HARTWELL MHE EBK AC GENTC GENES GENOMES
6th Edition
ISBN: 9781260944488
Author: HARTWELL
Publisher: MCG
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Textbook Question
Chapter 1, Problem 8P
a. | Are the triplets in the genetic code table shown in Fig. 1.5b written as DNA or RNA? |
b. | Two amino acids are each specified only by a single triplet. Identify these two amino |
acids and the corresponding triplets. | |
c. | If you know the sequence of amino acids in a protein, what does the genetic code |
table allow you to infer about the sequence of base pairs in the gene that specifies | |
that protein? |
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Shown below is a portion of a DNA sequence ( 31 base pairs long ) that encodes the last amino acids of a protein : The first three underlined base pairs indicate the frame and include the coding region . 123456789
A. Write the peptide sequence of the last 6 amino acids of the protein . Label both ends of the peptide . B. A insertion of one base pair causes the protein to decrease in length by 5 amino acids . With respect to the sequence given above , where does this insertion occur , and what base pair will you insert ?
C. An change of one base pair leads to the protein to increase in length by one amino acid. With respect to the sequence given above , which base pair would you change ? How would you change this base pair for the protein to increase in length by one amino acid ?
5'......TACTGCCCATGCCCAGAGAGAAAGCGCAGACGCGTCTAAactgt... 3'
a). (10 points). In the above sequences, the open reading frame is indicated by alternating
non-underlined and underlined triplets. Please use the codon table to deduce the amino
acid sequence for the region shown in the wildtype protein.
Wildtype AA sequence for the region around mutation #1:
Wildtype AA sequence for the region around mutation #2:
b). (10 points). Please make predictions what molecular change mutation #1 and mutation
#2 cause.
c). (5 points). Which mutation is more likely to abrogate the protein function? Why?
In the table below, there are four versions of gene A, one of which is normal, and the
other three which contain mutations that make the gene product nonfunctional.
Focus on the shaded region of the sequence. Use the genetic code table to answer
the question.
How would you describe Mutation #2?
Partial DNA sequence for gene A ("..." indicates many nucleotides of sequence not
shown)
5' ... ATG GTG AGC AAG GAG GAG CTG TTC ACC TGT AAA TAG ...
Normal
Mutation #1
5' ... ATG GTG AGC AAG GAG AAG CTG TTC ACC TGT AAA TAG ...
Mutation #2
5' ... ATG GTG AGC AAG TAG GAG CTG TTC ACC TGT AAA TAG ...
Mutation #3
5' ... ATG GTG AGC AAG GAG CTG TTC ACC TGT AAA TAG ...
Silent mutation
Nonsense mutation
Frameshift mutations
Missense mútation
Chapter 1 Solutions
HARTWELL MHE EBK AC GENTC GENES GENOMES
Ch. 1 - Choose the phrase from the right column that best...Ch. 1 - If one strand of a DNA molecule has the base...Ch. 1 - The size of one copy of the human genome is...Ch. 1 - Indicate whether each of the following words or...Ch. 1 - a. How many different DNA strands composed of 100...Ch. 1 - RNA shares with proteins the ability to fold into...Ch. 1 - The human protein lactate dehydrogenase shown in...Ch. 1 - a. Are the triplets in the genetic code table...Ch. 1 - Why do scientists think that all forms of life on...Ch. 1 - Why would a geneticist study a yeast cell or a...
Ch. 1 - How can a scientist tell if a protein present in...Ch. 1 - Figure 1.6 shows the amino acid sequences of parts...Ch. 1 - Why do scientists think that new genes arise by...Ch. 1 - Explain how the exon/intron structure of genes...Ch. 1 - Mutations in genes that change their pattern of...Ch. 1 - A single zebrafish gene function was inactivated...Ch. 1 - Different mutations in the WDR62 gene that...Ch. 1 - Researchers have successfully used gene therapy to...Ch. 1 - By the time this book is published, it will likely...
