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CSIR NET JRF Life sciences Coaching by BioTecNika, Bangalore

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CSIR NET JRF Life sciences Coaching by BioTecNika, Bangalore
CSIR NET JRF Life sciences Coaching by BioTecNika, Bangalore
CSIR NET JRF Life sciences Coaching by BioTecNika, Bangalore
CSIR NET JRF Life sciences Coaching by BioTecNika, Bangalore
CSIR NET JRF Life sciences Coaching by BioTecNika, Bangalore
CSIR NET JRF Life sciences Coaching by BioTecNika, Bangalore
CSIR NET JRF Life sciences Coaching by BioTecNika, Bangalore

Comments
Jayanti Jodder
By: Jayanti Jodder
1050 days 15 hours 10 minutes ago

THIS IS AVERY GOOD WAY TO HELP STUDENT LIKE ME TOGET JRF AND I AM SURE VIT WILL HELP ME.

vandana singh
By: vandana singh
979 days 7 hours 30 minutes ago

can u send me csir sample paper

jagjeet kaur
By: jagjeet kaur
939 days 20 hours 12 minutes ago

please send me sample papers of physical sciences.

manju
By: manju
938 days 12 hours 18 minutes ago

please send me sample papers of chemical sciences and life sciences.

rajaji
By: rajaji
935 days 7 minutes ago

Can u please send me the sample phyics papers.

junction
By: junction
933 days 15 hours 55 minutes ago

PLESE SEND ME LAST YEAR SAMPLE PAPERS OF MATHEMATICS (1ST AND 2ND PAPER) ALSO SUGGEST SOME BOOKS FOR CALCULUS OF VARIATION. PLESE GUIDE ME.

khushaboo arya
By: khushaboo arya
928 days 19 hours 4 minutes ago

arya.khushaboo@gmail.com Can u please send me the sample paper of life sciences

saran
By: saran
919 days 21 hours 16 minutes ago

its really useful..

A Subramanian
By: A Subramanian
918 days 20 hours 39 minutes ago

Sir, I am going to appear for NET exam in Mathematical sciences in DEC 2009. please give me the current complete syllabus for this subject through email. Pl give me the sample question paper also through email. \ Subramanian - Chennai

Namrata dixit
By: Namrata dixit
917 days 21 hours 13 minutes ago

sir , please send me the sample paper of chemical sciences

BlessiBharath
By: BlessiBharath
914 days 22 hours 35 minutes ago

sir can you pls send me the sample paper of physical sceince

MONICA HIRA
By: MONICA HIRA
906 days 10 hours 5 minutes ago

SIR,can you send me the sample papers of MATHEMATICAL SCIENCE. sir also guide me that how should i prepare for net exam. sir also give me knowledge that is there any state level test for lecturership?sir please send all this on my mail i.d. monica.hira@ymail.com

MONICA HIRA
By: MONICA HIRA
906 days 10 hours 4 minutes ago

ok.thanks

mandarpkarandikar
By: mandarpkarandikar
905 days 17 hours 26 minutes ago

sir can you pls send me the sample paper of physical sceinces for csir net

Deependra pal
By: Deependra pal
898 days 15 hours 46 minutes ago

Deependra pal Sir,i want to inform u that i am going to appear for CSIR,NET jrf so plz send me sample papers of life sciences as soon as possible

suman
By: suman
893 days 10 hours 47 minutes ago

sir am suman can you send chemical scince (csir net &jrf )papers

sudha nachiar
By: sudha nachiar
883 days 7 hours 8 minutes ago

sir can u send life sciences sample papers (csir net and jrf) of previous years

padmavathi
By: padmavathi
875 days 15 hours 42 minutes ago

pls sir send me the sample paper of physical sceince.which book is refered to this net exam?

soni
By: soni
875 days 7 hours 54 minutes ago

please mail me last year's question papers for chemical sciences.....

Rosalima Peter
By: Rosalima Peter
871 days 18 hours 40 minutes ago

Sir, i am going to appear for CSIR,NET jrf so plz send me sample papers of life sciences as soon as possible.i

M.BALAGANESH
By: M.BALAGANESH
870 days 14 hours 54 minutes ago

please send me last year's question papers for chemical sciences.....

Avinash.v
By: Avinash.v
868 days 18 hours 14 minutes ago

Can u please send me the sample paper of life sciences ayyanor.sanand@gmail.com

Avinash.v
By: Avinash.v
868 days 17 hours 55 minutes ago

Sir, i am going to appear for CSIR,NET jrf so plz send me sample papers of life sciences as soon as possible.i Avinash.v

suha
By: suha
856 days 9 hours 51 minutes ago

i want to prepare for mathematics csir net exam.plz send me model question answer & related study materials

tingu
By: tingu
856 days 7 hours 58 minutes ago

please send me previous years question papers for physical science

sudhakar reddy
By: sudhakar reddy
855 days 20 hours 31 minutes ago

sir i am going to appear for csir,net jrf so please send me sample papers of physics as soon as possibl. sudhakar reddy

rupinder
By: rupinder
852 days 15 hours 11 minutes ago

hello plz send me latest syllabus n study material regarding csir.....thanks

abhilasha
By: abhilasha
851 days 17 hours 53 minutes ago

ABHILASHA sir can u send life sciences sample papers (csir net and jrf) of previous years .

P.V.Ravi
By: P.V.Ravi
844 days 17 hours 21 minutes ago

P.V.Ravi sir please send me 0f sample papers for csir mathematical science

Arunima Datta
By: Arunima Datta
842 days 9 hours 53 minutes ago

ARUNIMA DATTA- Thursday,October 21,2009 sir can you send me question paper(I&II)of csir,jrf net-June2009 and model questions for both paper of Life Science.

Arunima Datta
By: Arunima Datta
842 days 9 hours 15 minutes ago

TARASANKAR MAITI 21.10.2009 Sir, Please send me sample question paper for life science, csir ugc net

kanta
By: kanta
841 days 21 hours 25 minutes ago

kanta please send me of sample papers of computer sciience

Sahil Sharma
By: Sahil Sharma
841 days 16 hours 33 minutes ago

send me sample papers of life sciences

Sadaf Anwar
By: Sadaf Anwar
840 days 19 hours 34 minutes ago

plz send me sample paers as well as last year papers of life sciences

D.G.Hundiwale
By: D.G.Hundiwale
838 days 9 hours 19 minutes ago

i want to know weather free coatching in chemical sciences is available.

D.G.Hundiwale
By: D.G.Hundiwale
838 days 9 hours 19 minutes ago

i want to know weather free coatching in chemical sciences is available.

DALESH
By: DALESH
832 days 17 hours 32 minutes ago

send me samplle papers as well as last exaam papers please

riddhi
By: riddhi
832 days 16 hours 19 minutes ago

i want to appear in net-ls.can i get sample papers of life sciences

vijaya
By: vijaya
830 days 19 hours 58 minutes ago

hi plz send to me NET previous papers for Environmental sciences. Part-1,2,3

vijaya
By: vijaya
830 days 19 hours 56 minutes ago

i need teaching aptitude and g.k for NET

arunasiddhanta
By: arunasiddhanta
821 days 16 hours 36 minutes ago

SEND ME SAMPLE QUESTION PAPERS FOR MATHEMATICS CSIR NET.

abhishekdhinwa
By: abhishekdhinwa
819 days 13 hours 14 minutes ago

send me samplle papers as well as last exaam papers for CSRI NET JRF please

Basavaraj
By: Basavaraj
816 days 17 hours 22 minutes ago

Hi need some csir-net model question papers of life science...so i request tou sir plz send as above mentioned..both paper 1 and paper 2.

