Bio Exam 4: Chapter 20
Gel electrophoresis
A technique that uses a gel made of a polymer as a molecular sieve to separate out nucleic acids by size
B
The reason for using Taq polymerase for PCR is that _____. a) only minute amounts are needed for each cycle of PCR b) it is heat stable and can withstand the heating step of PCR c) it has regions that are complementary to the primers d) it binds more readily than other polymerases to the primers
Denaturation, annealing, and extension
Three-step cycle of PCR:
95 to 55 to 72
What is the temperature change in PCR?
Cloning vector
A DNA molecule that can carry foreign DNA into a host cell and replicate there
Electroporation
A brief electrical pulse is applied to a solution containing cells creating temporary holes in their plasma membranes, through which DNA can enter
Expression vector
A cloning vector that contains a highly active bacterial promoter just upstream of a restriction site where the eukaryotic gene can be inserted in the correct reading frame
complementary DNA
A form of the gene that includes only the exons
Recombinant DNA
A molecule containing DNA from two different sources (usually a plasmid and foreign DNA)
Stem cell
A relatively un-specialized cell that both reproduce itself indefinitely and, under appropriate conditions, differentiate into specialized cells of 1 or more types
Single nucleotide polymorphism
A single base-pair site where variation is found in at least 1% of the population
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
A technique that isolates a gene of interest and obtains many copies of the desired gene
DNA ligase
An enzyme that seals the bonds between restriction fragments
GMO
An organism that has acquired by artificial means 1 or more genes from another species or multiple other species
Transgenic
Animal that has a gene from another animal introduced to it
DNA microarray assays
Consists of tiny amounts of a large number of single-stranded DNA fragments representing different genes fixed to a glass slide in a tightly spaced grid
Genetic markers
DNA sequences that vary in the population
Restriction enzymes (restriction endonucleases)
Enzymes that protect the bacterial cell by cutting up foreign DNA from other organisms or phages
DNA sequencing
Exploiting the principle of complementary base pairing to determine the complete nucleotide sequence of a DNA molecule
DNA isolation
First step for making cells with recombinant plasmids
D
Gel electrophoresis separates DNA fragments on the basis of what characteristic? a) mutations b) charge c) sequence d) length e) restriction sites
Gene amplification, protein production
Gene cloning is useful for two basic purposes: _________ & ____________________
negative, positive
In gel electrophoresis DNA molecules migrate from _____ to _____ ends of the gel.
Genetic profile
Individual's unique set of genetic markers
Genome-wide association studies
Large-scale analysis that do not require complete sequencing of all genomes in the two groups
Sequencing by synthesis
Method of identifying the sequence of a segment of DNA by using electronic monitors to identify which of four nucleotides is added during synthesis of a complementary strand
RNA interference method
Method that uses synthetic double-stranded RNA molecules matching the sequence double-stranded RNA molecules matching the sequence of a particular gene to trigger breakdown of the gene's messenger RNA or to block its translation
in vitro
Outside of the cell; in a test tube
Extension
Part of PCR where DNA polymerase adds nucleotides to the 3' end of each primer
Annealing
Part of PCR where the DNA is cooled to allow primers to form hydrogen bonds with ends of target sequence
Denaturation
Part of PCR where the DNA is heated briefly to separate the DNA strands
Restriction site
Particular short DNA sequence where a specific restriction enzyme makes specific cuts
DNA cloning
Preparing well-defined segments of DNA in multiple identical copies
Short tandem repeats
Repeated units of two- to five- nucleotide sequences in specific regions of the genome; allows for genetic markers
specific
Restriction enzymes are very _________
Restriction enzymes added
Second step for making cells with recombinant plasmids
Sticky end
Single-stranded end extension that is left after a restriction enzyme cuts at a restriction site; can form hydrogen bonds with a complementary piece
Plasmids
Small, circular DNA molecules that are replicated separately from the bacterial chromosome
DNA isolation, Restriction enzymes added, Mix & ligase added, recombinants produced, recombinants introduced (into bacterial cells), plate bacteria (onto agar with ampicillin in media), bacterial growth
Steps required to produce cells carrying recombinant plasmids
Gene inserted (in plasmid), plasmid inserted (into bacterial cell), growth (of bacterial cell), product (used in research or industry)
Steps to gene cloning
In vitro mutagenesis
Technique in which specific mutations are introduced into a cloned gene and the mutated gene is returned to a cell to disable the normal cellular copies of the same gene
In situ hybridization
Technique that allows one to see the mRNA in place and in the intact organism
DNA technology
Techniques for sequencing and manipulating DNA
Nucleic acid hybrization
The base pairing of one strand of a nucleic acid to the complementary sequence on a stand from another nucleic acid molecule
Nucleic acid probe
The complementary molecule, a short, single-stranded nucleic acid that can be either RNA or DNA
Genetic engineering
The direct manipulation of genes for practical purposes
DNA ligase
The enzyme that catalyzes the formation of covalent bonds that close up the sugar-phosphate backbones of DNA strands
Gene therapy
The introduction of genes into an afflicted individual for therapeutic purposes
Biotechnology
The manipulation of organisms or their components to make useful products
sticky ends
The most useful restriction enzymes cut DNA in a way to produce ________
Pluripotent
The potential to develop into many different cell types
Totipotent
The potential to give rise to all the specialized cell types of the organism
Gene cloning
The production of multiple copies of a single gene
Restriction fragments
The products of restriction enzymes making cuts at certain restriction sites
palindrome
The same forwards and backwards
palindromes
The sequences that restriction enzymes target are ___________
A
The sticky end of the DNA restriction fragment shown here will pair with a DNA restriction fragment with a DNA sequence of ____. TGCAGAATTC CTTAAG A) -ACGT B) -AAAA C) ACGU D) -GTAC
A
The sticky end of the DNA restriction fragment shown here will pair with a DNA restriction fragment with the sticky end _____. TGCAGAATTC CTTAAG a) -ACGT b) -AAAA c) -ACGU d) -GTAC e) -TGCA
A
The unpaired nucleotides produced by the action of restriction enzymes are referred to as _____. a) sticky ends b) base sequences c) single strands d) restriction fragments e) ligases
Reverse transcriptase PCR
Turns sets of mRNAs into double-stranded DNAs
template DNA, DNA polymerase, nucleotides, primer
What is needed for PCR?
D
What is the enzymatic function of restriction enzymes? a) to repair breaks in sugar-phosphate backbones b) to join nucleotides during replication c) to join nucleotides during transcription d) to cleave nucleic acids at specific sites e) to add new nucleotides to the growing strand of DNA
Taq DNA polymerase
What is the special DNA polymerase used in PCR?
heat
What is used to denature the DNA during PCR?
D
Which of the following is in the correct order for one cycle of polymerase chain reaction (PCR)? a) Extend primers; anneal primers; denature DNA. b) Denature DNA; add fresh enzyme; anneal primers; add dNTPs; extend primers. c) Anneal primers; denature DNA; extend primers. d) Denature DNA; anneal primers; extend primers.
B
Which of the following sequences could be cut by a restriction enzyme a) AATTCC & TTAAGG b) GTGCAC & GTGCAC c) ATC & TAG d) TTTGGG & AAACCC