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 7, Problem 31P
a. | You have a test tube containing 5 ml of a solution of bacteriophages, and you would like to estimate the number of bacteriophages in the tube. Assuming the tube actually contains a total of 15 billion bacteriophages, design a serial dilution experiment that would allow you to estimate this number. Ideally, the final plaque-containing plates you count should contain more than 10 and fewer than 1000 plaques. |
b. | When you count bacteriophages by the serial dilution method as in part (a), you are assuming a plating efficiency of 100%; that is, the number of plaques on the petri plate represents exactly the number of bacteriophages you mixed with the plating bacteria. Is there any way to test the possibility that only a certain percentage of bacteriophage particles can form plaques (so that the plating efficiency would be less than 100%)? Why is it fair to assume that any plaques are initiated by one rather than multiple bacteriophage particles? |
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a. You have a test tube containing 5 ml of a solution ofbacteriophages, and you would like to estimate thenumber of bacteriophages in the tube. Assuming thetube actually contains a total of 15 billion bacteriophages, design a serial dilution experiment thatwould allow you to estimate this number. Ideally,the final plaque-containing plates you count shouldcontain more than 10 and fewer than 1000 plaques.b. When you count bacteriophages by the serialdilution method as in part (a), you are assuming aplating efficiency of 100%; that is, the number ofplaques on the petri plate represents exactly thenumber of bacteriophages you mixed with the plating bacteria. Is there any way to test the possibilitythat only a certain percentage of bacteriophageparticles can form plaques (so that the plating efficiency would be less than 100%)? Why is it fair toassume that any plaques are initiated by one ratherthan multiple bacteriophage particles?
A plaque assay is performed beginning with 1 mL of a solution containing bacteriophages. This solution is serially diluted 3 times by combining 0.1 mL of each sequential dilution with 9.9 mL of liquid medium. Then 0.1 mL of the final dilution is plated in the plaque assay and yields 12 plaques.What is the initial density of bacteriophages in the original 1 mL? Enter your answer to two significant figures ( for example: 1.1 * 10^2)
A plaque assay is performed beginning with 1 mL of a solution containing bacteriophages. This solution is serially diluted three times by combining 0.1 mL of each sequential dilution with 9.9 mL of liquid medium. Then 0.1 mL of the final dilution is plated in the plaque assay and yields 17 plaques. What is the initial density of bacteriophages in the original 1 mL?
Chapter 7 Solutions
Genetics: From Genes to Genomes
Ch. 7 - The following is a list of mutational changes. For...Ch. 7 - What explanations can account for the following...Ch. 7 - The DNA sequence of one strand of a gene from...Ch. 7 - Among mammals, measurements of the rate of...Ch. 7 - Over a period of several years, a large hospital...Ch. 7 - Suppose you wanted to study genes controlling the...Ch. 7 - In a genetics lab, Kim and Maria infected a sample...Ch. 7 - The results of the fluctuation test Fig. 7.5 were...Ch. 7 - The following pedigree shows the inheritance of a...Ch. 7 - Autism is a neurological disorder thought to be...
Ch. 7 - Like the yellow Labrador retrievers featured in...Ch. 7 - Remember that Balancer chromosomes prevent the...Ch. 7 - Figure 7.14 shows examples of base substitutions...Ch. 7 - Figure 7.14a shows the mutagen 5-bromouracil 5-BU,...Ch. 7 - So-called two-way mutagens can induce both a...Ch. 7 - In 1967, J. B. Jenkins treated wild-type male...Ch. 7 - When a particular mutagen identified by the Ames...Ch. 7 - Prob. 18PCh. 7 - The Ames test uses the reversion rate His- to His...Ch. 7 - The mutant FMR-1 allele that causes fragile X...Ch. 7 - The physicist Stephen Hawking, famous for his...Ch. 7 - Aflatoxin B1 is a highly mutagenic and...Ch. 7 - In human DNA, 70 of cytosine residues that are...Ch. 7 - Bromodeoxyuridine BrdU is a synthetic nucleoside...Ch. 7 - Albinism in animals is caused by recessive...Ch. 7 - a. In Figure 7.22b, what can you say about the...Ch. 7 - Imagine that you caught a female albino mouse in...Ch. 7 - Plant breeders studying genes influencing leaf...Ch. 7 - In humans, albinism is normally inherited in an...Ch. 7 - a. Seymour Benzers fine structure analysis of the...Ch. 7 - a. You have a test tube containing 5 ml of a...Ch. 7 - Prob. 32PCh. 7 - The rosy ry gene of Drosophila encodes an enzyme...Ch. 7 - Nine rII- mutants of bacteriophage T4 were used in...Ch. 7 - In a haploid yeast strain, eight recessive...Ch. 7 - In Problem 24, you learned that Bloom syndrome is...Ch. 7 - The pathway for arginine biosynthesis in...Ch. 7 - In corn snakes, the wild-type color is brown. One...Ch. 7 - In a certain species of flowering plants with a...Ch. 7 - The intermediates A, B, C, D, E, and F all occur...Ch. 7 - In each of the following cross schemes, two...Ch. 7 - Prob. 42PCh. 7 - The following complementing E. coli mutants were...Ch. 7 - In 1952, an article in the British Medical Journal...Ch. 7 - Mutations in an autosomal gene in humans cause a...Ch. 7 - Antibodies were made that recognize six proteins...Ch. 7 - Prob. 47PCh. 7 - Prob. 48PCh. 7 - In addition to the predominant adult hemoglobin,...Ch. 7 - Most mammals, including New World primates such as...Ch. 7 - Humans are normally trichromats; we have three...
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