Microbiology Notes Exam 2 (Lectures 9&10) – Flashcards
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DNA!
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DNA
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What is the five carbon sugar which makes up the back bone of DNA? |
Deoxyribose
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[image] |
What are the four nucleotide bases in DNA? |
Adenine (A) Guanine (G) Thymine (T) and Cytosine (C) [image] |
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complementary base pairing [image] |
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What do we call a segment of DNA that codes for a specific product? |
A gene!
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What is a gene? |
A gene is a segment of the DNA that codes for specific producte e.g. the gene for eye color, or for a flagella [image] |
What do we call all the genetic informatian in an organism? |
The organism's genome [image] |
What structure(s) contain a bacteria's genome? |
The single bacterial chromosome and its plasmid(s), if present. [image] |
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Mitochondrial DNA or mtDNA |
What allows mitochondria to replicate independently of their cells? |
Mitochondrial DNA [image] |
What self replicating stucture exists in mammalian cells? |
Mitochondria [image] |
Who is mitochondrial DNA inherited from? |
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What is the main function of mitchondria in the cell? |
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What is the relationship between mitochondrial DNA and excercise? |
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What do we call all the genetic information that an organism has? |
The organism's genome. [image] |
What is the difference between genotype and genome? |
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What do we call all of the genes an organism is currently expressing? |
PHENOTYPE [image] |
What do we call two genes that influence the same trait? |
alleles In this example, the alleles are for a flower's color. [image] |
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If a mother and father both have one allele for brown eyes (B) and one for blue eyes (b), what are their chances of having a blue eyed child (bb)? |
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Are eukaryotic cells diploid or haploid? |
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Are prokaryotic cells diploid or haploid? |
HAPLOID, meaning they have only one copy of their genetic information. [image] |
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What did human's "base knowledge" of how genetics works come out of? Why? |
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Are their alleles in prokaryotic DNA? Why or why not? |
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What two types structures compose the backbone of DNA? |
Repeating deoxyribose sugar groups connected by phosphate groups.
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What is the "job" of a cell? |
To produce proteins that contribute to the overall integrity of the organism. |
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It increases in size. [image] |
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Replication of DNA [image] |
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When does DNA replication occur in relationship to mitosis? |
DNA replication occurs prior to mitosis. [image] |
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Accurate matching of base pairs in the DNA sequence [image] |
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Why do most of the mistakes in DNA replication go unnoticed? |
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What do we call an error in DNA replication which is not caught by the proofreading process? |
A mutation |
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The errors are going forward, there are no more corrections. |
What do we call a permanent and heritable change in DNA? |
A mutation [image] |
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All future generations of that cell. [image] |
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Replication Fork (D) [image]
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What is the replication fork? |
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What do three prime (3') and five prime (5') pertain to? To what process are these terms relevant? |
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When a cell goes to replicate, what happens to the double helix of the DNA? |
It must uncoil. This is the task of the enzyme helicase. [image] |
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What is the purpose of DNA? |
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In what type of pattern is DNA read? |
DNA is always read in sequences of 3, or codons. |
Where does protein synthesis occur? |
Protein synthesis occurs at the ribosome [image] |
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What happens if a ribosome can not read the presenting codon? |
The mRNA does not advance and protein synthesis ceases. |
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A base pair mutation or a point substition mutation [image] |
What do we call an error in which one nucleotide base is out of sequence? |
A base-pair or a point-substitution mutation. [image] |
How large is the average small protein? |
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What are the three possible outcomes for a point substitution error? |
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What do we call a mutation that codes for no amino acid? |
A nonsense mutation Think: NO AMINO ACID = NONSENSE [image] |
What do we call a mutation that calls for an incorrect amino acid? |
Missense mutation [image] |
What do we call a mutation that results in the correct amino acid being called for? |
A silent mutation |
What type of amino acid is called for in a nonsense code? |
none. [image] |
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a STOP CODE
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What type of protein results from a stop code? |
NONE. |
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What type of code calls for an amino acid, but not the correct amino acid? |
A missense code. |
What type of protein results from a missence code? |
an incorrect amino acid. |
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This is the primary structure of a protein [image] |
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[image] |
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What type of bonds create the secondary structure of proteins? |
Hydrogen Bonds [image] |
What structural level of protein are tendons, collagen and ligaments? |
Proteins, collagen and ligaments are proteins with a secondary structure. [image] |
What are two types of functional proteins? |
Hormones and enzymes |
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What dictates the final shape of any given enzyme? |
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What do we call a mutation that has no discernable effect? |
A silent mutation. |
What occurs in a silent mutation? |
The code is wrong but the protein is correct. This is due to the redundancy or degeneracy of DNA |
How is a silent mutation possible? |
Some codons (sequences of 3 nucleotide bases) code for the same amino acid. |
How many combination of nucleotide bases are there? |
64 |
How many amino acids are there? |
There are 20 amino acids |
How many of the 64 possible combinations (codons) of base pairs are stop codes? |
3 of the 64 are stop codes. |
How many combinations ultimatly code for the 20 amino acids? |
61 (There are 64 possible combinations but three are stop codes) |
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Redundancy or Degeneracy |
How many codes code for each amino acid? |
There is no universal number. Some have only one code, some have four. |
What do we call the principle whereby more than one sequence specifies a particular amino acid? Give both names. |
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How many types of mutations are there? What are they called? |
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What do we call the type of error that occurs in only one base pair? [image] |
A base substitution or point mutation [image] |
What type of genetic mutation is analogous to a typo? |
A point mutation or base substitution mutation. [image] |
What do we call a point mutation or base substitution mutation which inadvertantly creates a stop code? |
Nonsense code. No protein created. [image] |
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A missence mutation (This is the last example in the image below.) [image] |
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a silent mutation (the first point mutation below)
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What aspect of the genetic code makes silent mutations possible? |
The degeneracy or redundency of the genetic code [image]1 |
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What do we call the time between the occurance of a mutation and when the mutation has reproduced enough to make its mutation visually apparent? |
phenotypic lag |
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Phenotypic lag.
