Ch.8 Interactive Glossary Flashcards

1
Q

A agent that causes tumors in humans.

A

Carcinogen

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2
Q

A bacterial protein toxic to other bacteria.

A

Bacteriocin

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3
Q

A change in the characteristic of an organism arising from a permanent alteration of a DNA sequence in a gene.

A

Mutation

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4
Q

A diagnostic procedure used to detect potential cancer agents by their ability to cause back mutations in Salmonella cells.

A

Ames test

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5
Q

A molecule of RNA that unites with amino acids and transports them to the ribosome during protein synthesis.

A

Transfer RNA (tRNA)

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6
Q

A mutant cell that has regained a physiological or biochemical property.

A

Revertant

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7
Q

A mutant selection technique where one identifies colonies missing on a minimal medium plate.

A

Negative selection

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8
Q

A mutation arising from a mutagenic agent used under controlled laboratory conditions.

A

Induced mutation

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9
Q

A mutation that arises from chance events in the environment.

A

Spontaneous mutation

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10
Q

A nucleotide segment removed after transcription of a eukaryotic messenger RNA.

A

Intron

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11
Q

A segment of DNA that forms a copy of itself, after which the copy moves into areas of gene activity to interrupt the genetic coding sequence.

A

Insertion sequence

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12
Q

A segment of DNA that moves from one site on a DNA molecule to another site, carrying information for protein synthesis; also known as a jumping gene.

A

Transposon

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13
Q

A segments of DNA resulting from discontinuous DNA replication.

A

Okazaki fragment

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14
Q

A selection technique where one is looking for colonies growing on a minimal medium plate.

A

Positive selection

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15
Q

A small, circular DNA molecule that occurs frequently in bacteria and carries genes for drug resistance; also called R factor.

A

R plasmid

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16
Q

A small, closed-loop molecule of DNA apart from the chromosome; plasmids carry genes for drug resistance and pilus formation, and are used in genetic engineering techniques.

A

Plasmid

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17
Q

A three-base sequence on the mRNA molecule that specifies a particular amino acid in the protein molecule.

A

Codon

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18
Q

A three-base sequence on the tRNA molecule that binds to the codon on the mRNA molecule during translation.

A

Anticodon

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19
Q

A type of DNA replication in which a strand of DNA “rolls off” the loop and serves as a template for the synthesis of a complementary strand of DNA.

A

Rolling circle mechanism

20
Q

An alteration in the genetic information in a microorganism arising from the acquisition of DNA; in bacterial cells, recombination occurs by transformation, conjugation, or transduction.

A

Recombination

21
Q

An enzyme that catalyzes DNA replication by combining complementary nucleotides to an existing template strand.

A

DNA polymerase

22
Q

An enzyme that catalyzes RNA synthesis by combining complementary nucleotides to one strand of a gene.

A

RNA polymerase

23
Q

An enzyme that joins together separate Okazaki fragments during DNA replication.

A

DNA ligase

24
Q

An organism that contains all its nutritional needs in the medium.

A

Auxotroph

25
Q

An organism that lacks a nutritional need.

A

Prototroph

26
Q

An RNA transcript containing the information for synthesizing a specific polypeptide.

A

Messenger RNA (mRNA)

27
Q

An RNA transcript that forms part of the ribosome’s structure.

A

Ribosomal RNA (rRNA)

28
Q

One of the genes transcribed in an operon.

A

Structural gene

29
Q

That portion of an operon where a repressor protein binds.

A

Operator

30
Q

That portion of an operon where the RNA polymerase binds.

A

Promoter

31
Q

The biochemical process in which RNA is synthesized according to a code supplied by the bases of a gene in the DNA molecule.

A

Transcription

32
Q

The biochemical process in which the code on the mRNA molecule is translated into a sequence of amino acids in the protein molecule.

A

Translation

33
Q

The complete set of genes in a virus or an organism.

A

Genome

34
Q

The continuous strand synthesized during DNA replication.

A

Leading strand

35
Q

The discontinuous strand synthesized during DNA replication.

A

Lagging strand

36
Q

The doctrine stating that DNA is transcribed into RNA, which is then translated into protein.

A

Central dogma

37
Q

The first codon (AUG) translated in a mRNA.

A

Start codon

38
Q

The form of gene control where a repressor protein binds to an operator unless inhibited; the lactose (lac) operon is an example.

A

Negative control

39
Q

The gene outside an operon that codes for a repressor protein.

A

Regulatory gene

40
Q

The genetic material of all cells and some viruses.

A

Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)

41
Q

The last codon (UGA, UAA, or UAG) in an mRNA read but not translated by a ribosome.

A

Stop codon

42
Q

The mature eukaryotic mRNA produced after introns have been removed.

A

Exon

43
Q

The protein that binds to the operator in an operon.

A

Repressor protein

44
Q

The twisting and tight packing of the DNA into a chromosome.

A

Supercoiling

45
Q

The type of replication carried out by all organisms where each double helix is composed of one old and one new polynucleotide strand.

A

Semiconservative replication

46
Q

The unit of bacterial DNA that controls and expresses a particular set of structural genes.

A

Operon