Operons
Eukaryotes
DNA Packaging
Post-transcriptional Control
The Central Dogma & More
100

This is the collective name for a group of bacterial genes with related functions that are controlled by a single master switch.

What is an operon?

100

Unlike bacteria, eukaryotic cells require these specific proteins to recognize the promoter and recruit RNA polymerase.

What are transcription factors?

100

This term refers to the loosely packed, accessible form of DNA that is actively being transcribed.

What is euchromatin?

100

This mechanism allows a single gene to produce multiple distinct proteins by joining different combinations of exons.

What is alternative RNA splicing?

100

This enzyme is responsible for "unzipping" the DNA double helix and building an RNA transcript.

What is RNA polymerase?

200

In a repressible system like the trp operon, this type of molecule binds to the repressor to activate it when levels of the end product are high.

What is a corepressor?

200

This conserved DNA sequence, located within the promoter, is the primary site for the initiation of transcription in eukaryotes.

What is the TATA box?

200

These "beads on a string" are the fundamental units of chromatin, consisting of DNA wrapped around histone proteins.

What are nucleosomes?

200

These small, non-coding RNA molecules can bind to mRNA to block translation or trigger its degradation.

What are microRNAs (miRNAs)?

200

This is the term for the entire set of genetic information belonging to an organism.

What is a genome?

300

This specific DNA segment serves as the "on/off" switch of the operon where a repressor protein binds to physically block RNA polymerase.

What is the operator?

300

These distal DNA sequences act as binding sites for activators and can influence a gene's expression from thousands of base pairs away.

What are enhancers?

300

DAILY DOUBLE! Adding this specific chemical group to histones reduces their positive charge, causing the DNA to loosen and turn a gene "ON."

What is an acetyl group (Acetylation)?

300

This small molecule is used as a "death tag" to mark proteins for rapid destruction.

What is ubiquitin?

300

In the central dogma, this is the name of the process that converts mRNA into a sequence of amino acids.

What is translation?

400

This type of operon, such as the lac operon, is typically "OFF" and transcription must be activated by a specific inducer molecule.

What is an inducible operon?

400

DAILY DOUBLE! This process is why a skin cell and a heart cell look different despite having identical genomes.

What is differential gene expression?

400

This highly condensed form of DNA is transcriptionally silent and inaccessible to RNA polymerase.

What is heterochromatin?

400

This organelle acts as the cell's "garbage disposal" by breaking down tagged proteins.

What is a proteasome?

400

While eukaryotic DNA is full of non-coding regions, these organisms have highly compact genomes that are mostly functional genes.

What are prokaryotes?

500

If a mutation prevents a repressor from ever binding to the operator in an inducible system, the resulting transcription would be...

What is constant?

500

For eukaryotic transcription to occur, these four elements must be present.

1. RNA Polymerase

2. Transcription Factors
3. Enhancer region
4. Activator Proteins

500

Human DNA is linear and wrapped around histones, whereas prokaryotic DNA can be described as this. 

What is "naked" and circular?

500

If a protein's levels are low despite high levels of its mRNA, one plausible explanation could be this. 

What is translational interference (or rapid proteolysis)?

500

DAILY DOUBLE! This percentage represents the amount of the human genome that actually consists of functional, coding genes.

What is less than 3%?