Kasar Anjum
By: Kasar Anjum
807 days 22 hours 10 minutes ago

plz send me the sample question papers on mathematical sciences and physical sciences for csir net

salunkhe
By: salunkhe
805 days 18 hours 25 minutes ago

plz send me the sample question papers on life science for csir net

salunkhe
By: salunkhe
805 days 18 hours 23 minutes ago

plz send me the sample question papers on life sciences and

namrata juneja
By: namrata juneja
802 days 7 hours 53 minutes ago

SIR PLZ SEND ME SAMPLE PAPERS OF C.S.I.R.NET EXAM OF MATHEMATICS....AND GIVE ME THE CORRECT SYLLABUS FOR THE 2010 AN PLZ PRESCRIBE THE BOOKS RELATED TO IT....NAMRATA JUNEJA....PLZ SEND ON MY GMAIL ACCOUNT...USER NAME-NEWLYNAMRATA

nida qamar
By: nida qamar
801 days 10 hours 52 minutes ago

please send me sample papers of life science for CSIR NET entrance exam.

sonali wagh
By: sonali wagh
787 days 20 hours 57 minutes ago

please send me sample papers of life science for CSIR NET entrance exam.

Arivalagan
By: Arivalagan
776 days 21 hours 1 minutes ago

please send CSIR - NET Mathematical science study material

sukhdeep singh
By: sukhdeep singh
775 days 7 hours 22 minutes ago

hi, im prep'g 4 net chemical sciences (June ).if u can dn help me

neha
By: neha
771 days 17 hours 36 minutes ago

hello... plz send the question papers of chemical sciences of previous years and also the revised syllabus.....to me.

naveen
By: naveen
771 days 14 hours 27 minutes ago

Hi......... plz do send me the solved papers for NET SET Chemical science 2008. Thanks in advance.

sikta biswas
By: sikta biswas
755 days 10 hours 23 minutes ago

Plzz send me the previous year question papers and solutions of physical science.

m.venkadesan
By: m.venkadesan
744 days 15 hours 39 minutes ago

hello sir im prapagaran can you send me model question paper of csir and book reference for chemical science, my email id is pgaran28@gmail.com

ANAMIKA SHARMA
By: ANAMIKA SHARMA
729 days 17 hours 23 minutes ago

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ANAMIKA SHARMA
By: ANAMIKA SHARMA
729 days 17 hours 23 minutes ago

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archana
By: archana
711 days 11 hours 37 minutes ago

Hello Sir, I am preparing for life-science CSIR-net for june. So can u please help me with sample papers and the solutions.. waiting for a positive reply.. archana.bholkar@gmail.com

Naveen
By: Naveen
701 days 14 hours 20 minutes ago

Hello Sir, Im Naveen, I am preparing for Physical Science, Please help me with sample papers and any coaching institute in Chennai or Bangalore will really helpful to me. Eagerly waiting for your reply, -- ms_harshas@yahoo.co.in Thanks, Naveen

mir tajamul
By: mir tajamul
697 days 10 hours 24 minutes ago

Respected sir.can u plz provide me the csir.net sample papers for life sciences

b.rachana
By: b.rachana
694 days 13 hours 1 minutes ago

HELLO SIR I AM RACHANA I COMPLETED MY PG IN COMMERCE SO I REQUEST YOU THAT CAN I WRITE THE EXAM FOR JUNIOR LECTURESHIP(JLS) I REQUEST THAT PLEASE INFORM IN MY EMAIL ADDRESS AND I CAN WRITE THE EXAM PLEASE SEND THE SIMPLE QUESTION PAPERS TO ME ITS VERY HELP FULL TO ME BEFORE 20.03.2010

sarath mohan
By: sarath mohan
692 days 19 hours 5 minutes ago

sir, can u sent me life science sample question paper.my id is sarathmohan40@yahoo.co.in

bhawna
By: bhawna
681 days 13 hours 59 minutes ago

Hello Sir, I am preparing for mathemaths CSIR-net for june. So can u please help me with sample papers and the solutions.. waiting for a positive reply..bhawnasahu@gmail.com

ramaraju
By: ramaraju
680 days 19 hours 48 minutes ago

HI SIR.I AM PREPARING FOR CHEMICAL SCIENCES JRF JUNE 2010.PLEASE SEND ME THE PRIVIUS QUESTION PAPERS AND THEIR SOLUTIONS (ANSWERS)TO ME TO KNOW HOW MUCH ANSWER IS TO BE WRITTEN IN THE SECOND PAPER.THANKING YOU IN ADVANCE.ramaraju.panduga@yahoo.in

monika
By: monika
665 days 20 hours 4 minutes ago

ply send me sample papers of mathematics onmy id monika.mehani @gmail.com

gadamneeraja
By: gadamneeraja
644 days 7 hours 11 minutes ago

I DIDNOT RECEIVE ANY E-MAIL ABOUT THE TEST TIMING OR CLASS SCHEDULE TILL NOW .PLEASE KEEP ME INFORMED.
CAN U GUIDE ME IN PREPARING FOR LIFE SCIENCES NET- PAPER 1A

gadamneeraja
By: gadamneeraja
644 days 7 hours 11 minutes ago

I DIDNOT RECEIVE ANY E-MAIL ABOUT THE TEST TIMING OR CLASS SCHEDULE TILL NOW .PLEASE KEEP ME INFORMED.
CAN U GUIDE ME IN PREPARING FOR LIFE SCIENCES NET- PAPER 1A

gadamneeraja
By: gadamneeraja
644 days 7 hours 11 minutes ago

I DIDNOT RECEIVE ANY E-MAIL ABOUT THE TEST TIMING OR CLASS SCHEDULE TILL NOW .PLEASE KEEP ME INFORMED.
CAN U GUIDE ME IN PREPARING FOR LIFE SCIENCES NET- PAPER 1A

gadamneeraja
By: gadamneeraja
644 days 7 hours 11 minutes ago

I DIDNOT RECEIVE ANY E-MAIL ABOUT THE TEST TIMING OR CLASS SCHEDULE TILL NOW .PLEASE KEEP ME INFORMED.
CAN U GUIDE ME IN PREPARING FOR LIFE SCIENCES NET- PAPER 1A

gadamneeraja
By: gadamneeraja
644 days 7 hours 11 minutes ago

I DIDNOT RECEIVE ANY E-MAIL ABOUT THE TEST TIMING OR CLASS SCHEDULE TILL NOW .PLEASE KEEP ME INFORMED.
CAN U GUIDE ME IN PREPARING FOR LIFE SCIENCES NET- PAPER 1A

gadamneeraja
By: gadamneeraja
644 days 7 hours 11 minutes ago

I DIDNOT RECEIVE ANY E-MAIL ABOUT THE TEST TIMING OR CLASS SCHEDULE TILL NOW .PLEASE KEEP ME INFORMED.
CAN U GUIDE ME IN PREPARING FOR LIFE SCIENCES NET- PAPER 1A

gadamneeraja
By: gadamneeraja
644 days 7 hours 11 minutes ago

I DIDNOT RECEIVE ANY E-MAIL ABOUT THE TEST TIMING OR CLASS SCHEDULE TILL NOW .PLEASE KEEP ME INFORMED.
CAN U GUIDE ME IN PREPARING FOR LIFE SCIENCES NET- PAPER 1A

ashima mahajan
By: ashima mahajan
594 days 18 hours 4 minutes ago

please send me the study material for net jrf csir life sciences exam

prudhvi
By: prudhvi
592 days 5 hours 41 minutes ago

please send the chemical science papers

sandeep
By: sandeep
548 days 13 hours 34 minutes ago

plz send me study meterial 4 comp. science and application for csir net pre and main exam . sandeep.hr007@gmail.com

preeti chaubey
By: preeti chaubey
536 days 13 hours 12 minutes ago

kindly tell me the best books for preparation for CSIR net (mathematics) and also about good coachings too.

