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BS 161 FINAL EXAM WITH COMPLETE QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

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  • Course
  • BS 161
  • Institution
  • BS 161

BS 161 FINAL EXAM WITH COMPLETE QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

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  • September 2, 2024
  • 31
  • 2024/2025
  • Exam (elaborations)
  • Questions & answers
  • BS 161
  • BS 161
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Essiekarimi
BS 161 FINAL EXAM WITH COMPLETE QUESTIONS
AND ANSWERS

What accurately identifies the template strands for these genes? - ans -Strand 1 is
the template strand for the histone gene and strand 2 is the template strand for
the transporter gene

what aspect of nucleic acid structure is important in determining which strand is
the template strand? - ans -double stranded nucleic acids are antiparallel

what additional reasoning is needed to completely explain which strand is used as
the template strand? - ans -RNA polymerase moves from the promoter to the
terminator adding nucleotides to the 3' end of the new RNA

The building block on the right is used to produce what type of polymer? - ans -
RNA

How should the side chain of the amino acid depicted on the right be classified
and why should it be classified this way? - ans -It should be classified as polar
because the side chain contains atoms with significantly different
electronegativies which form polar bonds.

Prokaryotic protein synthesis is faster than eukaryotic protein synthesis. What
characteristic of prokaryotic transcription and translation makes the overall
process faster than in eukaryotes? - ans -Prokaryotes lack a nucleus so translation
of an mRNA can begin even before transcription of the mRNA is complete.

What correctly lists the components necessary for transcription? - ans -RNA
polymerase, DNA, and RNA nucleotides

What do you predict would happen if an aminoacyl tRNA synthetase was mutated
so that it always attached the wrong amino acid to its tRNA? - ans -The cell would
die because this would create errors in most proteins and erupt their function

In an effort to determine which type of molecule contained the genetic
information, scientists treated extracts from dead virulent bacteria with enzymes,

,incubated the treated extracts with live non virulent bacteria, and checked for
production of virulent bacteria. Which type of enzyme prevented production of
virulent bacteria? - ans -DNase

What role do the functional groups in the peptide bond play in alpha helices? -
ans -They form hydrogen bonds with functional groups in other peptide bonds of
nearby amino acids

What of the four levels of protein structure is represented in the image to the
right? - ans -Tertiary

What level of protein structure involves IMFs between two different polypeptide
chains? - ans -Quaternary

What type of molecule is depicted on the left and what features make it this type
of molecule? - ans -It is a disaccharide because it is made up of two
monosaccharides

What statement below most likely describes the role of amino acid 87 in the
structure and function of this enzyme? - ans -This interaction between amino acid
87 and 35 causes the polypeptide to fold into a specific tertiary shape.

when the Substrate binds to the enzyme, amino acid 90 is interacting with the
hydroxyl group on the Substrate. What type of interaction is most likely taking
place between amino acid 90 and the Substrate? - ans -Hydrogen bonding

you think that amino 50 is interacting with the NH3+ the substrate. Using this
hypothesis, which of the following amino acids would you predict might be found
at position 50 and why might you make this prediction? - ans -Aspartic acid
because it will form a favorable ionic interaction with the substrate.

what do you predict would happen in cells where a mutation changed amino acid
50 to a different amino acid that cannot interact with the amino group and why
would this happen? - ans -The cells would divide more rapidly because the
structure of the protein determines the function of the protein.

,In eukaryotes, what determines where transcription starts? - ans -General
transcription factors interact with promoters and bind to RNA polymerase
indicating where transcription starts.

What are critical regions of a tRNA molecule? - ans -amino acid attachment site
and anticodon loop

Alternative splicing allows for: - ans -different polypeptides to be made from a
single gene

Alternative splicing means that: - ans -different spliced forms contain different
combinations of exons

Depicted here are five codons from the coding strand of DNA and the very short
peptide they encode:original DNA sequence: 5'ATG-TCT-AAC-TTA-TAA 3'
protein sequence: Met-Ser-Asn-Leu-STOP

A mutation adds the nucleotide T between the first and second codons in the
DNA sequence creating a mutant version of the gene.

- What will happen to the length of the mRNA produced from the mutant version
of this gene? - ans -It will be one nucleotide longer because RNA poly does not
read codons

Depicted here are five codons from the coding strand of DNA and the very short
peptide they encode:original DNA sequence: 5'ATG-TCT-AAC-TTA-TAA 3'
protein sequence: Met-Ser-Asn-Leu-STOP

A mutation adds the nucleotide T between the first and second codons in the
DNA sequence creating a mutant version of the gene.

- What will happen to the length of the protein produced from the mutant version
of this gene? - ans -It will be shorter because the third codon is now a stop codon
which will cause translation to end

Depicted here are five codons from the coding strand of DNA and the very short
peptide they encode:original DNA sequence: 5'ATG-TCT-AAC-TTA-TAA 3'

, protein sequence: Met-Ser-Asn-Leu-STOP

A mutation adds the nucleotide T between the first and second codons in the
DNA sequence creating a mutant version of the gene.

- What best describes the impact of having extra nucleotide in this gene? - ans -
The extra nucleotide causes a shift in the reading frames

Explain how information is encoded in the structure of DNA
- The importance of IMF's in DNA
- Relationship between information in DNA and structure of proteins
- ans -information is encoded in DNA by the order of nucleotides, which
determines the structure and function. RNA polymerase comes along and pairs
complementary base pairs. Functional groups are important because they allow
for bases to be paired correctly thought IMF's. DNA determines the structure of
proteins

What component of a phospholipid is found in the interior of a lipid bilayer? - ans
-the fatty acids

What does the molecule on the right represent? - ans -Unsaturated fatty acid

Imaging the molecule shown is found in a membrane that contains a mixture of
phospholipids with saturated and unsaturated fatty acids. How does the bend in
the tail impact the fluidity of the membrane? - ans -The bend prevents tight
packing which decreases the number of van der Waals interactions meaning less
energy is required to allow lipids to move past each other.

How does increasing the percentage of phospholipids containing unsaturated
fatty acids typically change the fluidity of a membrane if the temperature remains
constant?
- ans -It typically increases the fluidity

Imagine you find a plant with a mutation that makes it unable to produce
polyunsaturated fatty acids. Compared to a normal plant that can produce
polyunsaturated fatty acids, predict how this mutation most likely influences the

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