Genetics: From Genes to Genomes
6th Edition
ISBN: 9781259700903
Author: Leland Hartwell Dr., Michael L. Goldberg Professor Dr., Janice Fischer, Leroy Hood Dr.
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
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Chapter 6, Problem 3P
During bacterial transformation, DNA that enters a cell is not an intact chromosome; instead, it consists of randomly generated fragments of chromosomal DNA. In a transformation where the donor DNA was from a bacterial strain that was a+ b+ c+, and the recipient was a b c, 55% of the cells that became a+ were also transformed to c+. But only 2% of the a+ cells were b+. Is gene bor c closer to gene a?
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Chapter 6 Solutions
Genetics: From Genes to Genomes
Ch. 6 - Griffith, in his 1928 experiments, demonstrated...Ch. 6 - Griffith, in his 1928 experiments, demonstrated...Ch. 6 - During bacterial transformation, DNA that enters a...Ch. 6 - Nitrogen and carbon are more abundant in proteins...Ch. 6 - If 30 of the bases in human DNA are A, a what...Ch. 6 - Which of the following statements are true about...Ch. 6 - Imagine you have three test tubes containing...Ch. 6 - What information about the structure of DNA was...Ch. 6 - A portion of one DNA strand of the human gene...Ch. 6 - When a double-stranded DNA molecule is exposed to...
Ch. 6 - A particular virus with DNA as its genetic...Ch. 6 - The underlying structure of DNA is very simple,...Ch. 6 - Prob. 13PCh. 6 - Bacterial transformation and bacteriophage...Ch. 6 - The CAP protein is shown bound to DNA in Fig....Ch. 6 - In Meselson and Stahls density shift experiments...Ch. 6 - When Meselson and Stahl grew E. coli in 15N medium...Ch. 6 - If you expose human tissue culture cells for...Ch. 6 - Draw a replication bubble with both replication...Ch. 6 - a. Do any strands of nucleic acid exist in nature...Ch. 6 - As Fig. 6.21 shows, DNA polymerase cleaves the...Ch. 6 - The bases of one of the strands of DNA in a region...Ch. 6 - Replicating structures in DNA can be observed in...Ch. 6 - Indicate the role of each of the following in DNA...Ch. 6 - Draw a diagram of replication that is occurring at...Ch. 6 - Figure 6.18 depicts Watson and Cricks initial...Ch. 6 - Researchers have discovered that during...Ch. 6 - A DNA synthesizer is a machine that uses automated...Ch. 6 - Bacterial cells were coinfected with two types of...Ch. 6 - A yeast strain with a mutant spo11- allele has...Ch. 6 - Imagine that you have done a cross between two...Ch. 6 - The Neurospora octad shown came from a cross...Ch. 6 - From a cross between e f g and e f g strains of...Ch. 6 - In Step 6 of Fig. 6.27, the resolvase enzyme...Ch. 6 - Figure 6.31shows four potential outcomes of...Ch. 6 - Each of the substrates for site-specific...Ch. 6 - Prob. 37PCh. 6 - Suppose that you could inject a wild-type mouse...Ch. 6 - C31 is a type of bacteriophage that infects...Ch. 6 - Cre is a recombinase enzyme encoded by a gene in...Ch. 6 - Like Cre/loxP recombination, site-specific...
