Biology
5th Edition
ISBN: 9781260487947
Author: BROOKER
Publisher: MCG
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Chapter 11.3, Problem 1CC
If this experiment was conducted for four rounds of
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Consider the experiment conducted by Meselson and Stahl in which they used 14N and 15N in cultures of E. coli and equilibrium density gradient centrifugation. Draw pictures to represent the bands produced by bacterial DNA in the centrifuge tube before the switch to medium containing 14N and after one, two, and three rounds of replication in that medium. Use separate sets of drawings to show the bands that would appear if replication were (a) semiconservative; (b) conservative; (c) dispersive.
The chromosome of E. coli contains 4.6 million bp. How long will it take to replicate its DNA? Assuming that DNA polymerase III is the primary enzyme involved and that it can actively proofread during DNA synthesis, how many base pair mistakes will be made in one round of DNA replication in a bacterial population containing 1000 bacteria?
How many bands of DNA would be expected in Meselson and Stahl’s experiment after two rounds of conservative replication?
Chapter 11 Solutions
Biology
Ch. 11.1 - Prob. 1CSCh. 11.1 - Prob. 1EQCh. 11.1 - Prob. 2EQCh. 11.1 - CoreSKILL In the experiment of Avery, MacLeod,...Ch. 11.2 - Prob. 1CCCh. 11.2 - Prob. 2CCCh. 11.2 - Core Skill: Modeling The goal of this modeling...Ch. 11.2 - Prob. 2CSCh. 11.3 - If this experiment was conducted for four rounds...Ch. 11.4 - Molecular Mechanism of DNA Replication Concept...
Ch. 11.4 - Prob. 2CCCh. 11.4 - Prob. 3CCCh. 11.4 - Prob. 4CCCh. 11.5 - Prob. 1CCCh. 11.5 - Prob. 1CSCh. 11 - Why did researchers initially believe that the...Ch. 11 - Prob. 2TYCh. 11 - Which of the following equations is accurate...Ch. 11 - Prob. 4TYCh. 11 - Which of the following statements about the...Ch. 11 - Meselson and Stahl were able to demonstrate...Ch. 11 - During replication of a DNA molecule, the daughter...Ch. 11 - Prob. 8TYCh. 11 - A nucleosome is a. a dark-staining body composed...Ch. 11 - The conversion of euchromatin into heterochromatin...Ch. 11 - What are the four key criteria that the genetic...Ch. 11 - A double-stranded DNA molecule contains 560...Ch. 11 - Prob. 3CQCh. 11 - Prob. 1COQCh. 11 - CoreSKILL How might you provide evidence that DNA...
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- What result would Meselson and Stahl have obtained if the replication of DNA were conservative (i.e., the parental double helix stayed together)? Give the expected distribution of DNA molecules after 1.0 and 2.0 generations for conservative replication.arrow_forwardYou decide to repeat the Meselson-Stahl experiment, except this time you plan to grow the E. coli cells on light 14N medium for many generations and then transfer them to heavy 15N medium and allow them to grow for 2 additional generations (2 rounds of DNA replication). If the conservative model of DNA replication was correct, what is the expected distribution of DNA in the density gradient after two rounds of replication? Multiple Choice One band of intermediate density. One band of light density. One band of heavy density. One band of light density and one band of heavy density. One band of light density and one band of intermediate density.arrow_forwardApproximately how many high-energy bonds does DNA polymerase use to replicate a bacterial chromosome (ignoring helicase and other enzymes associated with the replication fork)? compared with its own dry weight of 10–12 g, how much glucose does a single bacterium need to provide enough energy to copy its DNA once?arrow_forward
- You decide to repeat the Meselson-Stahl experiment, except this time you plan to grow the E. coli cells on light 14N medium for many generations and then transfer them to heavy 15N medium and allow them to grow for 2 additional generations (2 rounds of DNA replication). If the conservative model of DNA replication was correct, what is the expected distribution of DNA in the density gradient after two rounds of replication?arrow_forwardWhy were Meselson and Stahl unable to distinguish between the dispersive and the semiconservative models following only one round of DNA replication?arrow_forwardThe Meselson-Stahl experiment provided strong evidence that DNA replication was conservative, by alternately growing bacteria in medium with heavy 15N and light 14N. If DNA replication were dispersive, what result would Meselson and Stahl have observed after the first round of DNA replication in light nitrogen? Group of answer choices Two bands, one at the location for pure 15N and one at the location for pure 14N. One band, located half way between the locations for pure 15N and pure 14N. Two bands, one at the location for pure 15N and one located halfway between the locations for pure 15N and pure 14N. None of these Three bands, one at the location for pure 15N, one at the location for pure 14N, and one at a location halfway between.arrow_forward
- If we are given this segment of DNA: TTGGHTGUTGG HHUUTHUGHUU Let’s suppose this DNA was treated with nitrous acid. The nitrous acid was then removed, and the DNA replicated for two generations. What would be the sequences of the DNA products after the DNA had replicated two times? (note Hypoxanthine pairs with cytosine) and so there would be four sets?arrow_forwardBased on the electrophoresis experiment, 0.7% agarose gel concentration was used. If the gel concentration increased to 1%, what would happen to the DNA migration? Explain briefly.arrow_forwardThe E. coli chromosome is 1.28 mm long. Under optimal conditions the chromosome is replicated in 40 minutes. (a) What is the distance traversed by one replication fork in 1 minute? (b) If replicating DNA is in the B form (10.4 base pairs per turn), how many nucleotides are incorporated in 1 minute in one replica- tion fork? (c) If cultured human cells (such as Hela cells) replicate 1.2 m of DNA during a 5-hour S phase and at a rate of fork movement one- tenth of that seen in E. coli, how many origins of replication must the cells contain? (d) What is the average distance, in kilobase pairs, between these origins?arrow_forward
- Using the same experimental setup as in the original Meselson and Stahl experiment, predict the bands (heavy, light or intermediate) that you would observe after one round of replication if DNA polymerase replicated the bacterial genome by the conservative model of replication. Draw and explain your prediction.arrow_forwardIf DNA replication followed the dispersive model of replication, how would the outcomes of the Meselson-Stahl experiment change? Describe the composition of DNA samples after one and two rounds of replication, and how this is different from the findings of the original experiment.arrow_forwardWhat would be the anticipated caloric energy needed to construct the human genome from scratch (approximately 3 billion base pairs on 23 individual chromosomes in a diploid state)? Assume that all the purine and pyrimidine bases are pre-existing and abundant ATP and replicating enzymes are not limiting. What would be the estimated daily energy requirement to maintain nuclear supercoiled DNA available for synthetic activities and not quiescent?arrow_forward
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