Lecture 1-4 (protein structure, function, purification, characterization)
Lecture 5-9 (DNA Structure, Chromatin Structure and Regulation, DNA Replication)
Lecture 10-13 (DNA Repair, Recombination, and DNA Methods)
Lecture 14-17 (Transcription, Translation)
Lecture 18-21 (Genetic Regulation, Mechanisms, Post-Transcriptional Controls)
100

CH 1: The character of Serine's R-group

What is polar hydroxyl group?

100

CH 5: These scientists used bacteriophage with radioactive sulfur and phosphorus to prove that DNA is the genetic material.

Who are Hershey and Chase?

100

CH 11: Remnants of RNA-based viruses in our genome.

What are Retroviral-like Retrotransposons?

100

CH 14: The sequence similar to the newly-transcribed mRNA, with the exception of Uracil for Thymine.

What is the DNA anti-template/coding/sense strand?

100

CH 18: This motif in regulatory proteins interacts with the DNA minor groove.

What is Hinge Helix motif

200

CH 2: Strategy such that a spontaneous reaction may be made 'drive' an nonspontaneous one.

What are Coupled Reactions?

200

CH 6: Genes evolved from a common ancestor that have been separated by speciation, yet still maintaining similar functions.

What are orthologs?

200

CH 12: This method detects and quantifies a specific DNA sequence.

What is Southern Blotting?
200

CH 15: This protein is involved in assembling the pre-initiation protein complex in eukaryotic transcription.

What is the Mediator protein?

200

CH 19: Changes to the mRNA structure, such as Stem loops, which occur depending on levels of gene products to regulate the continuation/termination of transcription.

What are Riboswitches?

300

CH 4: Purpose of ELISA

What is semi-quantitatively identify how much of a protein is present?

300

CH 8: ssDNA-dependent RNA Polymerase, involved in first synthetic step of DNA Replication

What is Primase?

300

CH 13: A method to understanding gene function by manipulating a DNA sequence and studying the resulting phenotype/function changes.

What is Reverse Genetics?

300

CH 17: The number of GTP required to terminate translation.

What is one?

300

CH 20: The process by which only one copy of a gene in an individual (either from mother or father) is expressed, while the other copy is suppressed. 

What is Genetic Imprinting?

400

CH 3: Acetylation of Lysine impacts amino acid in this manner

What is blocks positive charge?

400

CH 7: These proteins restrict assembly of nucleosomes into higher order structures, keeping them 'open', by limiting SMC proteins.

What are barrier proteins?

400

CH 10: The type of DNA repair that fixes pyrimidine crosslinking, commonly thymine dimers.

What is Nucleotide Excision Repair?

400

CH 16: The enzyme that links amino acids to tRNA during translation.

What is amino acyl-tRNA synthetase?

400

This type of small non-coding RNA can inhibit translation or impact mRNA stability, leading to degradation

What is miRNA?

500

CH 9: The dimers that dissociate during (eukaryotic) histone replication.

What are H2A-H2B dimers?

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