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Chapter 14 & 15

front 1

What name is given to the process in which a strand of DNA is used as a template for the manufacture of a strand of pre-mRNA?

back 1

transcription

front 2

What name is given to the process in which the information encoded in a strand of mRNA is used to construct a protein?

back 2

translation

front 3

What name is given to the process in which pre-mRNA is edited into mRNA?

back 3

RNA processing

front 4

Polypeptides are assembled from _____.

back 4

amino acids

front 5

RNA processing converts the RNA transcript into _____.

back 5

mRNA

front 6

True or false? A codon is a group of three bases that can specify more than one amino acid.

back 6

False

front 7

Which of the following statements about mutations is false?

back 7

A knock-out mutation results in a total absence of the mutated protein.

front 8

If a DNA sequence is altered from TAGCTGA to TAGTGA, what kind of mutation has occurred?

back 8

Deletion

front 9

Which mutation(s) would not change the remainder of the reading frame of a gene sequence that follows the mutation(s)?

back 9

One addition and one deletion mutation.

front 10

If the sequence ATGCATGTCAATTGA were mutated such that a base were inserted after the first G and the third T were deleted, how many amino acids would be changed in the mutant protein?

back 10

Two

front 11

If a mutated DNA sequence produces a protein that differs in one central amino acid from the normal protein, which of the following kinds of mutations could have occurred?

back 11

An addition mutation and a deletion mutation.

front 12

In the diagram below, the gray unit represents _____.

back 12

RNA polymerase

front 13

In the diagram below, the green unit represents _____.

back 13

the promoter

front 14

In the diagram below, the two blue strands represent _____.

back 14

DNA

front 15

Which of these correctly illustrates the pairing of DNA and RNA nucleotides?

back 15

GTTACG

CAAUGC

front 16

The direction of synthesis of an RNA transcript is _____.

back 16

5' —> 3'

front 17

What is the process called that converts the genetic information stored in DNA to an RNA copy?

back 17

Transcription

front 18

DNA does not store the information to synthesize which of the following?

back 18

Organelles

front 19

Transcription begins at a promoter. What is a promoter?

back 19

A site in DNA that recruits the RNA Polymerase

front 20

Which of the following statements best describes the promoter of a protein-coding gene?

back 20

The promoter is a nontranscribed region of a gene.

front 21

What determines which base is to be added to an RNA strand during transcription?

back 21

Base pairing between the DNA template strand and the RNA nucleotides

front 22

Which of the following terms best describes the relationship between the newly synthesized RNA molecule and the DNA template strand?

back 22

Complementary

front 23

What happens to RNA polymerase II after it has completed transcription of a gene?

back 23

It is free to bind to another promoter and begin transcription.

front 24

Which of the following terms associated with transcription describe regions of nucleic acid?

back 24

  • terminator
  • gene
  • promoter

front 25

During transcription in eukaryotes, a type of RNA polymerase called RNA polymerase II moves along the template strand of the DNA in the 3'→5' direction. However, for any given gene, either strand of the double-stranded DNA may function as the template strand.

For any given gene, what ultimately determines which DNA strand serves as the template strand?

back 25

the base sequence of the gene's promoter

front 26

After transcription begins, several steps must be completed before the fully processed mRNA is ready to be used as a template for protein synthesis on the ribosomes.

Which three statements correctly describe the processing that takes place before a mature mRNA exits the nucleus?

back 26

  • A cap consisting of a modified guanine nucleotide is added to the 5' end of the pre-mRNA.
  • A poly-A tail (50-250 adenine nucleotides) is added to the 3' end of the pre-mRNA.
  • Noncoding sequences called introns are spliced out by molecular complexes called spliceosomes.

front 27

During RNA processing a(n) _____ is added to the 5' end of the RNA.

back 27

modified guanine nucleotide

front 28

During RNA processing a(n) _____ is added to the 3' end of the RNA.

back 28

a long string of adenine nucleotides

front 29

Spliceosomes are composed of _____.

back 29

snRNPs and other proteins

front 30

The RNA segments joined to one another by spliceosomes are _____.

back 30

exons

front 31

Translation occurs in the _____.

back 31

cytoplasm

front 32

Where does translation take place?

back 32

Ribosome

front 33

Which nucleic acid is translated to make a protein?

back 33

mRNA

front 34

Which of the following processes is an example of a post-translational modification?

back 34

Phosphorylation

front 35

Which of the following steps occurs last in the initiation phase of translation?

back 35

The large ribosomal subunit joins the complex.

front 36

At which site do new aminoacyl tRNAs enter the ribosome during elongation?

back 36

A-site

front 37

What is meant by translocation?

back 37

The ribosome slides one codon down the mRNA.

front 38

True or false. A tRNA with an anticodon complementary to the stop codon catalyzes the reaction by which translation is terminated.

back 38

False

front 39

Which of these is a tRNA?

