terms
negative operons
lac operon
restriction enzymes
biotech
100

What is polycistronic mRNA

single mRNA molecule that contains the coding information for more than one protein.

100

where does the regulator protein bind onto the operon 

onto the operator 

100

what does the lac operon encodes genes for

the metabolism of lactose 

100

How do restriction enzymes recognize where to cut DNA?

They recognize specific palindromic sequences and cut at or near these sequences.

100

What are the three main steps of a PCR cycle?

Denaturation, annealing, and extension

200

What is the function of a regulator gene?

encodes a protein (usually a repressor or activator) that affects the transcription of another gene or operon.

200

what process is being regulated by the regulator protein

transcription 

200

what are the structural genes

beta- galactosidase 

permease

transacetlyase 


200

what is a palindromic sequence


a sequence of base pairs that reads the same in both directions, when read 5' to 3' on one strand and 3' to 5' on the complementary strand.

200

What is the main principle behind gel electrophoresis?

separates DNA fragments based on their size, with smaller fragments moving faster through the gel.

300

What do structural genes encode? 

Structural genes encode proteins or RNA involved in metabolism, structural functions, and biochemical pathways.

300

What is the default state of gene expression in a negative inducible operon?

"Off" (repressor bound to operator).


300

What protein does the lacY gene encode?

permease

300

How do sticky ends differ from blunt ends after a restriction enzyme cuts DNA?

Sticky ends have overhanging single-stranded DNA regions, which can pair with complementary sequences, while blunt ends have no overhang and result in straight cuts across both strands.

300

What is the role of the Cas9 protein in CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing

an enzyme that cuts DNA at a specific location guided by RNA.

400

What is meant by "constitutive expression" of a gene?

refers to genes that are continuously expressed under normal cellular conditions without regulation.

400

What happens when an inducer binds to the repressor in a negative inducible operon?

It inactivates the repressor, allowing transcription.

400

What happens if the lacO gene is functional (lacO+) in the lac operon?

Repressor can bind to this operator in the absence of the inducer

400

how to calculate the probability a particular RE recognition site would occur by chance within a piece of DNA?

(1/4) to the power of number of bp postitions


400

what sequence does Cas9 nuclease cut upstream of 

PAM sequence 

500

Explain the difference between positive and negative control in gene regulation

Positive control involves the activation of gene expression by an activator protein, while negative control involves the inhibition of gene expression by a repressor protein.

500

What is the role of a corepressor in a negative repressible operon?

It activates the repressor to block transcription.

500

if the genotype of the lac operon is

 lacI+ lacP+ lacO+ lacZ+ lacY+, with lactose absent what us the resent 

transcription does not occur, not structural proteins produces 

500

how to calculate the amount of recognition sites in a DNA sequence 

divide the amount of base pairs in the sequence by the amount of base pairs at one site. 

ex.

1000 bp x 1 site / 256 bp = 4 sites

500

what is the result of non-homologous end joining in CRISPR-Cas9 

duplication or deletion