TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 13094


You are studying a specific gene in yeast, and you want to express that yeast gene in E. coli. Your task is to design a strategy to insert the yeast gene into the bacterial plasmid. Below is a map of the area of the yeast genome surrounding the gene in which you are interested.
 
The distance between each tick mark placed on the line above is 100 bases in length
Below are the enzymes you can use, with their specific cut sites shown 5’-XXXXXX-3’ 3’-XXXXXX-5’
 
The plasmid is 5,000 bases long and the two farthest restriction enzyme sites are 200 bases apart. The plasmid has an ampicillin resistance gene somewhere on the plasmid distal from the restriction cut sites.
                                     
You transform your ligation planned in which two restriction enzymes would you use to design a way to get the insert into the vector if you had to use two enzymes simultaneously, into bacteria and plate the bacteria on Petri plates containing ampicillin. (You actually transform six different ligation mixtures, which are described below, into six different populations of cells, and plate each transformation onto a different plate, because you want to do all of the correct controls.) The next day you come in to lab to look at how many colonies of bacteria are on each plate. You are really excited, because the number of colonies you see on each plate tells you that the entire procedure worked! Which of the three following patterns of number of colonies did you see in order to conclude that you had a successful transformation?
In this table, DV = digested vector. DYG = digested yeast genome.
 
a) Pattern-1, DV only + Ligase→No colonies b/c you have digested with 2 different restriction enzymes that can’t ligate together 
b) Pattern-2, DYG only + Ligase→ No colonies because all you transformed is the digested, linear yeast DNA.
c) Pattern-3, Water + Ligase→ No plasmid with the ampicillin resistance gene (or any DNA) was transformed into the bacteria and so it won’t grow in the presence of ampicillin.
d)Pattern-3, DV + DYG + Ligase→Colonies. The plasmid and yeast gene can ligate together to form a functional plasmid that will express the ampicillin resistance gene.
e) Pattern-1 and 2 only, DV + DYG (No Ligase) →No colonies because, although you have both digested plasmid and a digested yeast gene with complementary sticky ends
Which of the following statements about these ligations and their pattern is correct?

#Unit 13. Methods in Biology
  1. A and C
  2. C and D
  3. D and E
  4. B, D and E
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TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 2203

#Unit 2. Cellular Organization

Parietal cells acidify the stomach contents while maintaining a neutral cytosolic pH by: 

a. exporting “excess” cytosolic OH– as HCO3–.
b. exchanging HCO3– for Cl–.
c. preserving electroneutrality by accompanying the movement of each Cl– ion into the stomach lumen by a K+.
d. the excess K+ ions pumped inward by the H+/K+ ATPase are returned to the stomach lumen, thus maintaining the normal intracellular K+ concentration.
Which of the following combination is correct?

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 2204

#Unit 2. Cellular Organization

A mutant channel protein is expressed in an oocyte. Compared to patch clamping experiments in oocytes expressing the normal channel, the length of downward deviations is diminished by half. This indicates:

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 2205

#Unit 2. Cellular Organization

Amino acid entry into cells can occur via uniporters or symporters. If the rate of leucine entry into the cell increases when the pH decreases, this suggests:

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 2206

#Unit 2. Cellular Organization

The glucose uniporter GLUT1 has a Km of 1.5 mM for D-glucose and 30 mM for D-galactose.  At a concentration of 5 mM for each, what is the rate of glucose transport relative to galactose transport?  The Vmax may be assumed to be the same for both.

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 2207

#Unit 2. Cellular Organization

Why was it unexpected that transporter proteins are required for transmembrane fatty acid transport?

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 2208

#Unit 2. Cellular Organization

Which of the following statements is a reasonable explanation for why unsaturated fatty acids help keep a membrane more fluid at lower temperatures?