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Phenotypic lag |
Define phenotypic lag. |
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At least _____ percent of the organisms on a given plate have mutated. |
At least _4%_ percent of the organisms on a given plate have mutated? |
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Why can we not observe a mutation when it first arises in a colony of bacteria? |
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What must occur for a mutation to be propogated forward? |
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Are all mutations propogated forward, why or why not? |
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Is mutation in bacteria a rare occurence? |
No! Bacteria are readily able to "reinvent" some of their properties |
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A frame shift mutation |
A series of how many nucleotide bases specify one amino acid? |
A series of 3 nucleotide bases specify one amino acid. [image] |
The genetic code is always read in sequences of ________. |
The genetic code is always read in sequences of three. |
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A frame shift muation [image] |
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A frameshift mutation results from an addition or deletion of a nucleotide base. |
In a frameshift mutation, what type of protein results? |
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What are inborn metabolic error? |
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PKU and Tay-Sachs disease are both examples of what? |
Inborn metabolic errors or inborn metabolic disorders. NOTE: both diseases result from the inherited inability to produce a given enzyme necessary for the normal metabolic processes of the body.
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Tay-Sachs disease |
What historically prevelant social taboos have perpetuated diseases like Tay-Sachs? |
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What type of mutation often produces lethals? |
Frame shift mutation |
For a bacterial mutation to be carried forward, what must it do? |
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In what two ways do mutations originate? |
Spontaneous mutation and Induced mutation |
What do we call mutations that occur at random? |
Spontaneous mutations |
Are spontaneous mutations relatively frequent, or infrequent? |
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Are spontaneous mutations predictable or unpredictable in their outcome? |
Spontaneous mutations are unpredictable in their outcome. |
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Is antibiotic resistance promoted by spontaneous mutation? |
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What type of mutation is the result of chance? |
Spontaneous mutations |
What type of cause of mutation associated with exposure to radiation? |
Induced mutations are sometimes caused by exposure to radiation |
What effect does radiation have on the chromosomes? |
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Which type of mutagen is more predictable in its results, radiation or chemical? |
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How do we determine if a given chemical is mutagenic? |
By performing the Ames Test
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What type of bacteria is employed in the Ames test? |
Salmonella, specifically Salmonella typhimurium
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What is an essential amino acid? |
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What is a non-essential amino acid? |
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What amino acid is associated with the Ames test? |
histidine |
What nonessential amino acid is employed in the Ames test? Who is this amino acid nonessential to? |
Histidine is employed in the Ames test. Histidine is a nonessential amino acid to wild type salmonella |
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According to the lecture on the Ames test, what is in each of the two plates onto which the broth mixture of wild-type salmonella and chemical x is innoculated? |
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In the lecture on the Ames test, what did growth on both plates indicate? |
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What test did Prof. McCleary indicate as a "velvet blot test"? |
The Ames test.
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auxotrophs or an auxotrophic form of salmonella or histidine auxotrophs.
or [image] |
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What is an auxotroph? |
an organism that has a nutritional requirement not found in the parent strain. |
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Conditionally essential |
What does the term "conditionally essential" refer to? |
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What types of compounds must pass an Ames test? |
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What is the Ames test used to detect? |
Chemicals that are mutagenic |
What is used to detect chemicals that are mutagenic? |
The Ames test |
What is the relationship between mutagenic substances and cancer? |
Many mutagenic substances are also carcinogenic, or cancer causing |
Are all mutagenic substances carcinogenic? |
Nope |
What type of mutation very often produces a lethal? |
A frameshift mutation |
Are mutations the biggest contributor to alterations in organisms? |
No. Mutations are not the biggest contributors to alterations in organisms. |
Is mutation propogated primarily by vertical or horizontal transmission? |
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Conjugation, Transformation, Transduction and Specialized Transduction |
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Conjugation |
What 2 attributes must the donor organism have to allow conjugation to occur? |
[image] |
Can information for antibiotic resistance be carried on a plasmid? |
It definitly can. |
What is the function of a pilus? |
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What do we call the process in bacteria in which genes are taken up from a dead bacterium and incorporated into a live bacteria as "naked" DNA in solution? |
Transformation
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What do we call the uptake of "naked" DNA by an organism? |
Transformation |
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YES! Transformation contributes to the rise of antibiotic resistance.
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Why are hospitals the "best places" to encounter super bugs? |
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What is transduction? |
The transfer of genetic information using a virus. [image] |
What do we call the transfer of genetic information using a bacterial virus? |
Transduction [image] |
What do we call the type of virus that infects bacteria? |
Bacteriophages or phages [image] |
What are bacteriophages or phages? What process[es] of genetic transfer are they invovled in? |
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What two things must be present for transduction or specialized transduction to occur? |
A bacteriophage and a [competent] bacteria [image] |
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Specialized transduction [image] |
In what process is a random section of a donor bacterium's chromosome transferred to a new bacterium via bacteriophage? |
Generalized transduction |
For what process(es) must a bacteria be made competent? |
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Which situation is more likely to result in a new viral infection, generalized transduction or specialized transduction? |
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