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- In a transformation experiment, donor DNA was obtained from a prototroph bacterial strain (x* y z'), and the recipient was a triple auxotroph (x y z ). The following transformant classes were obtained: x* y z xy'z 160 130 190 170 x'y 3 xy x'y 5 What general conclusions can you draw about the linkage relationships among the three genes?arrow_forwardIn DNA-hybridization experiments on six species of plants in the genus Vicia, DNA was isolated from each of the six species, denatured by heating, and sheared into small fragments (W. Y. Chooi. 1971. Genetics 68:213–230). In one experiment, DNA from each species and from E. coli was allowed to renature. The graph shows the results of this renaturation experiment. Q. Notice that, for the Vicia species, the rate of renaturation is much faster in the first hour and then slows down. What might cause this initial rapid renaturation and the subsequent slowdown?arrow_forward(i) For the chromatogram below, what is the sequence of the template DNA from base 115 to 125? CTGTGTGAAATTGT TA T CCGC T CA CA AT T C CACA CA A CATA CGAGC CGGAAG CA TA A 110 120 130 140 150 160 (ii) An allele of a gene has the following change in it's sequence ATG GTG CÁC CTG ACT CCT GTG GAG AAG TCT compared to the wild type ATG GTG CAC CTG ACT CT GAG GAG AAG TCT With reference to the sequence; there is a codon, resulting in a change from is a mutation in the to which mutation.arrow_forward
- A bacterial transformation is performed with a donor strain that is resistant to four drugs, A, B, C, and D, and a recipient strain that is sensitive to all four drugs. The resulting recipient cell population is divided and plated onmedia containing various combinations of the drugs. The following table shows the results.a. One of the genes is distant from the other three, which appear to be closely linked. Which is the distant gene? b. What is the likely order of the three closely linked genesarrow_forwardIn a transformation experiment, donor DNA was obtained from aprototroph bacterial strain (a+b+c+), and the recipient was a tripleauxotroph (a-b-c-). What general conclusions can you draw aboutthe linkage relationships among the three genes from the followingtransformant classes that were recovered? a+ b- c- 180 a- b+ c- 150 a+ b+ c- 210 a- b- c+ 179 a+ b- c+ 2 a- b+ c+ 1 a+ b+ c+ 3arrow_forwardThe mutation for drug resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the bacteria that causes the disease tuberculosis, occurs within the chromosome, not in the plasmid. How do you think this would affect the likelihood of an individual bacterium becoming drug resistant?arrow_forward
- In DNA-hybridization experiments on six species of plants in the genus Vicia, DNA was isolated from each of the six species, denatured by heating, and sheared into small fragments (W. Y. Chooi. 1971. Genetics 68:213–230). In one experiment, DNA from each species and from E. coli was allowed to renature. The graph shows the results of this renaturation experiment. Q. Can you explain why the E. coli DNA renatures at a much faster rate than does DNA from any of the Vicia species?arrow_forwardSuppose the experiment of Meselson and Stahl was performed on a sample of 8 cells, each containing one copy of its circular double-stranded DNA genome, and that had been growing on normal 14N medium. You then grew the cells for 3 generations in medium containing 15N. The outcome would be A) 8 cells with single-stranded DNA molecules with 14N, and 24 cells with single-stranded DNA molecules with 15N. B) 16 cells with double-stranded DNA molecules with equal amounts of 14N and 15N, and 48 cells with double-stranded DNA molecules with 15N. C) 8 cells with double-stranded DNA molecules with equal amounts of 14N and 15N, and 24 cells with double-stranded DNA molecules with 15N. D) 8 cells with double-stranded DNA molecules with equal amounts of 14N and 15N, and 32 cells with double-stranded DNA molecules with 15N. E) 65 cells with single-stranded DNA molecules with 15N.arrow_forwardPeople with a commonly occurring, wild type allele of PTC with two adjacent thymines at a particular site in the coding sequence are more prone to BCCs than people without this allele. How can this be explained (one sentence)? The "two adjacent thymines" allele of PTC causes a bigger increase in BCC risk for people xeroderma pigmentosum (XP), who lacks components of the nucleotide excision repair pathway, compared to people without XP. How can this be explained (one sentence)?arrow_forward
- Bacteriophage T4 has a linear double-stranded DNA genome, yet mapping many mutations, as shown in Figure, generates a circular linkage map. How might you explain this discrepancy?arrow_forwardMany of the gene products involved in DNA synthesis were initially defined by studying mutant E. coli strains that could not synthesize DNA. (a) The dnaE gene encodes the a subunit of DNA polymerase III. What effect is expected from a mutation in this gene? How could the mutant strain be maintained? (b) The dnaQ gene encodes the e subunit of DNA polymerase. What effect is expected from a mutation in this gene?arrow_forwardTwo pathways, homologous recombination and nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ), can repair double-strandbreaks in DNA. If homologous recombination is an errorfree pathway whereas NHEJ is not always error free, whyis NHEJ used most of the time in eukaryotes?arrow_forward
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