Brock Biology of Microorganisms (15th Edition)
15th Edition
ISBN: 9780134261928
Author: Michael T. Madigan, Kelly S. Bender, Daniel H. Buckley, W. Matthew Sattley, David A. Stahl
Publisher: PEARSON
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Textbook Question
Chapter 11, Problem 2AQ
Although a large number of mutagenic chemicals are known, none is known that induces mutations in only a single gene (gene-specific mutagenesis). From what you know about mutagens, explain why it is unlikely that a gene-specific chemical mutagen will be found. How then is site-specific mutagenesis accomplished?
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Mutagenesis is a technique in which genetic information of an organism is altered in a stable
manner resulting in a mutation. It may occur spontaneously in nature of as a result of
exposure to mutagens. It can also be achieved experimentally using optimized laboratory
procedures.
(i)
(ii)
What is site directed mutagenesis (SDM)?
Explain how SDM can assist in the integration of a His-tag at the end of your gene of
interest.
A chemist synthesizes four new chemical compounds in the laboratory
and names them PFI1, PFI2, PFI3, and PFI4. He gives the PFI
compounds to a geneticist friend and asks her to determine their
mutagenic potential. The geneticist finds that all four are highly
mutagenic. She also tests the capacity of mutations produced by the PFI
compounds to be reversed by other known mutagens and obtains the
following results. What conclusions can you make about the nature of
the mutations produced by these compounds?
Reversed by
Mutations,
Nitrous,
Aminopurine acid
Acridine
orange
2-
produced
by
Hydroxylamine
PFI1
Yes
Yes
Some
No
PFI2
No
No
No
No
PFI3
Yes
Yes
No
No
PFI4
No
No
No
Yes
You are working with a newly discovered mutagen, and you wish to determine the base change that it introduces into DNA. Thus far, you have determined that the mutagen chemically alters a single base in such a way that its base-pairing properties are altered permanently. To determine the specificity of the alteration, you examine the amino acid changes that take place after mutagenesis. A sample of what you find is shown here:Original: Gln–His–Ile–Glu–LysMutant: Gln–His–Met–Glu–LysOriginal: Ala–Val–Asn–ArgMutant: Ala–Val–Ser–ArgOriginal: Arg–Ser–LeuMutant: Arg–Ser–Leu–Trp–Lys–Thr–Phe
Chapter 11 Solutions
Brock Biology of Microorganisms (15th Edition)
Ch. 11.1 - Distinguish between a mutation and a mutant.Ch. 11.1 - Distinguish between screening and selection.Ch. 11.1 - Prob. 3MQCh. 11.1 - Write a one-sentence definition of the term...Ch. 11.2 - Do missense mutations occur in genes encoding...Ch. 11.2 - Why do frameshift mutations generally have more...Ch. 11.2 - Prob. 1CRCh. 11.3 - Why are suppressor tRNA mutations not lethal?Ch. 11.3 - Which class of mutation, missense or nonsense, is...Ch. 11.3 - What is the difference between same-site and...
Ch. 11.4 - Prob. 1MQCh. 11.4 - Prob. 2MQCh. 11.4 - Prob. 1CRCh. 11.5 - Which protein, found in virtually all cells,...Ch. 11.5 - Explain the fate of transferred chromosomal DNA if...Ch. 11.5 - Prob. 3MQCh. 11.5 - What are heteroduplex regions of DNA and what...Ch. 11.6 - During transformation a cell usually incorporates...Ch. 11.6 - In genetic transformation, what is meant by the...Ch. 11.6 - QExplain why recipient cells do not successfully...Ch. 11.7 - Prob. 1MQCh. 11.7 - What is the major difference between generalized...Ch. 11.7 - Why is phage conversion considered beneficial to...Ch. 11.7 - QExplain how a generalized transducing particle...Ch. 11.8 - In conjugation, how are donor and recipient cells...Ch. 11.8 - Explain how rolling circle DNA replication allows...Ch. 11.8 - QWhat is a sex pilus and which cell type, F or F+,...Ch. 11.9 - In conjugation involving the F plasmid of...Ch. 11.9 - Prob. 2MQCh. 11.9 - Prob. 3MQCh. 11.9 - QWhat is a merodiploid and how does an F plasmid...Ch. 11.10 - Why is it usually more difficult to select...Ch. 11.10 - Why do penicillins not kill species of Archaea?Ch. 11.10 - Explain one type of conjugation in Archaea and how...Ch. 11.11 - Prob. 1MQCh. 11.11 - What is the significance of the terminal inverted...Ch. 11.11 - How can transposons be used in bacterial genetics?Ch. 11.11 - Prob. 1CRCh. 11.12 - Why is the CRISPR system considered a prokaryotic...Ch. 11.12 - Prob. 2MQCh. 11.12 - QExplain why incoming DNA recognized by a short...Ch. 11 - A constitutive mutant is a strain that...Ch. 11 - Although a large number of mutagenic chemicals are...Ch. 11 - Why is it difficult in a single experiment to...Ch. 11 - Prob. 4AQ
