is a nonsense mutation?

400

What forms at the end of bacterial transcription?

A hairpin loop.

400

What is translocation?

Ribosome shifts one codon forward.

400

What if lacl has a loss-of-function mutation?

Operon always on

400

Why do eukaryotes not have operons?

They regulate genes individually with complex promoter regions. 

500

Explain the relationship between genotype and phenotype.

Proteins produced from genes determine traits. 

500

Explain the difference between promoter-proximal elements and enhancers.

PPEs are near the promoter; enhancers can be far away.

500

Explain why multiple ribosomes can translate on mRNA at the same time.

Ribosomes move 5' to 3', leaving space behind for another ribosome. 

500

Explain positive vs. negative control

Positive control+activator, Negative control= repressor.

500

Explain chromatin remodeling

DNA unwound from nucleosomes to allow transcription.

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