genetics test 4

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where are exconjugants identified by their growth?

on a selective growth medium

How many donor genes may a new exconjugant aquire by homologous recombination?

one or more

What are exconjugants that contain a complete F' factor called?

partial diploids

How many chromosomes are usually in bacteria?

1

The passage of DNA into a recipient is accompanied by what?

degradation of one of the strands

What does the alignment of the donor and the recipient trigger?

excision of one strand of recipient DNA and REPLACEMENT WITH DONOR DNA... this forms a heteroduplex

What happens after contact is established by the conjugation pilus?

gene expression from the F factor produces a protein complex called a relaxosome

what are the 2 types of transduction?

general and specialized

what are small double stranded circular DNA molecules containing NON-ESSENTIAL genes?

plasmids

What is the name of the protein complex that the F factor produces?

relaxosome

Plasmids that can replicate independently of the bacterial chromosome so that the number of plasmids per cell can increase rapidly are called what?

high-copy-number plasmids

Transfer of one or more donor alleles into the recipient chromosome occurs by what?

homologous recombination

what are the parts of a bacteriophage?

icosahedral head, protein sheath, sometimes tail fibers

How will each Hfr strain used in interrupted mating experiments transfer genes?

in a specific order

T strand transfer across the pilus is accompanied by a specialized process called _______________________________

rolling circle replication

what did ledenberg and tatum hypothesize about bacterial genetic transfer?

that physical contact was needed

what is lysis?

the breakage of a donor cell and fragmentation of the DNA of the donor

what is the recipient cell called after conjugation?

the exconjugant

What does the recipient cells use as a template for replication?

the imported DNA

what does rolling circle replication use as a template for DNA replication?

the non-transferred DNA strand

What complex binds the coupling complex?

the nucleoprotein complex

what provides a recognition signal for the coupling complex?

the nucleoprotein complex at the 5' end of the T strand

what is the transformed cell called?

the transformant

What are experiments that test for gene transfer at timed intervals used for?

to determine the distances between genes

In an interrupted mating experiment, the purpose of plating cells on a selective medium is

to ensure that only recombinant genotypes are recovered

How is transformation used in the laboratory?

to introduce plasmids to recipient cells

what is a cell that has been attacked by a bacteriophage called?

transductant

What is the transfer of DNA from one bacterium to another by viral vector?

transduction

What is the uptake of DNA from the environment?

transformation

what does cotransformed mean?

transformed into the recipient on the same fragment of DNA

when does an episome occur?

when a plasmid integrates into the bacterial chromosome

When does Transformation occur?

when a recipient cell takes up a fragment of donor DNA from the surrounding growth medium

Can transformation be used to map genes?

yes

What can happen to the episome at each insertion sequence?

it can be oriented in either of two directions

Where is the location and orientation of F Factor?

it varies among Hfr strains

What will be the cotransformation frequency for two genes too far apart to be cotransformed? How many crossover events will it require?

it will be the product of the two transformation frequencies, 4

who identified bacterial DNA transfer and when?

ledenberg and tatum 1946

Mapping information for a single Hfr gene is ___________

limited

plasmids that are usuallly present in one or two per bacterial cell and cannot replicate independently are called what?

low-copy-number plasmids

What is transformation preceded by?

lysis

What are insertion sequence elements?

mobile segments of bacterial DNA that can transpose themselves to new locations

time-of-entry maps are constructed using what?

multiple Hfr strains

what kinds of plasmids are found in bacteria?

naturally occurring

Is the F fcator fully transferred during mating?

no

Where is the nucleoprotein complex located?

at the 5' end of the T strand

what are the 6 steps of the lytic cycle?

attachment, injection, replication, transcription/translation, packaging, lysis

what are the 4 steps of the lysogenic cycle

attachment/injection, integration, excision of prophage, resumption of lytic cycle

Why are partial diploids called partial diploids?

because they contain two copies of the bacterial chromosome genes found on the F' factor

how is genetic information transferred during conjugation?

by a conjugation pilus

How are the maps from each strain consolidated?

by identifying overlap regions from each strain

How can three genes' orders be determined?

by the cotransformation frequency

_____________________ will often end up on th esame fragment of transforming DNA and require only ______ crossover events. they will have a ___________________ frequency similar to the transformation frequency of a single gene

closely linked genes, 2, cotransformation

What is the transfer of replicated DNA from a donor to a recipient?

conjugation

Which kind of bacterial genetic transfer is closest to sexual reproduction

conjugation

How long is an F factor?

100 Kb

How many steps is transformation?

4

how many insertion sequence elements does a large component F factor consist of?

4

How many of the genes that control conjugation are encoded by the F factor?

40

What is time-of-entry-mapping?

Experiments that test for gene transfer at timed intervals

Which of the following transposition events is most likely to result in a loss of function mutation? A.Insertion of an IS element within the coding region of a gene B. Transposition of an IS element that contains a stop codon within the inverted repeat sequence C. Insertion near the promoter region of a gene

A.Insertion of an IS element within the coding

what kind of organism has nutritional requirements in addition to those of the normal organism and cannot make their own nutrients?

Auxotroph

You perform a cotransduction experiment with a leuA + met4 - tyr9 + proC - donor and a leuA - met4 + tyr9 - proC + recipient. You select for leuA + transductants by plating on minimal medium + methionine, tyrosine, and proline. The bacteriophage you use is capable of transducing more than 300 kilobases (kb) of DNA at a time. Based on the map, which of the following statements is(are) true? Check all that apply. A.The leuA + met4 - tyr9 - proC - genotype will be the most common transductant genotype. B.The leuA + met4 + tyr9 + proC + genotype will be the least common transductant genotype. C.The leuA + met4 - tyr9 + proC - genotype will be more common than the leuA + met4 - tyr9 + proC + genotype. D. The leuA + met4 - tyr9 - proC - genotype will be more common than the leuA + met4 + tyr9 - proC + genotype.