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Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, biology and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- You are studying the tryptophan synthetase gene that Yanofsky also examined to determine the relationship between the nucleotide sequence and the amino acid sequence of the gene. Yanofsky found a large number of mutations that affected the tryptophan synthetase gene. A) If you took this mutant E. Coli line (that has an Arginine at this location) and exposed it to a mutagen that could potentially change bases, what are the second mutations you would most likely discover that would restore the activity of the tryptophan synthetase gene and where would it be located? B) Most of the mutations that Yanofsky recovered were missense mutations. However, Yanofsky also recovered a nonsense mutation that changed amino acid number 15 into a stop codon. This codon normally encodes Lysine. Does the recovery of this mutation support the hypothesis that this Lysine residue is critical in the function of the tryptophan synthetase protein?arrow_forward"The molecule serving as the genetic material is expected to absorb at the wavelengths shown to be mutagenic." Explain this statement ?arrow_forwardList three possible uses of site-directed mutagenesisarrow_forward
- Suppose a researcher previously cloned gene Y into M13 bacteriophage vector. Gene Y encodes a product called peptide Y. A region of gene Y contains the DNA sequence ATG-CGC-GAA-CTG-GTG-AAC-TAA. The researcher wishes to change a Val residue to an Ala residue in this region of peptide Y using site-directed mutagenesis. What should be the sequence of the mutant oligonucleotide primer in this region? You may use a codon table. mutant oligonucleotide primer sequence: GGC-GGC-GAA-CTG-GTG-AAC-TAA Incorrectarrow_forwardHow does a mutagen induce mutation ?explain with examples?arrow_forwardYou are interested in studying resistance to heavy metals and have selected the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisea to conduct your studies. You have recovered a deletion mutant that does not tolerate high concentrations of zinc (grows poorly in zinc containing media ) and have designated the mutant pgz-1 (for poor growth in zinc ). (a) What is the advantage to the type of mutant used in this work? What class of mutagen was likely use to generate pgz-1? ( b) Do you expect the PGZ gene to be expressed in your mutant? Explain.arrow_forward
- You are working with a newly discovered mutagen, andyou wish to determine the base change that it introduces into DNA. Thus far, you have determined that themutagen chemically alters a single base in such a waythat its base-pairing properties are altered permanently.To determine the specificity of the alteration, you examine the amino acid changes that take place after mutagenesis. A sample of what you find is shown here:Original: Gln–His–Ile–Glu–LysMutant: Gln–His–Met–Glu–LysOriginal: Ala–Val–Asn–ArgMutant: Ala–Val–Ser–ArgOriginal: Arg–Ser–LeuMutant: Arg–Ser–Leu–Trp–Lys–Thr–PheWhat is the base-change specificity of the mutagen?arrow_forwardDuring an Ames test, bacteria were exposed to a potential mutagen.Also, as a control, another sample of bacteria was not exposedto the mutagen. In both cases, 10 million bacteria were plated andthe following results were obtained:No mutagen: 17 coloniesWith mutagen: 2017 coloniesCalculate the mutation rate in the presence and absence of the mutagen.How much does the mutagen increase the rate of mutation?arrow_forwardExplain how site-directed mutagenesis can be used to produce an altered protein in bacterial cells.arrow_forward
- A certain compound that is an analog of the base cytosinecan become incorporated into DNA. It normally hydrogen bonds just as cytosine does, but it quite often isomerizes to a form that hydrogen bonds as thymine does. Doyou expect this compound to be mutagenic, and, if so,what types of changes might it induce at the DNA level?arrow_forwardWhat is a mutagen? Describe a point mutation, structuralmutation, and nondisjunctionarrow_forwardAs we described in class, in the early 1960's Francis Crick and colleagues set out to determine how many nucleotide bases make up a codon, before it was possible to sequence DNA and before Nirenberg and his colleagues solved the genetic code. To do this, they used a chemical mutagen that they knew made single nucleotide changes, used this mutagen to conduct a screen for mutations that disrupted a particular gene, and collected a number of different mutations in this gene. Briefly describe the logic they used to deduce that the codon length is 3 nucleotides long.arrow_forward
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