Campbell Biology: Custom Edition
18th Edition
ISBN: 9781323717271
Author: Urry, Cain, Wasserman, Minorsky, Reece
Publisher: PEARSON C
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Textbook Question
Chapter 25.1, Problem 3CC
MAKE CONNECTIONS Ø In changing from an "RNA world" to today's "DNA world," genetic Information must have flowed from RNA to DNA. After reviewing Figures 17.4 and 19.9, suggest how this could have occurred. Does such a flow occur today?
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The RNA World Hypothesis suggests that the earliest forms of life used RNA as a genome instead of DNA. Why then do we not see organisms alive today with RNA genomes?
(a) Why can there be multiple codons for an amino acid? Why would this have evolved?
(b) What is the advantage of Illumina Next Generation Sequencing?
If nitrogenous bases (A, G, C, T or U) could polymerize to chains of nucleotides, could this eventually form the structure shown in the figure above? Would an RNA structure that can act as an enzyme, such as the one shown above, have been the result of chemical evolution with competition between replicating RNA molecules? Or was it likely the first RNA molecule that arose from a chain of nitrogenous bases could immediately act as an enzyme?
Chapter 25 Solutions
Campbell Biology: Custom Edition
Ch. 25.1 - What hypothesis did Miller test in his classic...Ch. 25.1 - How would the appearance of protocells have...Ch. 25.1 - MAKE CONNECTIONS In changing from an "RNA world"...Ch. 25.2 - Describe an example from the fossil record that...Ch. 25.2 - WHAT IF? Your measurements indicate that a...Ch. 25.3 - The first appearance of free oxygen in the...Ch. 25.3 - What evidence supports the hypothesis that...Ch. 25.3 - WHAT IF? What would a fossil record of life today...Ch. 25.4 - Explain the consequences of plate tectonics for...Ch. 25.4 - What factors promote adaptive radiations?
Ch. 25.4 - Prob. 3CCCh. 25.5 - Explain how new body forms can originate by...Ch. 25.5 - Why is it likely that Hox genes have played a...Ch. 25.5 - MAKE CONNECTIONS Given that changes in morphology...Ch. 25.6 - How can the Darwinian concept of descent with...Ch. 25.6 - Prob. 2CCCh. 25 - Describe the roles that montmorillonite clay and...Ch. 25 - What are the challenges of estimating the ages of...Ch. 25 - What is the "Cambrian explosion," and why is it...Ch. 25 - Explain how the broad evolutionary changes seen in...Ch. 25 - How could changes in a Single gene or DNA region...Ch. 25 - Explain the reasoning behind the Statement...Ch. 25 - Level 1: Knowledge/Comprehension 1. Fossilized...Ch. 25 - The oxygen revolution changed Earth's environment...Ch. 25 - Prob. 3TYUCh. 25 - Prob. 4TYUCh. 25 - Which of the following steps has not yet been...Ch. 25 - Prob. 6TYUCh. 25 - Prob. 7TYUCh. 25 - EVOLUTION CONNECTION Describe how gene flow,...Ch. 25 - Prob. 9TYUCh. 25 - WRITE ABOUT A THEME: ORGANIZATION You have seen...Ch. 25 - Prob. 11TYU
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- Working on the Amazon River, a biologist isolated DNA from two unknown organisms, P and Q. He discovered that the adenine content of P was 15% and the cytosine content of Q was 42%. This means that: a. the amount of guanine in P is 15%. b. the amount of guanine and cytosine combined in P is 70%. c. the amount of adenine in Q is 42%. d. the amount of thymine in Q is 21%. e. it takes more energy to unwind the DNA of P than theDNA of Q.arrow_forwardDiscuss the following: “During the evolution of life on earth, RNA lost its glorious position as the first self- replicating catalyst. its role now is as a mere messenger in the information flow from DNA to protein.”arrow_forwardIf RNA played a key role in the origin of life,why do cells now use DNA for information storage and proteins to carry out other cellular processes?arrow_forward
- Calculate how many triplet codons would be possible had evolution seized on six bases (three complementary base pairs) rather than four bases with which to construct DNA. Would six bases accommodate a two-letter code, assuming 20 amino acids and start and stop codons?arrow_forward→ 읊 https://openvellum.ecollege.com/course.html?courseld-15183778&HepID=fb9c...☆ @ Pearson Copyright O 2019 Pearson Education Inc. All rights reserved. | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy Permissions I Contact Usarrow_forward1. How many genes are needed to sustain life?2. Using a flow diagram, trace the history of the discovery of the DNA as the genetic material?3. Following Chargaff’s rule, what is the percent concentration of other nitrogenous bases if the concentration of Adenine is 21%?4. In the double helix model of DNA by Watson and Crick, what is the distance between successive bases and how many base pairs will complete one full turn?5. Based on literature, the number of genes in the human genome is lower compared to rice but rice have fewer chromosomes and lesser amount of DNA than humans. What is the main reason for this difference in the DNA-gene ratio?6. What are introns? Where are they located in the DNA?7. What are exons? What is their function?8. What proportion in the human genome are actual genes?9. What sequences form most of the human genome? What is their significance in the expression of genes?10. What are tandem repeats?arrow_forward
- Griffith, in his 1928 experiments, demonstrated that bacterial strains could be genetically transformed. The evidence that DNA was the transforming principle responsible for this phenomenon came later. What was the key experiment that Avery, MacCleod, and McCarty performed to prove that DNA was responsible for the genetic change from rough cells into smooth cells? Pls help explain this question asap!!arrow_forward1. how is information from the DNA passes on from one cell to another?2. How does the structure of a DNA molecule hellp account for the great variety of life that exists on earth?3. Does your mRNA model more closely resemble the DNA strand from which it was transcribed?4. Explain how the structure of DNA enables the molecule to be easily transcribed. Why it is important for genetic information?5. Why is RNA important to the cell?6. How does the mRNA molecule carry information from DNA?arrow_forwardDNA sequences can act as "tape measures of evolution". Scientists analyzing the human genome sequence were surprised to find that some regions of the human genome that are most highly conserved (similar to comparable regions in other species) don't code for proteins at all. Given what you've learned about "genes" speculate on reasons why this might be so.arrow_forward
- Can DNA Adopt Structures of Higher Complexity?arrow_forwardModels of real-world phenomena can reveal important links between structure and function in biology. Describe how the structure of DNA revealed by theWatson and Crick model suggests how it functions in living things.arrow_forwardOn further analysis of the DNA described in conceptual questionC21, you discover that the triplex DNA in this alien organism iscomposed of a double helix with a third strand wound within themajor groove (just like the DNA in Figure shown). How would youpropose that this DNA is able to replicate itself? In your answer,be specific about the base-pairing rules within the double helixand which part of the triplex DNA would be replicated first.arrow_forward
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