manju.m
By: manju.m
501 days 18 hours ago

IT'S ME MANJU STUDING MARINE BIOTECH CAN I GET THE MODEL QUESTION PAPERS OF CSIR

manju.m
By: manju.m
501 days 18 hours ago

IT'S ME MANJU STUDING MARINE BIOTECH CAN I GET THE MODEL QUESTION PAPERS OF CSIR

srilatha
By: srilatha
476 days 10 hours 13 minutes ago

plz send csir sample solved question papers of computer science

ramya.G
By: ramya.G
422 days 14 hours 18 minutes ago

please send me previous papers of chemical sciences.This site is very beneficial to students like me.

Trupti
By: Trupti
419 days 15 hours 12 minutes ago

Hi this is trupti read the sample papers and well satisfied with the knowledge given

komal agarwal
By: komal agarwal
393 days 21 hours ago

PLZ SEND ME CSIR SAMPLE PAPER OF MATHEMATICAL SCIENCE

Shravan Kumar.R
By: Shravan Kumar.R
321 days 20 hours 14 minutes ago

Sir,this might an extrordinary thing that you are doing for the students like me.All the students must great full to you for giving more details about csir

Shravan Kumar.R
By: Shravan Kumar.R
321 days 20 hours 12 minutes ago

Good morning Sir,
i am shravan.I am going to write the csir-2011 exam in mathematics.I'll be thankful to you if you send me the previous papers for mathematics subject

neelima chauhan
By: neelima chauhan
319 days 12 hours 25 minutes ago

please sent me sample paper of life science, study material and suggest the book

neelima chauhan
By: neelima chauhan
319 days 12 hours 25 minutes ago

please sent me sample paper of life science, study material and suggest the book

rashmi
By: rashmi
317 days 22 hours 36 minutes ago

plz send me studying material for ugc-csir(physical science)

kirti singh
By: kirti singh
309 days 7 hours 27 minutes ago

please send me sample papers of life sciences.

babli yadav
By: babli yadav
300 days 13 hours 35 minutes ago

plz send the solved ugc net papar of history

meena
By: meena
124 days 11 hours 8 minutes ago

what is the new pattern of net jrf of 2012 in life science?

Presentation Transcript Presentation Transcript

NET-JRF Sample Paper 2B : NET-JRF Sample Paper 2B Presented at http://biotutor.biotecnika.org/live-classes/ By Biotecnika Expert Krithika, This Online Coaching is Provided for CSIR NET JRF Aspirants by www.biotecnika.org

Congratulations Top Scorers!!! : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG Congratulations Top Scorers!!! The toppers of SP 2/B are Mine with 94% Shwetha N with 82% Archana Ojha with 75% Please Contact info@biotecnika.org or krithika@biotecnika.org If you have uncleared doubts, Biotecnika experts would always be there to help you in clearing your doubts.

1. Effect of EDTA on Bacterial cell is : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 1. Effect of EDTA on Bacterial cell is Remove Mg++ ions digest polymeric compounds Removes lipid molecules removes insolubles cell debris. EDTA (ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid). The EDTA molecule can bind to metal ions by forming six bonds to it - two from nitrogen atoms in amino groups and four from oxygen atoms in carboxyl groups. Ca and Mg ions form the salt bridges in gram-negative bacteria binding polysaccharides on the surface of the cell wall. They also chelate the divalent ions of the lipoprotein and lipopolysaccharides of the cell wall. Antimicrobials in Food  By P. Michael Davidson, John Nikolaos Sofos, Alfred Larry Branen

2. Klenow fragment can : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 2. Klenow fragment can only polymerise DNA on a single strand only degrade DNA both none Uses of Klenow fragment Synthesis of double-stranded DNA from single-stranded templates. Filling in recessed 3' ends of DNA fragments. Digesting away protruding 3' overhangs. Preparation of radioactive DNA probes. In some situations, the 3' -> 5' exonuclease activity of Klenow fragment is either undesirable or not necessary. By introducing mutations in the gene that encodes Klenow, forms of the enzyme can be expressed that retain polymerase activity, but lack any exonuclease activity. These forms are the enzyme are usually called exo- Klenow fragment.

3. which one of the following acts as inducer of lac operon : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 3. which one of the following acts as inducer of lac operon lactose allolactose permease ß galactosidase The tetrameric lac repressor protein, has four binding sites for allolactose. When those sites become occupied, the protein undergoes a change in shape (allosteric modification), which causes it to dissociate from the operator site, allowing transcription to proceed. Thus allolactose induces the lac operon by a process of de-repression. In order for lactose to induce the operon, there must already be present a low level of permease to get the lactose into the cell and a low level of ß-galactosidase to convert the lactose to allolactose. Mutants that totally lack either the permease or ß-galactosidase cannot be induced by lactose.

4. Most base substitution in -10 to -35 base pair region causes : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 4. Most base substitution in -10 to -35 base pair region causes increase in promoter function decrease promoter function does not affect promoter function increase operator function A specific region just upstream from a gene that acts as a binding site for transcription factors and RNA polymerase during the initiation of transcription. In prokaryotes, the promoter consists of two short sequences at -10 and -35 positions upstream from the transcription start site. The sequence at -10 is called the Pribnow box, or the -10 element, and usually consists of the six nucleotides TATAAT. The Pribnow box is absolutely essential to start transcription in prokaryotes. The other sequence at -35 (the -35 element) usually consists of the six nucleotides TTGACA. Its presence allows a very high transcription rate.

5. Linkers are : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 5. Linkers are Double stranded DNA with blunt ends Single stranded DNA with sticky ends Single stranded DNA with blunt ends Single stranded DNA with sticky ends Sticky end and Blunt end are the two possible configurations resulting from the breaking of double-stranded DNA. DNA exhibits a stabilizing interaction between complementary base pairs, providing specificity to the pairing of two strands of DNA. If two complementary strands of DNA are of equal length, then they will terminate in a blunt end, as in the following example. (linkers) 5'-CpTpGpApTpCpGpCpTpApGpT-3' 3'-GpApCpTpApGpCpGpApTpCpA-5' However, if one strand extends beyond the complementary region, then the DNA is said to possess an overhang or it has a sticky end. (Adapters) 5'-ApTpCpTpGpApCpT-3‘ 3'-TpApGpApCpTpGpApCpTpApCpG-5' These linkers play a vital role in genetic Engineering. They are used in cloning Experiments.

