Chapter 6. Exploring Evolution and Bioinformatics Flashcards

1
Q

Synthetic oligonucleotides that can specifically bind ligands. They are useful in biotechnology and medicine and to study molecular evolution.

A

aptamers

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2
Q

molecules that have evolved from a common ancestor. Also referred to as homologous molecules.

A

Homolog

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3
Q

A means of determining the evolutionary relatedness of two proteins in which the two amino acid sequences are systematically aligned with respect to each other to identify regions of significant overlap.

A

Sequence alignment

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4
Q

A sequence comparison tool that yields a list of sequence alignments, each accompanied by an estimate giving the likelihood that the alignment occurred by chance.

A

BLAST search

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5
Q

mutations that replace one amino acid with another similar in size and chemical properties.

A

Conservative substitution

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6
Q

the evolutionary process by which proteins with different properties are derived from a common ancestor.

A

Divergent evolution

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7
Q

the process by which different evolutionary pathways arrive at the same solution to a biochemical problem.

A

Convergent evolution

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8
Q

the process of producing large populations of molecules en mass and then selecting for a particular biochemical property.

A

Combinational chemistry

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9
Q

homologous molecules that are present within different species and have similar or identical functions.

A

Ortholog

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10
Q

conserved residues that are structurally and functionally important and are characteristic of particular families of proteins.

A

Sequence template

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11
Q

a tool for determining evolutionary relationships between amino acid sequences. When two sequences are compared, each substitution is assigned a score based on the matrix. A large positive score corresponds to a substitution that occurs frequently, while a negative score correspond to a substitution that occurs only rarely.

A

Substitution matrix

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12
Q

A branching diagram or tree that shows the evolutionary relatedness of different organisms on the basis of some biological characteristic, such as the amino acid sequences of a family of proteins.

A

Evolutionary tree

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13
Q

homologous molecules that are present within one species. Paralogs often differ in their detailed biochemical functions.

A

Paralog

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14
Q

The exchange of DNA between species that provides a selective advantage to the recipient.

A

horizontal gene transfer

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15
Q

In this substitution, an amino acid is replaced by one that is structurally dissimilar.

A

nonconservative substitution

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