Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 18
Grab Bag
Grab Bag
100

Amino acids are linked together via this type of bond.

What are peptide bonds?

100
Helix-turn-helix is an example of this.

What is a DNA binding protein?

100

This is what occurs when a thymine base (T) is replaced by a guanine base (G) during replication of a wild type strand due to mutation, for example.

(hint: transition or transversion)

What is a transversion?

100

This site on the ribosome is where the new tRNA carrying the fMet amino acid binds.

What is the P (peptidyl) site?

100

Lac IS

What is the super repressor mutant on the lac operon?

200

This is the term for the fact that each amino acid can be represented by more than one codon.

What is degenerate?

200

A Pribnow box and TTGACA are examples of these, in prokaryotes.

What are consensus sequences?

200

This is the type of mutation that occurs when an amino acid codon mutates to a stop codon, halting the translation of the polypeptide.

What is a nonsense mutation?

200

These two functional groups are present in all amino acids.

What are the amino group and the carboxyl group?

200

This mechanism is used to repair thymine dimers in DNA. (There are two mechanisms; either answer will suffice.)

What are direct repair (photoreactivation) or nucleotide excision repair (dark repair)?

300

These scientists used auxotrophic mutants to discover biochemical pathways, coming up with the "one gene, one protein" hypothesis.

Who are Beadle and Tatum?

300

This occurs when tryptophan levels are high; the trp operon folds into a loop structure, with region 3 pairing with region 4 to stop an ongoing transcription.

What is attenuation?

300

This is what happens after a mutation has occurred; then, another mutation changes the amino acid back exactly to the wild type.

What is a true reverse mutation?

300

This type of molecule can be transcribed and translated at the same time in a prokaryote.

What is mRNA?
300

This protein helps transport lactose into the cell to be broken down by the lac operon.

What is permease?

400

This refers to the "relaxed" nature of the third codon.

What is wobble?

400

These types of genes are always expressed and the enzymes produced from these genes are always produced.

What are constitutive genes?

400

This is the process by which cytosine can become uracil, due to the removal of the NH2 group and replacement with a double bonded O.

What is deamination?

400

In translation, this portion of the tRNA molecule links to the amino acid during tRNA charging.

What is the acceptor stem?

400

Acridine and ethidium bromide belong to this category of chemical mutagens.

What is intercalating agents?

500

This is the sequence surrounding the start codon in eukaryotic translation.

What is the Kozak sequence?

500

In the lac operon, this happens to levels of cAMP (cyclic AMP) when levels of glucose are low and lactose is present.

What is that levels of cAMP are high, and it binds to CAP and helps facilitate binding of RNA polymerase to start transcription?

500

This is a base analog for thymine.

What is 5-bromouracil?

500

This type of mutation occurred here:

Wild Type:   Phe Leu Pro Thr Val Thr Thr Arg Trp

Mutant: Phe Leu His His Gly Asp Asp Thr Val

What is a frameshift mutation?

500

This is when a mutation occurs and then another mutation occurs in the same gene, but at a different site from the original mutation, but compensating for the first mutation.

What is an intragenic suppressor mutation?