Are we Gelin'
And Cut
What's your Vector Victor
Fried For Too Long
Off The Chain
100

This negatively charged part of DNA causes it to migrate toward the positive electrode during gel electrophoresis.

What is the phosphate backbone?

100

These enzymes were first discovered in bacteria, where they function as a defense mechanism against invading viral DNA.

What are restriction endonucleases?

100

This term describes DNA molecules formed by combining genetic material from two different sources into one sequence.

What is recombinant DNA?

100

CRISPR stands for this phrase describing repeating DNA sequences found in bacterial genomes.

What is Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats?

100

PCR stands for this laboratory technique used to amplify specific DNA sequences.

What is polymerase chain reaction?

200

This polysaccharide, derived from seaweed, forms the porous matrix used to separate DNA fragments by size.

What is agarose?

200

Most Type II restriction enzymes recognize short DNA sequences that have this type of symmetry, reading the same 5′ to 3′ on both strands.

What are palindromic sequences?

200

This prokaryotic organism is most commonly used as a host for propagating recombinant plasmids in molecular biology labs.

What is E. coli?

200

This protein functions as the endonuclease that creates a double-stranded break in DNA in the CRISPR system most commonly used in genome editing.

What is Cas9?

200

During this first step of PCR, DNA is heated to approximately 95°C to separate the two strands by disrupting hydrogen bonds.

What is denaturation?

300

During electrophoresis, smaller DNA fragments move faster because they experience less of this physical resistance in the gel matrix.

What is frictional resistance (or molecular sieving)?

300

When a restriction enzyme creates staggered cuts that leave single-stranded overhangs, these cohesive ends are produced.

What are sticky ends (or cohesive ends)?

300

This small, circular piece of DNA functions as a cloning vector and replicates independently inside bacterial cells.

What is a plasmid?

300

This short RNA molecule directs Cas9 to a complementary DNA sequence for precise cleavage.

What is guide RNA (gRNA or sgRNA)?

300

This PCR step allows short DNA sequences to bind to complementary target regions on the template strand.

What is annealing?

400

This intercalating dye fluoresces under UV light and is commonly used to visualize DNA bands in a gel.

What is ethidium bromide?

400

This type of DNA end is produced when both strands are cut at the same position, leaving no overhangs.

What are blunt ends?

400

To ensure a gene inserted into a vector is transcribed, it must be placed downstream of this DNA regulatory sequence.

What is a promoter?

400

A CRISPR-Cas9 double-stranded break requires hydrolysis of this specific bond between the 3′ hydroxyl of one nucleotide and the 5′ phosphate of the next.

What is the 3′–5′ phosphodiester linkage?

400

This thermostable DNA polymerase, originally isolated from Thermus aquaticus, is commonly used in PCR.

What is Taq polymerase?

500

DNA samples are loaded near this electrode so that they migrate through the gel toward the positive terminal.

What is the negative electrode (cathode)?

500

After digestion, this enzyme catalyzes formation of phosphodiester bonds to seal DNA fragments into a vector.

What is DNA ligase?

500

In blue-white screening using vectors like pUC19, white colonies typically indicate disruption of this reporter gene.

What is the lacZ gene?

500

In 2020, these two scientists were awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for developing CRISPR-Cas9 as a genome-editing tool.

Who are Jennifer Doudna and Emmanuelle Charpentier?

500

Ideally, each PCR cycle doubles the amount of DNA, resulting in amplification that follows this type of mathematical growth pattern.

What is exponential growth?

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