Note 7.1 - Gene to Protein
... gene found in a strand of DNA. RNA has an alphabet made up of four letters representing nitrogenous bases; A (adenine), G (guanine), U (uracil), and C (cytosine). Once again only three letters are used to code for an amino acid. There are sixty four (43) different combinations of three nitrogenous b ...
... gene found in a strand of DNA. RNA has an alphabet made up of four letters representing nitrogenous bases; A (adenine), G (guanine), U (uracil), and C (cytosine). Once again only three letters are used to code for an amino acid. There are sixty four (43) different combinations of three nitrogenous b ...
File
... List A – G and tell what they AND what they do a. amino acid: subunit of a protein b. tRNA: takes amino acid to ribosome c. anticodon: matches to codon d. codon: matches to tRNA. Message. e. mRNA: carries message from DNA f. ribosome: makes protein g. protein: made from DNA ...
... List A – G and tell what they AND what they do a. amino acid: subunit of a protein b. tRNA: takes amino acid to ribosome c. anticodon: matches to codon d. codon: matches to tRNA. Message. e. mRNA: carries message from DNA f. ribosome: makes protein g. protein: made from DNA ...
DNA Profiling
... INTERPOL serves only as the conduit for the sharing and comparison of information. It does not keep any nominal data linking a DNA profile to any individual. A DNA profile is simply a list of numbers based on the pattern of an individual’s DNA, producing a numerical code which can be used to differe ...
... INTERPOL serves only as the conduit for the sharing and comparison of information. It does not keep any nominal data linking a DNA profile to any individual. A DNA profile is simply a list of numbers based on the pattern of an individual’s DNA, producing a numerical code which can be used to differe ...
DNA Profiling
... INTERPOL serves only as the conduit for the sharing and comparison of information. It does not keep any nominal data linking a DNA profile to any individual. A DNA profile is simply a list of numbers based on the pattern of an individual’s DNA, producing a numerical code which can be used to differe ...
... INTERPOL serves only as the conduit for the sharing and comparison of information. It does not keep any nominal data linking a DNA profile to any individual. A DNA profile is simply a list of numbers based on the pattern of an individual’s DNA, producing a numerical code which can be used to differe ...
DNA History WebquestJ
... the DNA molecule structure. This discovery was made by American biologist, ________________, and British physicist, ________________. 9. James Watson and Francis Crick. http://www.dnai.org/timeline/index.html a. What did they receive the Nobel Prize for in 1962? ...
... the DNA molecule structure. This discovery was made by American biologist, ________________, and British physicist, ________________. 9. James Watson and Francis Crick. http://www.dnai.org/timeline/index.html a. What did they receive the Nobel Prize for in 1962? ...
in Power-Point Format
... DNA Fingerprinting and DNA Typing • Southern blots in forensic labs identify individuals from DNA-containing materials (Jeffreys et al., 1986) • Minisatellite DNA - sequence of bases repeated several times, also called DNA fingerprint – Individuals differ in repeats of basic sequence – – Difference ...
... DNA Fingerprinting and DNA Typing • Southern blots in forensic labs identify individuals from DNA-containing materials (Jeffreys et al., 1986) • Minisatellite DNA - sequence of bases repeated several times, also called DNA fingerprint – Individuals differ in repeats of basic sequence – – Difference ...
Lab - Recombinant DNA Simulation
... Genetic engineering is possible because of special enzymes that cut DNA. These enzymes are called restriction enzymes. Restriction enzymes are proteins produced by bacteria used to prevent (or restrict) the invasion of viruses. They act as “DNA scissors”, cutting viral DNA into pieces so that it can ...
... Genetic engineering is possible because of special enzymes that cut DNA. These enzymes are called restriction enzymes. Restriction enzymes are proteins produced by bacteria used to prevent (or restrict) the invasion of viruses. They act as “DNA scissors”, cutting viral DNA into pieces so that it can ...
AP Biology Final Exam Topics 2015
... 16) What are the Major Parts of the Cell Cycle? What Part or Phase do cells spend most of their time in? 17) What is Mitosis? What are the end products of Mitosis? 18) What is/are one/two major events of Prophase? Metaphase? Anaphase? Telophase? Cyokinesis? ...
... 16) What are the Major Parts of the Cell Cycle? What Part or Phase do cells spend most of their time in? 17) What is Mitosis? What are the end products of Mitosis? 18) What is/are one/two major events of Prophase? Metaphase? Anaphase? Telophase? Cyokinesis? ...
Gene Expression
... i. First diagram shows RNA transcript wound around minor grooves of DNA as its being made b. Instead, only about 12 bases of transcript actually remain with the template strand i. The nascent transcript is released free (not wound around DNA) ii. Happens because of topoisomerase (gyrase in new editi ...
... i. First diagram shows RNA transcript wound around minor grooves of DNA as its being made b. Instead, only about 12 bases of transcript actually remain with the template strand i. The nascent transcript is released free (not wound around DNA) ii. Happens because of topoisomerase (gyrase in new editi ...
Restriction Digestion and Analysis of Lambda DNA
... carefully adjusted so they are randomly and infrequently incorporated into the growing DNA strand. Once a dideoxynucleotide is incorporated into a single strand, DNA synthesis is terminated since the modified nucleotide does not have a free 3’ hydroxyl group on the sugar which is the site of the add ...