Slide 8 : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG

6. Leucine Zipper has : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 6. Leucine Zipper has Leu residue at every 7th position of a -helix Leu residue at every 4th position of a -helix Leu residue at every 7th position of ß-sheet Leu residue at every 4th position of ß-sheet D represents Leu residue A structure, referred to as the 'leucine zipper’ explain how some eukaryotic gene regulatory proteins work. The leucine zipper consist of a periodic repetition of leucine residues at every seventh position. The segments containing these periodic arrays of leucine residues seem to exist in an alpha-helical conformation. The leucine side chains extending from one alpha-helix interact with those from a similar alpha helix of a second polypeptide, facilitating dimerization; the structure formed by cooperation of these two regions forms a coiled coil. These leucines form the hydrophobic core of a coiled coil.

7. Which one can be used to cut a methionine between two polypeptide : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 7. Which one can be used to cut a methionine between two polypeptide Factor Xa Thrombin Cyanogen bromide none Cyanogen bromide attacks on the carboxylate side of methionine, converting it to homoserine. The chemistry of the reaction involves the nucleophilic attack of the thioether sulphur on the carbon in CNBr, followed by the cyclization of iminolactone, which is hydrolysed in water resulting in peptide cleavage. Thrombin is a serine protease that possesses trypsin-like behavior in that it prefers to cleave its substrates after arginine residues. Factor Xa cleaves after the arginine residue in its preferred cleavage site Ile-(Glu or Asp)-Gly-Arg. Chemical Reagents for Protein Modification  By Roger L. Lundblad thioether

8. Thrombin cuts the polypeptide at : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 8. Thrombin cuts the polypeptide at next to Gly next to Arg next to Met next to Lys The thrombin molecule contains two chains.  The A chain is composed of 36 residues and is non-essential for proteolytic activities.  The B chain is composed of 259 amino acids and is derived from the carboxyl terminal sequence of prothrombin.  The B chain contains the three active site amino acids, His57, Asp102, and Ser195. Thrombin is a serine protease that possesses trypsin-like behavior in that it prefers to cleave its substrates after arginine residues.

Slide 12 : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG

9. Primer extension is used for identification of : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 9. Primer extension is used for identification of 3' end 5' end both none A primer is a strand of nucleic acid that serves as a starting point for DNA replication. They are required because the enzymes that catalyze replication, DNA polymerases, can only add new nucleotides to an existing strand of DNA. The polymerase starts replication at the 3’end of the primer, and copies the opposite strand. In primer extension, a short antisense 5' end-labeled DNA primer (usually a synthetic oligonucleotide, but sometimes a small restriction fragment) is hybridized to RNA, usually total cellular RNA, then DNA is synthesized from this primer using reverse transcriptase. RTase will copy the RNA from the site of primer annealing to the 5'-end of the RNA molecule. The reactions are then analyzed by electrophoresis in sequencing gels in lanes adjacent to Sanger sequencing reactions of DNA containing the gene of question, using the same primer as that used in the PE analysis. The transcription initiation site (usually) can then easily be identified as the band in the sequencing reaction directly parallel to the run-off reverse transcript.

10. S1 nuclease analysis can be used for identification of : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 10. S1 nuclease analysis can be used for identification of 3' end 5' end both none S1 nuclease is an endonuclease that is active against single-stranded DNA and RNA molecules. It is five times more active on DNA than RNA. S1 nuclease analysis Preparations of RNA containing an mRNA of interest are hybridized to a complementary single-stranded DNA probe. At the end of the reaction period, nuclease S1 is used to degrade unhybridized regions of the probe, and the surviving DNA-RNA hybrids are then separated by gel electrophoresis and visualized by either autoradiography or Southern hybridization. The method can be used to quantify RNAs, to map the positions of introns and to identify the locations of 5' and 3' ends of mRNAs on cloned DNA templates

11. Adapters has : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 11. Adapters has one sticky end and one blunt end both sticky ends both blunt ends none Adapters are linkers with cohesive ends or a linker digested with RE, before ligation. The most widely used definition is cut linkers also called as adapters.They are not perfectly double stranded non single stranded. By adding adaptors to the ends of a DNA, sequences that are blunt can be converted into cohesive ends. Adaptor molecules are synthesized so that the blunt end is the same as ‘natural’ DNA, but the sticky end is different. The 3'-OH terminus of the sticky end is the same as usual, but the 5'-P terminus is modified; it lacks the phosphate group, and is in fact a 5'-OH terminus. DNA ligase is unable to form a phosphodiester bridge between 5'-OH and 3'-OH ends. The result is that, although base pairing is always occurring between the sticky ends of adaptor molecules, the association is never stabilized by ligation. Adaptors can therefore be ligated to a DNA molecule but not to themselves. After the adaptors have been attached, the abnormal 5'-OH terminus is converted to the natural 5'-P form by treatment with the enzyme polynucleotide kinase, producing a sticky-ended fragment that can be inserted into an appropriate vector. 5'-ApTpCpTpGpApCpT-3‘ 3'-TpApGpApCpTpGpApCpTpApCpG-5'

12. What is the ratio of absorbance of UV light by pure DNA at 260 nm and 280nm wavelength : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 12. What is the ratio of absorbance of UV light by pure DNA at 260 nm and 280nm wavelength 1.8 4.8 10.2 7.8 Since nucleotides, RNA, ssDNA, and dsDNA all absorb at 260 nm, they will contribute to the total absorbance of the sample. Therefore, to ensure accurate results, of purity, ratio of absorbance of UV light by DNA at 260 nm and 280nm wavelength is calculated. A ratio of ~1.8 is generally accepted as “pure” for DNA; a ratio of ~2.0 is generally accepted as “pure” for RNA. If the ratio is appreciably lower in either case, it may indicate the presence of protein, phenol or other contaminants that absorb strongly at or near 280 nm. The resultant 260:280 ratio for the nucleic acid being studied will be approximately equal to the weighted average of the 260/280 ratios for the four nucleotides present. The generally accepted ratios of 1.8 and 2.0 for DNA and RNA respectively, are "rules of thumb". The actual ratio will depend on the composition of the nucleic acid. RNA will typically have a higher 260/280 ratio due to the higher ratio of Uracil compared to that of Thymine. Guanine: 1.15 Adenine: 4.50 Cytosine: 1.51 Uracil: 4.00 Thymine: 1.47 260/280 ratio

13. The most abundant enzyme in the biosphere : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 13. The most abundant enzyme in the biosphere Amylase Rubisco DNA polymerase RNA polymerase Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase, most commonly known by the shorter name RuBisCO, is an enzyme that is used in the Calvin cycle to catalyze the first major step of carbon fixation, a process by which the atoms of atmospheric carbon dioxide are made available to organisms in the form of energy-rich molecules such as sucrose. RuBisCO catalyzes either the carboxylation or the oxygenation of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (also known as RuBP) with carbon dioxide or oxygen. RuBisCO is very important because it catalyzes the most commonly-used chemical reaction by which inorganic carbon enters the biosphere. RuBisCO is also the most abundant protein in leaves. It is found in plants, algae, cyanobacteria, phototropic and chemoautotropic proteobacteria .