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- Shown below is an R loop prepared for electron microscopy by annealing a purified eukaryotic messenger RNA with DNA from a genomic clone containing the full-length gene corresponding to the mRNA.arrow_forwardWe are given a random DNA sequence (each of the 4 bases has equal probability of occurring at each position in the sequence). A. What is the probability that three adjacent bases (a triplet) encode a stop codon? B. What is the probability that a given triplet is not a stop codon? C. What is the probability that neither of two adjacent triplets is a stop codon? D. What is the probability that none of 100 adjacent triplets are stop codons? E. Consider a single base insertion mutation between the 3rd and 4th codons in a natural gene that encodes a protein 100 amino acids long. Is it more likely that the protein produced by this mutant allele will be shorter or longer than 100 amino acids long?arrow_forwardGiven the following Wild Type and Mutated DNA sequences: 1.) Identify where the base pair change occurs ( what letter changed?) 2.) For BOTH sequences, write the mRNA strands, define the codon regions and amino acid sequences. 3.) Describe what kind of mutation has occurred (missense, nonsense, or silent), and what effect this may have on the protein. Wild Type DNA Sequence: 3' - AGGCTCGCCTGT - 5' Mutated DNA Sequence: 3' - AGTCTCGCCTGT - 5'arrow_forward
- Given the following Wild Type and Mutated DNA sequences: 1.) Identify where the base pair change occurs (what letters changed?) 2.) For BOTH sequences, write the mRNA strands, define the codon regions (with spaces), and amino acid sequences. 3.) Describe what kind of mutation has occurred (missense, nonsense, or silent), and what effect this may have on the protein. Wild Type DNA Sequence: 3' - CCTCGTTATGTG - 5' Mutated DNA Sequence: 3' - CCTCGTTATTTG - 5'arrow_forward5'....TACTGCCCATGCCCAGAGAGAAAGCGCAGACGCGTCTAA actgt... 3' a). (10 points). In the above sequences, the open reading frame is indicated by alternating non-underlined and underlined triplets. Please use the codon table to deduce the amino acid sequence for the region shown in the wildtype protein. Wildtype AA sequence for the region around mutation #1: Wildtype AA sequence for the region around mutation #2: b). (10 points). Please make predictions what molecular change mutation #1 and mutation #2 cause. c). (5 points). Which mutation is more likely to abrogate the protein function? Why?arrow_forwardAlthough techniques are available for determining the sequences of amino acids in proteins, it is becoming more and more common to sequence proteins indirectly by determining the base sequence of the gene for the protein and then inferring the amino acid sequence from the genetic-code relationships. Suggest why the latter technique is being used for proteins.arrow_forward
- E. How many nucleotides would be required to generate a polypeptide that is 15 amino acids long? This requires knowing how many nucleotides of DNA code for one amino acid. F. Assuming that there are between 20,000-25,000 genes in the human genome, do you think there are 1) fewer, 2) approximately the same number, or 3) more proteins in the human genome? Explain your answer.arrow_forward11) Examine the following two DNA sequences. Sequence 1: ATGCGATGCTAGCAT Sequence 2: ATGCGATGATAGCAT If both of these sequences code for proteins, how might the function of protein 2 differ from the function of protein 1? Use the table below for assistance. U C A G บบน UUC UUA UUG CUU CUC CUA CUG U Phe GUUT GUC GUA GUG Leu Leu AUU AUC lle AUA AUG Met or Start Val Ceweg 232 www... UCU UCC UCA UCG CCU CCC CCA CCG ACU ACC ACA ACG C GCU GCC GCA GCG Ser Pro Thr Ala CAU CAC CAA CAG A AAU AAC AAA AAG UAU U UAC C UAA Stop UGA Stop A UAG Stop UGG Trp G Tyr GAA GAG His Gin Asn Lys GAU GAC Asp G c] Glu UGU UGC CGU CGC CGA CGG AGU AGC AGA AGG GGU GGC GGA GGG Cys Arg Ser Arg Gly U C A G U C A G U C A G by Calin me press A) Protein 1 and protein 2 will function exactly the same. B) Protein 1 will be shorter than protein 2, so they will not function the same. C) Protein 2 will be shorter than protein 1, so they will not function the same. D) Protein 2 has a different sequence, so it will function…arrow_forwardThe human genome contains thousands of sequences known as small open reading frames, some of which encode proteins of about 30 amino acids. What is the minimum number of nucleotides required to encode such a protein?arrow_forward
- Given a polynucleotide sequence such as GAATTC,explain what further information you would need inorder to identify which is the 5′ end. (See Figure 16.5.)arrow_forwardIf the genetic code used 4 bases at a time, how many amino acids could be encoded?arrow_forwardBelow is a sequence of 540 bases from a genome. What information would you use to find the beginnings and ends of open reading frames? How many open reading frames can you find in this sequence? Which open reading frame is likely to represent a protein- coding sequence, and why? Which are probably not functioning protein-coding sequences, and why? Note: for simplicitys sake, analyze only this one strand of the DNA double helix, reading from left to right, so you will only be analyzing three of the six reading frames shown in Figure 19.4.arrow_forward
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