BIOLOGY 12E CONNECT ACCESS CARD
12th Edition
ISBN: 9781264938513
Author: Raven
Publisher: MCG
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Chapter 15, Problem 1IQ
Summary Introduction
To describe: How does the absence of proofreading ability for RNA polymerase affect the rate of error in the transcription process in comparison with
Introduction: To convert genotype to
Summary Introduction
To describe: Why it is believed that proofreading capacity for DNA polymerase is more essential than for RNA polymerase.
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Chapter 15 Solutions
BIOLOGY 12E CONNECT ACCESS CARD
Ch. 15.1 - Prob. 1LOCh. 15.1 - Prob. 2LOCh. 15.1 - List the roles played by RNA in gene expression.Ch. 15.2 - Prob. 1LOCh. 15.2 - Describe the characteristics of the genetic code.Ch. 15.2 - Prob. 3LOCh. 15.3 - Prob. 1LOCh. 15.3 - Differentiate among initiation, elongation, and...Ch. 15.3 - Prob. 3LOCh. 15.4 - Prob. 1LO
Ch. 15.4 - Prob. 2LOCh. 15.4 - Explain the differences between bacterial and...Ch. 15.5 - Prob. 1LOCh. 15.5 - Prob. 2LOCh. 15.5 - Prob. 3LOCh. 15.6 - Explain why the tRNA charging reaction is critical...Ch. 15.6 - Prob. 2LOCh. 15.7 - Prob. 1LOCh. 15.7 - Prob. 2LOCh. 15.7 - Compare translation on the RER and in the...Ch. 15.9 - Prob. 1LOCh. 15.9 - Explain the nature of triplet repeat expansion.Ch. 15.9 - Prob. 3LOCh. 15 - Prob. 1DACh. 15 - Prob. 2DACh. 15 - Prob. 1IQCh. 15 - Prob. 2IQCh. 15 - Prob. 3IQCh. 15 - The experiments with nutritional mutants in...Ch. 15 - What is the central dogma of molecular biology? a....Ch. 15 - In the genetic code, one codon a. consists of...Ch. 15 - Eukaryotic transcription differs from prokaryotic...Ch. 15 - An anticodon would be found on which of the...Ch. 15 - RNA polymerase binds to a ________ to initiate...Ch. 15 - During translation, the codon in mRNA is actually...Ch. 15 - You have mutants that all affect the same...Ch. 15 - The splicing process a. occurs in prokaryotes. b....Ch. 15 - The enzyme that forms peptide bonds is called...Ch. 15 - In comparing gene expression in prokaryotes and...Ch. 15 - The codon CCA could be mutated to produce a. a...Ch. 15 - An inversion will a. necessarily cause a mutant...Ch. 15 - What is the relationship between mutations and...Ch. 15 - Prob. 1SCh. 15 - Frameshift mutations often result in truncated...Ch. 15 - Describe how each of the following mutations will...Ch. 15 - There are a number of features that are unique 10...
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- Draw a DNA helix opened up to copy a single gene (CAREFUL this is NOT a replication bubble). You can make lines straight and parallel if you would like On the bottom strand starting in middle and going to left,draw an arrow to show the beginning of transcription Add 10 DNA bases of your choice (A,T, C or G) along the bottom line to left of arrow. Add the complementary bases along the top line. Beginning at the arrow, transcribe the DNA into RNA. Write the appropriate letters. Label 5’ and 3’ ends of all nucleic acids. Label the template strand and the coding (or sense) strands of DNA. Label the promoter. (Upload steps 1-8 but on your own please practice all 4 possible flips of this. Arrow on bottom facing left or right. Arrow on top facing left or right.)arrow_forwardWhat is an advantage and a disadvantage of this repair system?arrow_forwardWhich mechanism contributes to accuracy during DNA replication? Group of answer choices Base-stacking between nucleotides and the template DNA controls insertion of the correct nucleotide. Using primers increases accuracy because the first nucleotides in a new nucleic acid chain are more likely to be correct. The mismatch repair system recognizes an incorrect base-pair and corrects the mistake in both strands. All DNA polymerases have a 5′→ 3′ exonuclease activity which can remove incorrect nucleotides during replication.arrow_forward
- In both leading and lagging strand synthesis, DNA replication always proceeds in a certain direction. What direction is this? Explain how oligonucleotide primers in the Polymerase Chain Reaction work (PCR)arrow_forwardDuring the process of transcription, the polymerase must handle several distinct polynucleotide chains: the double-stranded DNA ahead of the polymerase, the single-stranded template DNA, the nontemplate DNA strand, and the freshly-synthesized mRNA. How does the polymerase keep each of these strands--as well as the incoming ribonucleotides needed for the polymerase reaction--separate?arrow_forwardWhat is/are the attributes that make nucleotide excision repair (NER) and base excision repair (BER) similar and/or different from each other? Select the correct response: The NER pathway is the only one that can remove DNA lesions in the strand regardless of their size which is followed by attaching the correct strand, then sealed by a DNA ligase. They both use the enzyme DNA glycosylases that recognizes the damaged DNA segments and proceed with repairing the faulty base in the strand. They differ NER only repairs purine bases while BER repairs pyrimidine bases. They both remove the damaged parts of the DNA where the BER pathway corrects only the identified damaged bases which are usually non-bulky lesions. The NER pathway, on the other hand, repairs the damage by removal of bulky DNA adducts which is a short-single stranded DNA segment. They both utilize the enzyme photolyase to reverse the damages created by the faulty section of the DNA. They both remove the damaged parts of the…arrow_forward
- Which of the followings statements are true about DNA polymerase? 1.) It can only go in one direction, meaning the lagging strand can't be synthesized continuously. 2.) It cannot start a DNA strand from scratch, so another enzyme is needed to create "primers" as a starting point. 3.) It cannot copy epigenetic marks (such as methyl groups) on its own; these must be "copied" onto the daughter DNA strand by other enzymes after DNA replication. 4.) All of the abovearrow_forwardWhich of the DNA polymerases shown in Table have the ability to proofread?arrow_forwardWhat is the difference between DNA proofreading and DNA repair? In 3-4 sentencearrow_forward
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