14. Method used for differentiating real genes from chance ORF's is : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 14. Method used for differentiating real genes from chance ORF's is CpG island codon bias Homology search and transcript analysis All of above An open reading frame (ORF) is a portion of an organism's genome which contains a sequence of bases that could potentially encode a protein. In a gene, ORFs are located between the start-code sequence (initiation codon) and the stop-code sequence (termination codon). However, short ORFs can also occur by chance outside of genes. Usually ORFs outside genes are not very long and terminate after a few codons. CpG islands are genomic regions that contain a high frequency of CG nucleotides. CpG islands typically occur at or near the transcription start site of genes, particularly housekeeping genes, in vertebrates. DNA regions >500 bp with a GC content >55% and observed CpG/expected CpG of 0.65 were more likely to be the true CpG islands. In most genomes not all members of a codon family are used with equal frequency. Eg: Humans,use GTG four times more frequently than GTA for coding valine. If an ORF contains high frequency of rare codons then it is probably not a gene. Homology search : When a test sequence is BLASTed and if 30% of amino acids matches with the database, then it can be confirmed a real gene. Transcript analysis: For many model organisms the EST’s and cDNA sequences are used.if the sequence of ORF matches the sequence of transcript. Then the ORF is a real gene.

15. Hybrid of trp and lac promoter is called : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 15. Hybrid of trp and lac promoter is called lrp lap tac trc Tac is a strong promoter and is the hybrid of the trp and lac promoters, containing -35 region of trp fused with -10 region of lacUV5(a form where there are 2 mutations in -10 region, leading to enhanced expression) promoter.It is induced by Lactose and IPTG.It is regulated by lac repressors and is independent of cAMP regulation. Eg of vectors containing tac promoters are pkk223,pkk233 and others. Trc is also a hybrid promoter of trp and lac,containing -35 region of trp fused with -10 region of lacUV5.These 2 regions are separated by 17bp whereas in tac they are separated by 16bp. Lap is a latency associated prmoter and is not a hybrid promoter.

16. Which one is not used in making genetic maps : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 16. Which one is not used in making genetic maps RFLP STR SNP EST's Genetic maps depict relative positions of loci based on the degree of recombination. This approach studies the inheritance/assortment of traits by genetic analysis. Physical maps show the actual (physical) distance between loci (in nucleotides). This approach applies techniques of molecular biology. Eg: Restriction mapping, EST mapping A genetic marker is a gene or DNA sequence with a known location on a chromosome and associated with a particular gene or trait. It can be described as a variation, which may arise due to mutation or alteration in the genomic loci, that can be observed. Eg: RFLP, STR, SNP, microsatellites etc An Expressed Sequence Tag is a tiny portion of an entire gene that can be used to help identify unknown genes and to map their positions within a genome. ESTs are small pieces of DNA sequence (usually 200 to 500 nucleotides long) that are generated by sequencing either one or both ends of an expressed gene. The idea is to sequence bits of DNA that represent genes expressed in certain cells, tissues, or organs from different organisms and use these "tags" to fish a gene out of a portion of chromosomal DNA by matching base pairs.

17. which is true for homeodomain : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 17. which is true for homeodomain was discovered in homeotic genes has DNA binding segment related to helix-turn-helix motif is enclosed in homeobox All of above Homeotic genes are defined by a DNA sequence known as the homeobox, which is a sequence of 180 nucleotides that code for a protein domain known as the homeodomain. The first genes found to encode homeodomain proteins were Drosophila developmental control genes, in particular homeotic genes, from which the name homeobox was derived. However, many homeobox genes are not homeotic genes; the homeobox is a sequence motif, while "homeotic" is a functional description for genes that cause homeotic transformations. The protein products of homeotic genes belong to a class of proteins known as transcription factors, all of which are capable of binding to DNA, thereby regulating the transcription of genes. The homeobox sequence codes for a 60 amino acid helix-turn-helix protein known as the homeodomain. The homeodomain acts as an "on/off" switch for gene transcription by binding to specific sequence enhancers of a gene, which either activates or represses the gene.

18. Plasmids are found in - : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 18. Plasmids are found in - bacteria yeast mouse both a and b Small, circular, extrachromosomal DNA molecules. They can replicate independently of the genome, and are found in numbers ranging from one per cell to hundreds per cell (this is called "copy number"). Plasmids frequently carry genes for antibiotic resistance.Plasmids are considered transferable genetic elements, or "replicons", capable of autonomous replication within a suitable host. Plasmids can be found in all three major kingdoms, Archea, Bacteria and Eukaryote. Among eukaryotes, plasmids have been found in fungi and plants but not in animals. Most plasmids are mitochondrial. In filamentous fungi, plasmids are commonly encountered in isolates from natural populations. Individual populations may show a predominance of one type, but some plasmids have a global distribution, often crossing species boundaries. Circular plasmids are common only in Neurospora spp., but linear plasmids have been found in many fungi. Circular plasmids have one open reading frame (ORF) coding for a DNA polymerase or a reverse transcriptase. Linear plasmids generally have two ORFs, coding for presumptive DNA and RNA polymerases with amino acid motifs showing homology to viral polymerases.

19. Which DNA binding protein motif is present in Lac repressor : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 19. Which DNA binding protein motif is present in Lac repressor helix-turn-helix zinc finger homeodomain leucine zipper The helix-turn-helix motif consists of about 20 amino acids. The basic form is that of 2 helices separated by a turn. One helix, the stabilization helix, is there to stabilize the other helix, the recognition helix. The helix-turn-helix motif will be illustrated with the lac-repressor-DNA complex. The leucine zipper is an interesting structure made up of two a-helical segments of protein that have leucines facing each other along the length of the helices, allowing them to dimerize and form a symmetric interface that can bind to the DNA on both sides of the double helix (see figure). The leucine zipper motif will be illustrated with the GCN4 (protein)-AP1 (DNA) complex, a protein involved in activating transcription in yeast. The Zinc finger motif includes a metal, Zinc, in the DNA-binding motif. The Zinc helps to stabilize the three-dimensional structure of the Zinc-finger. The Zinc is coordinated either with the sulfur in cysteine, or one of the nitrogens in the histidine imidazole sidechain. The zinc-finger motif will be illustrated with the Transcription Factor IIIA-DNA complex from the clawed frog Xenopus laevis.

20. Which of the following gene is carried by "F" plasmid ? : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 20. Which of the following gene is carried by "F" plasmid ? yrp yar tra trp lac Yrp - yeast replication plamid Yar – genes found in Human Y chromosome Trp – found in trp operon Lac – found in lac operon The Fertility factor is a bacterial DNA sequence that produces a sex pilus necessary for conjugation. It contains 20 tra (for "transfer") genes and a number of other genetic sequences responsible for incompatibility, replication, and other functions. The F factor is an episome and can exist as an independent plasmid or integrate into the bacterial cell's genome.

Slide 25 : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG F plasmid is responsible for oriV origin for vegetative replication -replication is bi-directional (like bacterial chromosome) -replicates in synchrony with bacterial chromosome oriT origin of transfer - rolling circle replication - single strand enters recipient which will synthesize the complementary strand Chromosomal Transfer by F-plasmid tra - transfer genes - genes on F-plasmid (tra genes) specify formation of sex pilus and conjugation bridge usually only F-plasmid is transferred,sometimes chromosomal genes are moved. http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/olc/dl/120082/bio_f.swf visit this URL for the video.