back 39

B

front 40

What enzyme catalyzes the attachment of an amino acid to tRNA?

back 40

aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase

front 41

The tRNA anticodon, GAC, is complementary to the mRNA codon with the sequence _____.

back 41

CUG

front 42

What is the name of the process shown in the diagram?

back 42

initiation (of translation)

front 43

The initiator tRNA attaches at the ribosome's _____ site.

back 43

P

front 44

The RNA that has an amino acid attached to it, and that binds to the codon on the mRNA, is called a ____

back 44

tRNA

front 45

Amino acids are attached to tRNA by enzymes called ________

back 45

aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase

front 46

The process, performed by the ribosome, of reading mRNA and synthesizing a protein is called _____

back 46

translation.

front 47

_____ of translation always happens at the start codon of the mRNA.

back 47

Initiation

front 48

______ of translation happens when the ribosome hits a stop codon on the mRNA.

back 48

Termination

front 49

Generally speaking, which of the following mutations would most severely affect the protein coded for by a gene?

back 49

a frameshift deletion at the beginning of the gene

front 50

Which of the following statements best defines the term operon?

back 50

An operon is a region of DNA that codes for a series of functionally related genes under the control of the same promoter.

front 51

What molecule binds to promoters in bacteria and transcribes the coding regions of the genes?

back 51

RNA polymerase

front 52

What is allosteric regulation?

back 52

In allosteric regulation, a small molecule binds to a large protein and causes it to change its shape and activity.

front 53

Under which conditions are the lac structural genes expressed most efficiently?

back 53

No glucose, high lactose

front 54

What happens to the expression of the lacI gene if lactose is not available in the cell?

back 54

There is no change—the lacI gene is constitutively expressed.

front 55

What is the function of the lacZ gene?

back 55

This gene encodes an enzyme, b-galactosidase, which cleaves lactose into glucose and galactose.

front 56

Which of the following enzymes converts ATP to cAMP?

back 56

Adenylyl cyclase

front 57

True or false? The mechanism by which glucose inhibits expression of the lac structural genes is known as catabolite stimulation, whereas the mechanism by which lactose stimulates expression of the lac structural genes is known as allosteric regulation.

back 57

False

front 58

The operon model of the regulation of gene expression in bacteria was proposed by _____.

back 58

Jacob and Monod

front 59

Which of these is NOT a component of the lac operon?

back 59

regulatory gene only

front 60

Regulatory proteins bind to _____.

back 60

the operator

front 61

In the presence of a regulatory protein the lac operon is _____.

back 61

not transcribed

front 62

Which of these is a regulatory gene?

back 62

D

front 63

A(n) ____ is a stretch of DNA consisting of an operator, a promoter, and genes for a related set of proteins, usually making up an entire metabolic pathway.

back 63

operon

front 64

The ________ is/are arranged sequentially after the promoter.

back 64

genes of an operon

front 65

A(n) ______ is a specific nucleotide sequence in DNA that binds RNA polymerase, positioning it to start transcribing RNA at the appropriate place.

back 65

promoter

front 66

A(n) _____ codes for a protein, such as a repressor, that controls the transcription of another gene or group of genes.

back 66

regulatory gene

front 67

Regulatory proteins bind to the _____ to control expression of the operon.

back 67

operator

front 68

A(n) _____ is a protein that inhibits gene transcription. In prokaryotes, this protein binds to the DNA in or near the promoter.

back 68

repressor

front 69

A(n) _______ is a specific small molecule that binds to a bacterial regulatory protein and changes its shape so that it cannot bind to an operator, thus switching an operon on.

back 69

inducer

front 70

_____ bind(s) to DNA enhancer regions.

back 70

Activators

front 71

Which of these indicates an enhancer region?

back 71

A

front 72

Which of these directly bind(s) to the promoter?

back 72

C & D

front 73

Enzyme complexes that break down protein are called _____.

back 73

proteasomes

front 74

The nuclear membrane's role in the regulation of gene expression involves _____.

back 74

regulating the transport of mRNA to the cytoplasm

front 75

What is the function of a spliceosome?

back 75

RNA processing

front 76

Protein-phosphorylating enzymes' role in the regulation of gene expression involves _____.

back 76

protein activation

front 77

Which of the following terms describes the DNA–protein complexes that look like beads on a string?

back 77

Nucleosome

front 78

Which of the following regulatory elements is not composed of DNA sequences?

back 78

Activators

front 79

True or false? Regulatory and basal transcription factors regulate transcription by binding to the promoter.

back 79

False

front 80

Which of the following regulatory DNA sequences might be located thousands of nucleotides away from the transcription start site of a gene?

back 80

Enhancer

front 81

Which of the following events in transcription initiation likely occurs last?

back 81

RNA polymerase binds to the promoter of the gene.

front 82

True or false? One possible way to alter chromatin structure such that genes could be transcribed would be to make histone proteins more positively charged.

back 82

False