Exam 12: Transcription
Exam 1: Introduction to Genetics, Chromosomes and Cellular Reproduction11 Questions
Exam 2: Basic Principles of Heredity7 Questions
Exam 3: Sex Determination and Sex-Linked Characteristics9 Questions
Exam 4: Extensions and Modifications of Basic Principles13 Questions
Exam 5: Pedigree Analysis, Applications, and Genetic Testing9 Questions
Exam 6: Linkage, Recombination, and Eukaryotic Gene Mapping6 Questions
Exam 7: Bacterial and Viral Genetic Systems9 Questions
Exam 8: Chromosome Variation7 Questions
Exam 9: DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene9 Questions
Exam 10: Chromosome Structure and Transposable Elements12 Questions
Exam 11: DNA Replication and Recombination12 Questions
Exam 12: Transcription8 Questions
Exam 13: RNA Molecules and RNA Processing9 Questions
Exam 14: The Genetic Code and Translation9 Questions
Exam 15: Control of Gene Expression in Prokaryotes9 Questions
Exam 16: Control of Gene Expression in Eukaryotes6 Questions
Exam 17: Gene Mutations and DNA Repair9 Questions
Exam 18: Molecular Genetic Analysis and Biotechnology13 Questions
Exam 19: Genomics and Proteomics9 Questions
Exam 20: Organelle DNA6 Questions
Exam 21: Developmental Genetics and Immunogenetics7 Questions
Exam 22: Cancer Genetics7 Questions
Exam 23: Quantitative Genetics8 Questions
Exam 24: Population Genetics10 Questions
Exam 25: Evolutionary Genetics7 Questions
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RNA differs from DNA in that RNA possesses a hydroxyl group on the 2'-carbon atom of its sugar, contains uracil instead of thymine, and is normally single stranded. Several classes of RNA exist within bacterial and eukaryotic cells.
-Which class of RNA is correctly paired with its function?
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
B
The different eukaryotic RNA polymerases use different mechanisms of termination. Transcription at genes transcribed by RNA polymerase II is terminated when an exonuclease enzyme attaches to the cleaved 5' end of the RNA, moves down the RNA, and reaches the polymerase enzyme.
-How are the processes of RNA polymerase II termination and rhodependent termination in bacteria similar and how are they different?
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Correct Answer:
Both processes use a protein that binds to the RNA molecule and moves down the RNA toward the RNA polymerase. They differ in that rho does not degrade the RNA, whereas Rat1 does so
A transcription unit is a piece of DNA that encodes an RNA molecule and the sequences necessary for its proper transcription. Each transcription unit includes a promoter, an RNA-coding region, and a terminator.
-Which of the following phrases does not describe a function of the promoter?
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Correct Answer:
D
Transcription ends after RNA polymerase transcribes a terminator. Bacterial cells possess two types of terminator: a rho-independent terminator, which RNA polymerase can recognize by itself; and a rho-dependent terminator, which RNA polymerase can recognize only with the help of the rho protein.
-What characteristics are most commonly found in rho-independent terminators?
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Transcription is initiated when the basal transcription apparatus, consisting of RNA polymerase and transcription factors, assembles on the core promoter and becomes an open complex.
-What is the role of TFIID in transcription initiation?
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General transcription factors and RNA polymerase assemble into the basal transcription apparatus, which binds to DNA near the start site and is necessary for transcription to take place at minimal levels. Additional proteins called transcriptional activators bind to other consensus sequences in promoters and enhancers and affect the rate of transcription.
-What is the difference between the core promoter and the regulatory promoter?
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Within a single gene, only one of the two DNA strands, the template strand, is usually transcribed into RNA.
-What is the difference between the template strand and the nontemplate strand?
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A promoter is a DNA sequence that is adjacent to a gene and required for transcription. Promoters contain short consensus sequences that are important in the initiation of transcription.
-What binds to the -10 consensus sequence found in most bacterial promoters?
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