21. In zinc finger Zn++ ion is co-ordinated to : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 21. In zinc finger Zn++ ion is co-ordinated to 4 Cys 4 His 2 Cys and 2 His Both a and c The zinc finger motif contains one or more zinc ions which are crucial for the structural stability. It can be divided into three types: C2H2 zinc finger: It is characterized by the sequence CX2-4C....HX2-4H, where C = cysteine, H = histidine, X = any amino acid. In the 3D structure, two cysteine residues and two histidine residues interact with a zinc ion .Eg:S1 transcription factor C4 zinc finger: Its consensus sequence is CX2CX13CX2CX14-15CX5CX9CX2C. The first four cysteine residues bind to a zinc ion and the last four cysteine residues bind to another zinc ion. Eg Estrogen receptor C6 zinc finger. It has the consensus sequence CX2CX6CX5-6CX2CX6C. The yeast's Gal4 contains such a motif where six cysteine residues interact with two zinc ions. Eg: GAL4

Slide 27 : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG In Fig 2&3 Green strands – Cysteine residue Orange Balls – Zn ion Red Strands - Receptor Fig 2 Fig 3

22. Which one is not used in making genetically modified crops : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 22. Which one is not used in making genetically modified crops vector based on plant virus various plasmid DNA artificial plasmid of animals natural plasmid of agrobacterium The agrobacterium transfers its own T-DNA, but if the T-DNA is removed and replaced with another gene, A. tumefaciens can be used to introduce that gene into the plant genome, thereby providing a vector for scientists to engineer beneficial genes into plants. Larger genes can be introduced to plants using bacterial artificial chromosomes (BACs). BACs are synthesized gene vectors based on a plasmid from E. coli. BACs can have inserts ranging from 50 to 350 kb, allowing for the transfer of large genes or many small genes at once. For specialized studies (production of foreign proteins in plants, expression of potentially lethal genes, etc.), virus-based vectors are used.

23. E.Coli cannot : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 23. E.Coli cannot degrade recombinant protein always fold recombinant protein correctly glycosylate recombinant protein correctly All of above Advantages of prokaryotic recombinant protein expression systems: Ease of culture Rapid cell growth Inducible expression using IPTG Simple purification Some of the disadvantages in using E.coli as the host are: Most proteins become insoluble and are very difficult to recover as functional proteins Post-translational modifications are not added by bacteria Protein may not be functional. http://www.exptec.com/Stategies/Problems%20and%20hosts.htm follow this URL for the expression problems due to hosts

24. Lac promoter can be induced by:- : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 24. Lac promoter can be induced by:- Iso propyl thio galactosidase iso methyl thio cyanate tryptophan 3-beta -indole acrylic acid Isopropyl-ß-D-thio-galactoside (IPTG) is frequently used as an inducer of the lac operon as it binds to repressor and inactivates it. Unlike allolactose, the sulfur (S) atom creates a chemical bond which is non-hydrolyzable by the cell, preventing the cell from "eating up" or degrading the inductant; therefore the IPTG concentration remains constant. IPTG can enter thye cells without lactose permease,and hence it can act as an inducer in the absence of functional lacy and lacz products

26. pBIN 19 binary vector consist of : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 26. pBIN 19 binary vector consist of lac z' gene kanamycin resistance gene cloning sites all of above

27. In lac operon the repressor is encoded by : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 27. In lac operon the repressor is encoded by Lac A Lac Y Lac Z Lac I The operon is under the control of the adjacent lacI gene, encoding the lactose repressor. The repressor is a regulatory gene. In the absence of allolactose, the inducer of the lac operon, the repressor tetramer binds to the lac operator (lacO) and prevents RNA polymerase from transcribing the operon. However, when allolactose is present it binds to the repressor this prevents repressor from binding to lacO and permits RNA polymerase to bind to lacP and to initiate transcription. The lacI gene is transcribed constitutively from its own promoter. The lac repressor is a tetramer, where all four identical components are 360 amino acids in length. There are three main domains in the lac repressor molecule. The NH2 terminal domain (residues 1-62), the coreprotein domain (residues 62-340), and the COOH-terminal domain (residues 340-357) The NH2 terminal domain of the lac repressor is involved with the DNA binding. The NH2 terminal ends can actually be subdivided into two separate functioning domains: the DNA-binding region (residues 1-45) and the hinge region (residues 46-62) http://biology.kenyon.edu/BMB/Chime/Mat/MASTER.HTM follow the link for more details.

28. Drawback of using baculovirus in protein production : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 28. Drawback of using baculovirus in protein production larger nuclear inclusion bodies makes large amount of protein improper glycosylation polyhedrin gene product Advantages of using baculovirus expression system are Eukaryotic post-translational modification Proper protein folding and function High expression levels Easy scale up with high-density suspension culture Disadvantages of using baculovirus expression system are Low secretion level. Improper glycosylation. Proteins that occur as aggregates. Refrerence: http://books.google.com/books?id=QUd1FfElRN4C&pg=PA31&lpg=PA31&dq=polyhedrin+gene+product&source=web&ots=ge0SjQefy-&sig=2ebOC49QenqMOhdgiDqEXpZQ&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=9&ct=result#PPA27,M1 Polyhedrin gene product is non essential when the virus Is propagated.In its absence BV is secreted by the infected cells. This dispensible nature of polyhedrin gene makes BV suitable for constructing vectors. The desired gene is placed under the control of polyhedrin promoter.

29. A yeast vector carrying A 2 ?m circlular origin of Replication : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 29. A yeast vector carrying A 2 ?m circlular origin of Replication YAC YEp YIp YRp The YpI integrative vectors do not replicate autonomously, but integrate into the genome at low frequencies by homologous recombination.The YpI integrative vectors do not replicate autonomously, but integrate into the genome at low frequencies by homologous recombination. The YEp yeast episomal plasmid vectors replicate autonomously because of the presence of a segment of the yeast 2 mm plasmid that serves as an origin of replication (2 mm ori). The 2 mm ori is responsible for the high copy-number and high frequency of transformation of YEp vectors. The YCp yeast centromere plasmid vectors are autonomously replicating vectors containing centromere sequences, CEN, and autonomously replicating sequences, ARS. The YCp vectors are typically present at very low copy numbers, from 1 to 3 per cell. A yeast artificial chromosome (short YAC) is a vector used to clone large DNA fragments (larger than 100 kb and up to 3000 kb). It is an artificially constructed chromosome and contains the telomeric, centromeric, and replication origin sequences needed for replication and preservation in yeast cells. The Yrp contain ARS as their origin of replication in yeast. they have very high copy numbers but are extremely unstable.

30. Factor Xa cuts at : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 30. Factor Xa cuts at After Arg of Gly-Arg Before Arg of Gly-Arg Before Gly of Gly0 Leu After Gly of Gly-Leu Factor Xa is a serine endopeptidase composed of two disulfide-linked subunits that converts prothrombin to thrombin in the blood coagulation cascade. Factor Xa cleaves after the arginine residue in its preferred cleavage site Ile-(Glu or Asp)-Gly-Arg and it will occasionally cleave at other basic residues. However, it will not cleave at a site followed by proline or arginine. Factor Xa is often used to remove fusion tags, such as the common histidine tag, from expressed proteins. By treating a purified, 6xHis-tagged protein expressed with a factor Xa cleavage site, it is possible to obtain the protein in its native form. The purified, expressed protein is incubated with factor Xa protease.

