DNA Damage
DNA Repair
Transcription
Translation
Techniques
100

Depurination, tautomeric shifts, and oxidative damage are examples

What are spontaneous mutations?

100

These two methods are used to fix double strand breaks

What are homologous and non-homologous recombination repair?

100

The 5' methylguanosine cap, RNA splicing, and the 3' poly-A tail

What are the steps of RNA processing (post-transcriptional modification)?

100

A string of amino acids connected by peptide bonds

What is a polypeptide chain?

100

A technique used to make millions of copies of a particular sequence of DNA.

What is PCR?
200

Compounds which can substitute for purines or pyrimidines

What are base analogs?

200

This type of DNA repair fixes incorrect base pairing and occurs immediately after replication. New DNA strands are recognized by nicks in the DNA or absent methyl groups.

What is mismatch repair?

200
The two promoter regions present in prokaryotes

What are the -10 element and the -35 element?

200

This ribosomal site is where new tRNA molecules carrying amino acids enter.

What is the Aminoacyl (A) site?

200

These two methods are used to open up the cell membrane in order to perform a transformation.

What is heatshock and electroporation?

300

The likelihood a gene will undergo a mutation in a generation or per gamete formed

What is a mutation rate?

300

This DNA repair mechanism corrects DNA that contains
incorrect base pairing due to chemically modified bases. First the incorrect base is removed, and then the backbone is excised. 

What is Base Excision Repair?

 

300

This method of transcription termination uses a hairpin loop to disassemble the RNA polymerase from the DNA strand. 

What is Rho-independent termination?

300

In this stage of translation, the small subunit binds to mRNA, then the tRNA-fmet enters into the p-site, protein factors then draw in the large ribosomal subunit

What is initiation?

300

A collection of cloned DNA sequences that are complementary to mRNA extracted from a tissue or cell. 

What is a cDNA library?

400

A mutagen which causes pyrimadine dimers

What is UV radiation?

400

Xeroderma Pigmentosum is caused by mutations in this DNA repair mechanism.

What is Nucleotide Excision Repair (NER)?

400

This type of RNA combines with proteins to make a complex called the spliceosome

What is snRNA?

400

This serves as the translation initiation seqeunce in bacteria and is bound by the 16S rRNA

What is the Shine-Dalgarno sequence?

400

This enzyme is used in CRISPR gene editing to cut DNA.

What is Cas/Cas9?

500

One example of this would be a mutation in a skin cell caused by depurination which stops a protein from functioning (looking for 3 descriptors).

What is a somatic, spontaneous, loss-of-function mutation?

500

This form of DNA repair occurs when DNA lesions, such as thymine dimers, causes replication to fail or be incomplete 

What is postreplication repair?

500

These proteins are essential for recruitment of RNA polymerase II in eukaryotic transcription initiation.

What are transcription factors?

500

This idea is the typical explanation for why there are fewer tRNAs (40-60) than codons (61). 

What is the Wobble Hypothesis?

500

This fluorescent molecule is added to Sanger sequencing reactions to terminate elongation.

What are dideoxynucleotides (ddNTPs)?

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