... carefully adjusted so they are randomly and infrequently incorporated into the growing DNA strand. Once a dideoxynucleotide is incorporated into a single strand, DNA synthesis is terminated since the modified nucleotide does not have a free 3’ hydroxyl group on the sugar which is the site of the add ...
DNA Questions #4 Questions on the PCR Process:
... a short sequence of nucleotides that is complimentary to a sequence of nucleotides in the middle of an STR target sequence. b. a sequence of nucleotides that can bind to the end of an STR to help begin amplification or replication of the DNA. c. a sequence of nucleotides that binds to the entire STR ...
... a short sequence of nucleotides that is complimentary to a sequence of nucleotides in the middle of an STR target sequence. b. a sequence of nucleotides that can bind to the end of an STR to help begin amplification or replication of the DNA. c. a sequence of nucleotides that binds to the entire STR ...
Chapter 2 Chemistry of nucleic acid
... • 1987: launched the human genome project • 2001: accomplished the draft map of human genome ...
... • 1987: launched the human genome project • 2001: accomplished the draft map of human genome ...
Biol-1406_Ch10Notes.ppt
... _______ lives on what its host eats • Specific ________ are needed to metabolize the type of food that comes along • e.g. in newborn mammals, E.coli are bathed in milk, containing the milk sugar ___________ • The lactose _______ contains three structural genes, each coding for an enzyme that aids in ...
... _______ lives on what its host eats • Specific ________ are needed to metabolize the type of food that comes along • e.g. in newborn mammals, E.coli are bathed in milk, containing the milk sugar ___________ • The lactose _______ contains three structural genes, each coding for an enzyme that aids in ...
Plasmid w/ kanamycin resistance (pKAN)
... – Plasmid fragments are loaded into a gel – Connected to a power supply ...
... – Plasmid fragments are loaded into a gel – Connected to a power supply ...
Linkage
... Terminology in microbial genetics • Prototroph: “original” and “feed”, a wild type strain, one able to synthesize all needed compounds from a simple carbon source such as glucose. • Auxotroph: a mutant that has lost the ability to make some necessary organic compound; it must be added to the cultur ...
... Terminology in microbial genetics • Prototroph: “original” and “feed”, a wild type strain, one able to synthesize all needed compounds from a simple carbon source such as glucose. • Auxotroph: a mutant that has lost the ability to make some necessary organic compound; it must be added to the cultur ...
DNA - An overview - World of Teaching
... • Reconstituted “mixed” viruses by mixing the proteins of one strain with the RNA of the second strain, and vice versa. • When these mixed viruses were infected with tobacco leaves, the progeny was phenotypically and genotypically identical like parent from where ...
... • Reconstituted “mixed” viruses by mixing the proteins of one strain with the RNA of the second strain, and vice versa. • When these mixed viruses were infected with tobacco leaves, the progeny was phenotypically and genotypically identical like parent from where ...
Effects of high magnetic fields on in vitro transcription
... FM and FR are comparable to other molecular forces which have been measured. Considering the forces required to unzip a beta hairpin, to stop the polymerase from proceeding along the DNA, or to overstretch DNA are all on the order of ~10-11 N, our forces are small. Movement of the thumb 1 nm is a co ...
... FM and FR are comparable to other molecular forces which have been measured. Considering the forces required to unzip a beta hairpin, to stop the polymerase from proceeding along the DNA, or to overstretch DNA are all on the order of ~10-11 N, our forces are small. Movement of the thumb 1 nm is a co ...
Ch 12/13 Notes
... After running through the experiment only phosphorus-32 was found in the cell. What were the viruses injecting into the cell? DNA Therefore that must be the genetic material of the bacteriophage. This convinced scientists that DNA was the genetic material for all living things, not just viruse ...
... After running through the experiment only phosphorus-32 was found in the cell. What were the viruses injecting into the cell? DNA Therefore that must be the genetic material of the bacteriophage. This convinced scientists that DNA was the genetic material for all living things, not just viruse ...
Document
... exact copies of itself during the cell cycle 2. Replication assures every cell has complete set of identical genetic information ...
... exact copies of itself during the cell cycle 2. Replication assures every cell has complete set of identical genetic information ...
Introduction to Genetics
... specific cells for their own replication, consist of protein & nucleic acid (ds/ss DNA or RNA). Transposable elements –1st identified in maize Replicate as part of another genetic element capable of moving from site to site. Transposable elements prove - genetic material not stable, fluidic ...
... specific cells for their own replication, consist of protein & nucleic acid (ds/ss DNA or RNA). Transposable elements –1st identified in maize Replicate as part of another genetic element capable of moving from site to site. Transposable elements prove - genetic material not stable, fluidic ...
Replisome
The replisome is a complex molecular machine that carries out replication of DNA. The replisome first unwinds double stranded DNA into two single strands. For each of the resulting single strands, a new complementary sequence of DNA is synthesized. The net result is formation of two new double stranded DNA sequences that are exact copies of the original double stranded DNA sequence.In terms of structure, the replisome is composed of two replicative polymerase complexes, one of which synthesizes the leading strand, while the other synthesizes the lagging strand. The replisome is composed of a number of proteins including helicase, RFC, PCNA, gyrase/topoisomerase, SSB/RPA, primase, DNA polymerase I, RNAse H, and ligase.