Con A adsorbs strongly to the membrane, yet the HRP protein binds only slightly. If HRP bound as strongly to the membrane as Con A, then the assay may not be possible unless an intermediate step was done. What would that intermediate step be?
Con A adsorbs strongly to the membrane, yet the HRP protein binds only slightly. If HRP...
3. Con A adsorbs strongly to the membrane, yet the HRP* protein binds only slightly. If HRP bound as strongly to the membrane as Con A, then the assay may not be pos- sible unless an intermediate step was done. What would that intermediate step be?
*Biochemistry Lab Question 1. Chromatography columns have a limited protein binding capacity (Consider not overloading the column) Yet you may have noticed that the Wash fraction fluoresced slightly. If you see a band in the Western Blot Wash lane, what does this data say about the physical protein structure of rGFP in that lane? Give a possible MW for this band. 2. (4pts) If overloaded the Ni+2 Agarose column with a crude extract sample that contained too much rGFP, would...
n 13 You have found a mutant that has a G-protein that can only bind GDP and cannot bind GTP. Which of the following might you expect in the mutant cells? red ed out of ag question Select one: a. The secondary messenger would be made constantly. b. The cells would have more energy availability due to higher GTP binding. c. The secondary messenger would not be made. O d. The primary messenger would not be able to bind to...
Developmental Biology Help! Please answer all the questions 1) We discussed the fact that each stripe expression pattern is affected by the enhancer region that is utilized. Knowing that the maternal genes and the gap genes can both contribute to the pair-rule genes, and that in many cases multiple stripes may be contained in one area of GAP, how does the embryo have definition of stripes if all of these transcription factors can be within the same cell A it...
1. What is the argument pattern of the following passage (i.e., only the very last inferential step)? Note that the component statements have been broken down and numbered for you. (1) <Composites hold the key for new aircraft and spacecraft designs.> This is the case because (2) <They are stronger than aluminum> and (3) < [they are also] lighter than aluminum.> (Assume for the purposes of this exercise that material lightness and strength are both required together to make new...
QUESTION 1 Although SARS-CoV-2 is currently a global health threat, how might we turn it into a tool for biotechnology? a. It could possibly be turned into a viral vector against lung cancers b. Its promoters might be used to express genes in lung cells c. Its surface proteins could be used for new epitope tags d. All of the above QUESTION 2 Which of the following are applications of molecular assembly described in this course? a. It can be...
Molecular Bio lab. HELP!!
Here is the first part: the sequence traces and the entire
sequence. i just need the last 3 tasks. i color coded the ends so
you can see where it overlaps and connects
In the files section for your group there is a simulated output from an automated DNA sequencer using a variation of the classic Sanger method. (If you want to print it, it is formatted for legal sized paper.) This sequence encodes a protein...
As you know, a numeric type in C is only an approximation to the mathematical entity due to bit-size limitations. The goal of this lab is to deal with real problems caused by such differences. Along the way, you will also get more practice using loops. Recall that n! (read n factorial) is defined to be (1)(2)(3)(4)...(n-1)(n). Many useful computer science problems require the computation of C(n,k) (read n choose k) which is defined as: n! / (k! * (n-k)!),...
2. hypothesize the best conditions (pH and temperature) under
which the enzyme chymotrypsin functions with an appropriate
reference. also, hypothesize what will occur in the presence of an
inhibitor and the type of inhibition.
EXPERIMENT 5: ENZYME ACTIVITY WITH a-CHYMOTRYPSIN Prelab Assignment 1. Prepare a flow chart, covering one half of the experimental work (either part A and C if your lab bench is on the window side of the lab or part B and D if your locker is...
Denise Stubbs, the Nancy Drew of forensic accounting, sat in her office pondering yet another financial mystery. Her client, Candace Goodwell, owns Salon Select and the building and land on which the building sits. The retiree, who spends her winters in Florida and her summers in New York, had just left Denise’s office after discussing a matter that was particularly troubling. Candace had relied on her office manager, D Maxwell, who had been with her for years, to obtain bids...