Exam 13: Dna Replication and Repair
Exam 1: Introduction to the Study of Cell and Molecular Biology100 Questions
Exam 2: The Chemical Basis of Life87 Questions
Exam 3: Bioenergetics, Enzymes and Metabolism80 Questions
Exam 4: The Structure and Function of the Plasma Membrane99 Questions
Exam 5: Aerobic Respiration and the Mitochondrion99 Questions
Exam 6: Photosynthesis and the Chloroplast100 Questions
Exam 7: Interactions Between Cells and Their Environment103 Questions
Exam 8: Cytoplasmic Membrane Systems: Structure, Function, and Membrane Trafficking159 Questions
Exam 9: The Cytoskeleton and Cell Motility107 Questions
Exam 10: The Nature of the Gene and the Genome97 Questions
Exam 11: Gene Expression: From Transcription to Translation101 Questions
Exam 12: Control of Gene Expression100 Questions
Exam 13: Dna Replication and Repair98 Questions
Exam 14: Cellular Reproduction103 Questions
Exam 15: Cell Signaling and Signal Transduction: Communication Between Cells109 Questions
Exam 16: Cancer98 Questions
Exam 17: The Immune Response109 Questions
Exam 18: Techniques in Cell and Molecular Biology112 Questions
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Why does it appear that each origin can only be activated once per cell cycle?
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All DNA polymerases lay down nucleotides in a ______ direction and move along the template in a _______ direction.
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During replication of the lagging strand, DNA is constructed in small segments called ________ that are rapidly linked to longer pieces of DNA synthesized earlier.
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Which eukaryotic DNA polymerases require a sliding clamp to tether the DNA to the polymerase? (Select all correct choices)
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What is the function of the 5'->3' exonuclease activity of DNA polymerase I?
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The clamp loader that loads PCNA onto DNA is called _______ and is analogous to the E. coli DNA polymerase III clamp loader complex.
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Which eukaryotic DNA polymerase is thought to be the primary DNA-synthesizing enzyme during replication of the leading strand?
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The collection of proteins that forms the eukaryotic replicative complex is known as the __________.
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Which of the following DNA molecules could serve as an effective template for DNA synthesis in the early studies of DNA polymerase activity?
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Which are advantages of using recombinant DNA technology when compared with the gamma garden method of detecting favorably mutated crop varieties? (Select all correct choices)
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Which eukaryotic DNA polymerase functions in DNA repair, but does not appear to be involved in nuclear DNA replication?
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What theory of replication results in the integrity of both parental strands being disrupted, the new duplex strands made of both old and new DNA and neither the parental strands nor the parental duplex preserved?.
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What proteins bind selectively to single-stranded DNA and are responsible for keeping it extended and preventing it from being rewound?
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Which method of repair can be slower, less efficient, and responsible for correcting DNA strands in the parts of the genome that are not being currently transcribed?
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Who was the first to purify an enzyme that could incorporate DNA precursors into a polymer?
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What is the most common method for repairing damage to DNA?
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Bacteria are grown in a medium containing [15N]H4Cl for a number of generations so that all of the DNA is made of fully 'heavy' DNA. The bacteria are moved to a new medium and grown in [14N]H4Cl so that all subsequent new DNA will be "light". If replication were conservative, what would the DNA look like after two generation times have passed?
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In the transcription-coupled repair pathway of nucleotide excision repair, how is the presence of a lesion thought to be detected?
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Bacteria are grown in a medium containing [15N]H4Cl for a number of generations so that all of the DNA is made of fully 'heavy' DNA. The bacteria are moved to a new medium and grown in [14N]H4Cl so that all subsequent new DNA will be 'light.' After one generation time, what does the DNA look like?
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