Mutations
Prokaryotic Gene Control
Eukaryotic Gene Control
Mixed Concepts
Operons
100

This type of point mutation changes one amino acid to a different amino acid.


Missense mutation


100

This molecule serves as the RNA polymerase binding site in bacterial operons.


Promoter

100

These are the coding sequences of a gene that are kept in the final mRNA after splicing

Exons

100

Mutations that occur in germ cells can affect the next generation; mutations in these cells cannot.


Somatic cells


100

This part of an operon is where the repressor protein physically binds to block transcription.


Operator

200

A frameshift mutation caused by losing one or more nucleotides is called this.


Deletion


200

In the trp operon, this molecule acts as a corepressor that activates the repressor protein.


Tryptophan

200

These non-coding sequences are removed from pre-mRNA before it leaves the nucleus.

introns

200

In eukaryotes, this distant DNA control sequence binds activator proteins to boost transcription far above baseline.


Enhancer

200

A repressible operon is typically found in this type of metabolic pathway — one that builds molecules.


Anabolic (biosynthetic) pathway


300

This type of point mutation has no effect on the amino acid sequence due to redundancy in the genetic code.


Silent mutation


300

The lac operon is an example of this type of operon because a nutrient turns gene expression ON.


Inducible operon


300

A single gene can produce multiple different proteins by including or excluding different exons during this process.

Alternative RNA splicing

300

Both the trp repressible operon and DNA methylation in eukaryotes share this outcome.


They both turn off / repress gene transcription


300

In the lac operon, this specific molecule binds to the lac repressor and causes it to release the operator.


Allolactose (a derivative of lactose)


400

This chromosomal mutation type involves a segment being flipped 180° and reinserted.


Inversion


400

Francois Jacob and Jacques Monod coined this term for a cluster of related bacterial genes under one promoter.


Operon

400

Ubiquitin-tagged proteins are degraded in this cellular structure.


Proteasome

400

Name all 3 categories of base-pair substitution mutations and define each in one phrase.


Silent (no amino acid change), missense (different amino acid), nonsense (creates a premature stop codon)


400

The trp operon is normally ON (transcribing) when tryptophan levels are low. Name the protein that is produced but remains inactive until tryptophan binds it.


The trp repressor protein 


500

A frameshift insertion of exactly 3 nucleotides causes this specific consequence instead of a frameshift.


Addition of one extra amino acid with no reading frame shift


500

In both the trp and lac operons, the small molecule regulator works by causing this molecular event in the repressor protein.


A conformational (allosteric) change in the repressor protein


500

Histone acetylation activates transcription by doing this to chromatin structure.


Loosens/unwinds DNA from histones, making genes accessible to transcription factors


500

A eukaryotic cell uses alternative RNA splicing of the same pre-mRNA transcript to accomplish this.


Produce a family of different proteins from a single gene


500

Explain why an inducible operon is more energy-efficient than constitutive expression for a catabolic enzyme like β-galactosidase.


The cell only produces the enzyme when its substrate (lactose) is present, avoiding wasting energy and resources making a protein that has nothing to break down


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