Mutations & Mutants
DNA Damage & Repair
Gene Transfer Mechanisms
Transformation & Transduction
Conjugation & F plasmid
100

A strain with a nucleotide sequence different from the parental strain.

mutant

100

Mutations that occur without external intervention

spontaneous mutations

100

The three main mechanisms of horizontal gene transfer

transformation, transduction, and conjugation

100

The state a cell must be in to take up DNA during transformation

competence

100

The cell that donates DNA during conjugation

F⁺ cell

200

A mutation that gives the organism a growth advantage under certain conditions

selectable mutation

200

A test that screens chemicals for mutagenicity using bacterial mutations

Ames test

200

The three possible fates of donor DNA after transfer into a recipient

degradation, replication, and recombination

200

A method that can artificially induce competence in bacterial cells

Ca²⁺ treatment or electroporation

200

The circular plasmid (~100 kb) that encodes transfer functions

F (fertility) plasmid

300

The experiment used to identify nutritional auxotrophs

replica plating

300

A DNA repair mechanism that directly reverses damage without needing the opposite strand

direct reversal

300

The protein essential for homologous recombination

RecA

300

Transduction where any portion of the host genome can be packaged into a phage

generalized transduction

300

The replication mechanism used during plasmid transfer in conjugation

rolling-circle replication

400

A mutation that introduces a premature stop codon

nonsense mutation

400

The repair pathway that removes bulky pyrimidine dimers caused by UV light

nucleotide excision repair

400

The physical structure formed during homologous recombination

Holliday intermediate (heteroduplex)

400

Transduction where only specific genes adjacent to the prophage site are transferred

specialized transduction

400

Cells with the F plasmid integrated into their chromosome

Hfr strains

500

A mutation at a different site in the DNA that compensates for the original mutation

suppressor mutation

500

The error-prone, damage-tolerant repair system activated by RecA and LexA degradation

SOS regulatory system

500

The selective medium used to detect recombinants in a tryptophan experiment

agar lacking tryptophan

500

The phenomenon when lysogeny alters the phenotype of the host

phage conversion

500

Why does the recipient cell in an Hfr conjugation event typically remain F⁻ instead of becoming Hfr?

Because only a portion of the F plasmid is transferred before mating ends