31. A.tumefaciens causes : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 31. A.tumefaciens causes rust wort crown gall disease hairy root disease Agrobacterium tumefaciens causes crown gall disease of a wide range of dicotyledonous (broad-leaved) .The disease gains its name from the large tumour-like swellings (galls) that typically occur at the crown of the plant, just above soil level.Crown gall tumors result from the over-production of the phytohormones auxin and cytokinin specified by A. tumefaciens T-DNA genes. wart:Synchytrium endobioticum, a primitive parasitic fungus forms wart.The primary symptom consists of galls on tubers, stolons and stems, and occasionally on leaves, but never on roots. The rusts belong to the Basidiomycota, the division of fungi to which the mushrooms belong. Although the rusts attack a large number of seed plants and even some ferns.The common name rusts is based on the "rusty" colored blotches that is present on the stems and leaves from the urediospore stage in this group of fungi.Eg:Late Blight of Potato disease was due to the fungal pathogen, Phytophthora infestans. Hairy root disease is caused by A.rhizogenes.Although the T-DNA of some Riplasmids of A. rhizogenes contains auxin biosynthetic genes, these loci are not always necessary for hairy root formation. Recent experiments suggest that hairy root tumors result from the increased sensitivity of transformed cells to endogenous auxin levels. 1 2 4 3

33. Which is not a method of DNA insertion in living cells : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 33. Which is not a method of DNA insertion in living cells Transformation Transfection Microinjection none Transformation is the genetic alteration of a cell resulting from the uptake, genomic incorporation, and expression of foreign genetic material (DNA). Terms used for genetic alterations resulting from introduction of DNA by viruses (transduction) or by cell-cell contact between bacteria (conjugation). Transformation of eukaryotic cells in tissue culture is usually called transfection. Transfection is the process of introducing nucleic acids into cells by non-viral methods. Transfection of animal cells typically involves opening transient pores in the cell plasma membrane, to allow the uptake of material. Genetic material (such as supercoiled plasmid DNA or siRNA constructs), or even proteins such as antibodies, may be transfected. Microinjection refers to the process of using a very fine needle to insert substances at a microscopic or macroscopic level into a single living cell. It is a simple process in which a needle 0.5 to 5 micrometers in diameter penetrates the cell membrane and/or the nuclear envelope and the desired contents are then injected into the desired sub-cellular compartment and the needle is removed.

34. Use of regulatory protein to protect DNA from endonuclease is done in : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 34. Use of regulatory protein to protect DNA from endonuclease is done in DNA footprinting DNA fingerprinting gel retardation chemical degradation DNA Footprinting was developed in 1977 and is an analytical procedure in molecular biology for identifying the specific sequence of DNA (the binding site) that binds to a particular protein. DNA Footprinting is most commonly performed on proteins that are thought to play some significant functional role such as gene regulation. DNA Fingerprinting, method of identification that compares fragments of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) It is sometimes called DNA typing. Gel retardation is a technique used to find out the DNA-protein interactions by electrophoresing the DNA fragment and the DNA-protein complex.The DNA protein complex moves slowly in the GEL which shows the presence of the protein. Maxam Gilbert method requires radioactive labelling at one end of the DNA. Chemical treatment generates breaks at a small proportion of one or two of the four nucleotide bases in each of four reactions (G, A+G, C, C+T). Thus a series of labelled fragments is generated, from the radiolabelled end to the first 'cut' site in each molecule. The fragments in the four reactions are arranged side by side in gel electrophoresis for size separation. To visualize the fragments, the gel is exposed to X-ray film for autoradiography, yielding a series of dark bands each corresponding to a radiolabelled DNA fragment, from which the sequence may be inferred.

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35. Advantage of insulin production by recombinant DNA technique : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 35. Advantage of insulin production by recombinant DNA technique can be modified by addition of sugar molecules after translation insulin is a big protein active insulin is synthesized by bacteria none Human insulin is the only animal protein to have been made in bacteria in such a way that its structure is absolutely identical to that of the natural molecule. This reduces the possibility of complications resulting from antibody production. In chemical and pharmacological studies, commercially available Recombinant DNA human insulin has proven indistinguishable from pancreatic human insulin. The only disadvantage was contamination due to host cell and it requires thorough purification. Nowadays, the recombinant insulin is produced using Yeast cells as they secrete an almost complete human insulin molecule with perfect three dimensional structure. This minimises the need for complex and costly purification procedures.

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36. trp promoter is repressed by : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 36. trp promoter is repressed by leucine lactose galactose Tryptophan The trp operon is a repressible system. The primary difference between repressible and inducible systems is the result that occurs when the effector molecule binds to the repressor. With inducible systems, the binding of the effector molecule to the repressor greatly reduces the affinity of the repressor for the operator, the repressor is released and transcription proceeds. The lac operon is an example of an inducible system. With repressible systems, the binding of the effector molecule to the repressor greatly increases the affinity of repressor for the operator and the repressor binds and stops transcription. Thus, for the trp operon , the addition of tryptophan (the effector molecule) to the E. coli environment shuts off the system because the repressors binds at the operator.

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37. T-DNA is not : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 37. T-DNA is not between 15-30 Kb in size passed to daughter cells responsible for cancerous properties responsible for opine synthesis During tumour induction, Agrobacterium attaches onto plant cells and then transfers part of its DNA to some of these cells. The transferred DNA (T-DNA) which is found on a large Ti (tumour inducing) plasmid is modified within the bacterium and is transferred to the plant where it becomes integrated into the plant genome. Proteins which are encoded by the virulence (vir) region of the Ti plasmid regulate the T-DNA modification and transfer. Expression of genes located on the T-DNA leads to the formation of proteins involved with the production of auxins and cytokynines. These plant hormones cause the tumourous phenotype that is characterised by the ability of the plant cells to proliferate limitlessly and autonomously, even in the absence of added phytohormones. Crown gall tumours are characterised by the production of opines (derivatives of amino-acids). The biosynthesis of opines is catalysed by opine synthase enzymes, which are encoded by the T-DNA. Opines are formed in the tumours can be metabolised by the tumourigenic agrobacteria, but not by most other soil organisms. Thus, Agrobacterium creates for itself a favourable niche by genetic modification plant cells.

38. which one will affect efficiency of expression study of foreign gene in Ecoli : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 38. which one will affect efficiency of expression study of foreign gene in Ecoli presence of introns Sequence acting as termination signals in E.Coli codon bias All of above Introns: The foreign gene might contain introns.Since the E.coli does not have introns the host would not have proper machinery to remove introns from transcripts. The foreign gene might also contain sequences that act as termination signals in E.coli.These sequences might be completely innocuous in normal cell but in E.coli results in premature termination and loss of gene expression. Codon bias: tRNA availabilty is addressed,the highly expressed genes will have codons corresponding to abundant tRNAs and the genes expressed at low levels use codon for less abundant tRNA. Equalization of codon-anticodon hydrogen bonding. In cases where there is a choice of synonymous codon,selection would be to avoid very strong and weak interaction with anticodon,which decreases the translation efficiency. A variety of factors affect the expression of foreign proteins in Escherichia coli. These include: promoter strength, efficiency of ribosome binding, stability of the foreign protein in E. coli, location of the foreign protein in E. coli, the codons used to encode the foreign protein, the metabolic state of the cell, and the location, stability and copy number of the foreign gene.

39. Promoter used for control of cloned genes in saccharomyces cerevisiae : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 39. Promoter used for control of cloned genes in saccharomyces cerevisiae gal pho5 cup1 All of above Cloned genes in S. cerevisiae are placed under the control of GAL promoter which is normally upstream of the gene coding galactose epimerase (an enzyme for galactose metabolism). The GAL promoter is induced by Galactose. PHO5 promoters are regulated by the phosphate level in growth medium. CUP1 is induced by copper.

