1. Bacteria are haploid but there can still be recombination and gene exchange. How? What are...
1. Describe two kinds of recombination in eukaryotes. True of False 2._____ A recessive phenotype can be expressed by some progeny of a monohybrid cross. 3._____ Epistatic genes may result from dominant or recessive alleles. 4._____ At a single locus, a diploid individual may have more than two different alleles. 5. _____ A temperature-sensitive allele is an example of a genotype x environment interaction. 6. _____ All of the genetic material in a eukaryotic cell is found in the nucleus....
1. In a transformation experiment, E. coli uptake pRGLO plasmids that carry GFP gene. The transformed bacterial cells are grown on an ampicillin-treated agar plate. Which of the following is considered as a vector? GFP gene C E. coli cell c ampicillin-treated agar plate 0.5 points QUESTION 2 1. What is the function of bla gene? Break down the ampicillin Regulate the transcription of GFP gene Express the fluorescent trait in bacteria Control the uptake of DNA molecules in bacteria...
Q1) Which of the following best describes a haplotype? a variant form of a particular gene a combination of two alleles present at a single locus for a diploid individual A combination of alleles at multiple loci on the same chromosome or chromosome region a chromosomal region that experiences high recombination Q2) Two alleles in an individual are identical-by-descent (IBD) if they're homozygous, irrespective of their ancestry their phenotypic effects are the same as was experienced in the ancestor they're...
How many different “alleles” of a gene can there be? How many versions of a single gene can an individual inherit? Explain why these numbers are different.
What is a gene? Describe the function, structure, and location within the cell. What are the three stop codons? What is the start codon? Compare and contrast bacterial and eukaryotic ribosomes. Do a web search to find another example of a disease caused by a mutation in a single gene. Do the resulting symptoms (new trait) make sense considering the role of the affected protein? Why or why not? Transformation, conjugation, and transduction were discovered in the laboratory. How important...
produce haploid gametes; then those gametes can fuse to form a diploid zygote. 35. What is another purpose of meiosis other than stated in the question above? 36. How many cell divisions are involved in meiosis? (two) Do the cells also go through 37. What are homologous chromosomes? Do they contain the same alleles (different 38. How do homologous chromosomes line up on the metaphase plate in meiosis 1? How do 39. Understand the basic steps of meiosis. Please use...
Each bean represents a single allele. If the organisms in the
population are diploid (they have two alleles for each gene), how
many individuals are in the population?Since each bean represents a single allele:What allele does the black (or red) bean represent?What allele does the brown (or white) bean represent?What color combination of two beans represents a:homozygous dominant individual?Homozygous recessive individual?Heterozygous individual?What additional information do yall need?
How do the genomes of Archaea and Bacteria compare? Drag and
drop the phrases on the left to complete the sentences on the
right.
Part D Genome size of Archaea versus Bacteria How do the genomes of Archaea and Bacteria compare? Drag and drop the phrases on the left to complete the sentences on the right. Reset Help is/are larger than 1. Just by knowing that the Thaumarchaeota are Archaea, it isare smaller than those of s possible to predict...
Firstly I could do with a brief description of mitochondrial DNA. How does the structure of DNA in mitochondria compare to animal DNA (for the sake of simplicity let's say human - some animals might have unusual DNA structure) and what living organism is the mitochondrial genome most akin to? (Circular like bacteria maybe?) and are the mitochondria within a single human homogenous? Secondly, and most importantly to my aim, does the mitochondrial genome recombine in anyway? Is the process...
1. Genetic variation _____. A. is created by the direct action of natural selection B. must be present in a population before natural selection can act upon the population C. arises in response to changes in the environment D. tends to be reduced by when diploid organisms produce gametes 2. What is a genetic correlation? A. When selection favoring alleles for one trait causes a correlated but suboptimal change in an allele for another trait. B. When two offspring inherit...