B.The leuA + met4 + tyr9 + proC + genotype will be the least common transductant genotype. C.The leuA + met4 - tyr9 + proC - genotype will be more common than the

Sort the items according to whether they may be found only in free virus particles, only in uninfected host cells, or in both viruses and host cells. Into Viruses only, Host Cell Only, or Both RNA DNA Capsid Protein Ribosome Envelope with glycoproteins Capsomere(core protein)

Both have DNA, RNA, and protein only host cells have ribosomes capsomeres, envelopes, and capsids are only in viruses.

All of the following are characteristics of insertion sequences elements except _______. A.they encode protein B. there can be more than one copy of an IS element in a bacterial genome C. a copy of the insertion sequence becomes integrated at a new location D. they are flanked by inverted repeats

C. a copy of the insertion sequence becomes integrated at a new location

The role of transposase activity in IS element transposition includes _______. A.truncating other proteins B.filling in single-stranded gaps after IS insertion C. regulating expression of the target sequence D. cutting DNA at the target sequence

D. cutting DNA at the target sequence

Which of the following statements about conjugation is true?

DNA is transferred from an F+ cell to an F− cell.

What did Cavalli-Sforza identify in 1953?

Donor strains that transferred bacterial genes rather than F factor genes at a high rate

What can take place at any Insertion sequence element on a bacterial chromosome?

F factor integration

What are donor cells carrying an F' factor called?

F' cells

An ______________________ contains a functional F factor derived from ________________________ of the F factor from an Hfr chromosome

F' donor bacterium, imperfect excision

what are donor cells that possess an F factor called?

F+ cells

What are recipients, those who lack an F factor, called?

F- cells

True or false? A bacterial strain that is pro+ thi+ leu− met− will grow on minimal media plus leucine and thiamine.

False

True or False. Partial diploidy is not retained as a characteristic of the exconjugant and their descendants.

False. It is retained

True or False. The formation of the Hfr chromosome is very common.

False. It occurs rarely.

true or false. Plasmids are ususally larger than bacterial chromosomes.

False. They are smaller

True or False. Transformation is not a naturally occurring mechanism.

False. it is naturally occurring.

what kind of plasmid contains genes that promote its own transfer from donors to recipients?

Fertility Plasmid

Mapping bacterial genes by conjugation is based on which of the following assumptions?

Genes are transferred from donor to recipient in a linear fashion.

What is the ability to act as a donor determined by?

Heredity and a fertility factor

WHat can we call F factor cells that have been integrated into bacterial chromosomes?

Hfr cells

The F factor integrates into the bacterial chromosome to form what?

Hfr chromosome

What did Cavalli-Sforza name his dicovery?

High frequency recombination (Hfr) strains

Instead of recircularizing, what happens to linear DNA in the recipient cell?

Homologous recombination occurs between the linear DNA and the circular chromosome of the recipient.

What are mobile segments of bacterial DNA that can transpose themselves to new locations

Insertion sequence elements

What is the cessation of conjugation by breaking the conjugation tube?

Interrupted mating

A newly discovered gene zig is tested for linkage to rag. A double auxotrophic bacterial strain with the genotype zig− rag− is transformed by a prototrophic bacterial strain (zig+ rag+ ). The individual transformation frequencies for the genes are 0.018% for zig and 0.012% for rag. In a screen of 108 cells, there are two zig+ rag+ cotransformants. Do the results indicate that zig and rag are linked?

NO

What is the difference between natural and induced transformation?

Natural transformation is when DNA fragments in the environment are taken up by the cell. The fragment can either be degraded or integrated with induced transformation, a plasmid is used, and stable transformation happens when the plasmid is taken up... there is no degradation

Can linear DNA in the recipient cell recircularize?

No

Conjugation with F' Strains produces what?

Partial diploids

what kind of plasmid carries antibiotic resistance genes that can be transferred to recipient cells

Resistance plasmid

True or False. Complete transfer of the bacterial chromosome is not accomplished

True

True or False. The ability to act as a donor could be restored after conjugation with another donor strain.

True

The ____________ unwinds and a protein called ___________ binds the free 5' end

T strand, relaxase

How is a merozygote formed?

The F factor and several adjacent genes are excised from the chromosome of an F+ cell and transferred to an F− strain.

Which of the following statements about mapping bacterial genes by conjugation is NOT true?

The closer a gene to the Hfr origin, the more likely it will be transferred to the recipient during conjugation.

THe order and time of each in exconjugants are related to what?

The distance from the origin of transfer (oriT)

Once F factor insertion has taken place what happens the the locatoin and direction of the F factor for that Hfr strain?

They remain constant

What will happen to genes closer to the oriT

They will transfer earlier and beincorporated more frequently into recipients

What is the transfer of genetic material from donor to recipient by bacteriophage

Transduction

where does rolling circle replication begin?

at oriT

who isolated a strain that formerly acted as a donor but lost its ability to do so? When did he do it?

William Hayes, 1953

What does a bacterial chromosome usually look like?

a covalently closed circular molecule of double stranded DNA

What kind of organism can generate all its own macromolecules from simple sugars and inorganic minerals?

a prototroph

the F' factor that results from imperfect excision contains what?

all its own DNA plus a segment of the bacterial chromosome

circular elements like the F factor can integrate into the bacterial chromosome to form what?

an episome

homologous recombination forms what?

an exconjugant chromosome

What is used as a tool to control growth of bacteria?

antibiotic sensitivity and resistance

Where does integration occur?

at insertion sequence elements


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