40. Repression of lac operon is not caused due to : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 40. Repression of lac operon is not caused due to absence of lactose mutation in operator functional I gene on it functional I gene on another DNA in cell cis-acting locus - a genetic region affecting the activity of genes on that same DNA molecule Such a locus usually does not code for a protein but instead acts as a binding site for trans-acting proteins. Jacob and Monod proposed the "operator element" in the lac operon. - If mutated this operator element should be dominant in cis in that it only affects the genes on the same chromosome (directly adjacent to it). - It will not be dominant in trans. OC is dominant in the cis position - no diffusible product. cis dominance - the ability of locus to influence the expression of one or more adjacent loci on the same chromosome, as occurs in lac operator mutants of E.coli

41. which one is not encoded by structural gene of lac operon : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 41. which one is not encoded by structural gene of lac operon ß-galactosidase galactosidase acetylase galactosidase permease thio-galactosidase transacetylase lacZ encodes ß-galactosidase, an intracellular enzyme that cleaves the disaccharide lactose into glucose and galactose. lacY encodes ß-galactoside permease, a membrane-bound transport protein that pumps lactose into the cell. lacA encodes ß-galactoside transacetylase, an enzyme that transfers an acetyl group from acetyl-CoA to ß-galactosides

42. Which of the phage never cause cell lysis? : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 42. Which of the phage never cause cell lysis? M13 Lambda F-X174 none Bacteriophage lambda has two different life cycles. It can infect its host, E. coli, replicate and synthesize new phage, then lysing and killing the host as the phage burst from the cell. Or, the phage can infect the cell and enter a dormant phase within the cell in which the phage is present but its genes are generally not being expressed. Then under certain circumstances, the phage will leave dormancy and resume lytic growth. Coliphage F-X174 encodes a single lysis protein, E, a 91 amino acid membrane protein,which is a specific inhibitor of Mra Y gene involved in peptidoglycan synthesis. Filamentous hages like M13 and Ff are not lytic.Some of these phages become prophages by integrating into the genome,others remain as episomal or plasmid like prophages and establish a pseudolysogenic relationship with host,when they do not integrate but continuously produce progeny.

43. Examples of regulon are : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 43. Examples of regulon are SOS response to DNA damage heat shock gene system sugar metabolism system All of above In eukaryotes, a genetic unit consisting of a noncontiguous group of genes under the control of a single regulator gene. In bacteria, regulons are global regulatory systems involved in the interplay of pleiotropic regulatory domains and consist of several OPERONS. When bacteria are exposed to stress they can produce many defence proteins which genes are normally in a repressed state and that allow repair of damaged DNA and reactivation of DNA synthesis, and that these processes are connected with mutation. Since emotionally he was bound with the sea he called this phenomenon the SOS response, after Save Our Souls. Heat shock regulons contain a group of heat shock proteins (stress proteins). They are induced when a cell undergoes various types of environmental stresses like heat, cold and oxygen deprivation. For example, HSPs help new or distorted proteins fold into shape, which is essential for their function.

44. In HSP which s subunit mediates RNA polymerase binding to promoter : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 44. In HSP which s subunit mediates RNA polymerase binding to promoter s70 s32 s54 s90 Different ss have different affinities for variant promoters. * s70 - general purpose. * s54 - nitrogen metabolism. * s32 - heat shock proteins. * sS - stationary phase. * sF - flagella.

45. What is the function of Alkaline phosphatase and polynucleotide kinase : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 45. What is the function of Alkaline phosphatase and polynucleotide kinase Removes phosphate group from 5' end and add at 5' end respectively Removes phosphate from 3' end and adds at 3' end respectively Adds phosphate at 5' end and removes from 5' end respectively Adds phosphate at 3' end and removes from 3' end respectively Alkaline phosphatase removes 5' phosphate groups from DNA and RNA. It will also remove phosphates from nucleotides and proteins. These enzymes are most active at alkaline pH - hence the name. Polynucleotide kinase (PNK) is an enzyme that catalyzes the transfer of a phosphate from ATP to the 5' end of either DNA or RNA.

46. Similarity between chain termination and chemical degradation method of sequencing : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 46. Similarity between chain termination and chemical degradation method of sequencing use double stranded DNA Need Primer Degrades the DNA none See Next slide for the explanation. use double stranded DNA – maxim gilbert method (chemical degradation method) Need Primer – Sanger method (chain termination method) Degrades the DNA - (chemical degradation method)

Slide 54 : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG Sanger method Chain termination

47. which will negatively effect lac operon expression : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 47. which will negatively effect lac operon expression lactose less glucose concentration reased binding of cAMP and CRP decrease in concentration of c-AMP The activity of RNA polymerase also depends on the presence of another DNA-binding protein called catabolite activator protein or CAP.CAP can bind to DNA only when cAMP is bound to CAP. so when cAMP levels in the cell are low, CAP fails to bind DNA and thus RNA polymerase cannot begin its work, even in the absence of the repressor.

Slide 56 : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG

48. s subunit is a type of : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 48. s subunit is a type of specificity factor repressor activator none Bacterial RNA polymerases are best characterised in Thermus aquaticus. The five subunits are: * aI aII - required for DNA binding and assembly. * ß ß' - needed for DNA binding (contains basic amino acid residues) and catalysis. * ? - stabilises ß' binding. * s - forms holoenzyme. s stimulates tight binding between RNA polymerase and a promoter.Hence it is the specificity factor. A repressor is a DNA-binding protein that regulates the expression of one or more genes by decreasing the rate of transcription. An activator is a DNA-binding protein that regulates one or more genes by increasing the rate of transcription.

49. Vector used in first cloning experiment in mammalian cell was based on : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 49. Vector used in first cloning experiment in mammalian cell was based on SV 40 BPV adenovirus retrovirus Animal virus vectors also deliver the foreign genes into the cultured cells which get integrated into the host genome. The expression of foreign genes can also be amplified using the promoters of the virus gene. The cloned genes can be used in gene therapy, for the synthesis of important proteins etc. A vector based on Simian Virus 40 (SV 40) was used in the first cloning experiment involving mammalian cells in 1979. SV40 is capable of infecting several mammalian species following a lytic cycle in some hosts and lysogenic in some. Adenovirus are bigger viruses and are capable of cloning 8KB fragments. BPV Bovine papilloma virus has an unusual infection in mouse cells taking the form of multicopy plasmid with about 100 copies per cell. BPV molecules are passed on to daughter cells.They do not cause death in mouse.

50. Full form of HART is : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 50. Full form of HART is Hybridization and retranslation Hybrid arrest translation Hybridization and retranscription High affinity restriction technique

51. HRT and HART depend on : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 51. HRT and HART depend on bacterial cell translation eukaryptic cell translation both prokaryot and eukaryotic cell translation cell free translation Both HRT and HART rely on hybridising cloned DNA fragments to mRNA of the cell or tissue from which the clones have been derived.In both cases the identity Protein, hence the gene can be determined by examining the gels.

Slide 61 : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG HRT HART

52. Shotgun cloning is appropriate for : 5-Feb-09 BIOTECNIKA.ORG 52. Shotgun cloning is appropriate for prokaryotes eukaryotes both none Prokaryotes contain complete and uninterrupted ORFs - therefore prokaryote genes can be cloned directly from genomic DNA. Most eukaryotes have ORFs which are divided into coding (exon) and non-coding (intron) sequences – therefore these genes cannot be cloned directly from genomic DNA - these require cDNA cloning.

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