DNA experiments Flashcards
Describe the Mendelian laws of inheritance
- Segregation: genes come in pairs, and individuals only pass on one of these to their offspring
- Independent assortment: different genes are passed on separately from each other → inheritance of one does not depend on that of another
- dominance: an individual with two alleles of a gene will express the dominant form
Describe segregation
genes come in pairs, and individuals only pass on one of these to their offspring
Describe independent assortment
different genes are passed on separately from each other → inheritance of one does not depend on that of another
Describe dominance
an individual with two alleles of a gene will express the dominant form
Which experiment provided a physical basis for Mendel’s independent assortment?
Sutton-Boveri theory of chromosomal inheritance (1902)
Describe Griffith’s 1928 ‘Transforming principle’ experiment?
Can rough bacteria be transformed into smooth ones?
Smooth = Pathogenic
Rough = Not pathogenic
1. Kill S bacteria by heating them to high temps.
2. Inject S bacteria = no infection
3. Inject S strain + R strain = infection, mouse dies → Live S strain is recovered
What were the results of Griffith’s 1928 ‘transforming principle’ experiment?
- Inoculation with dead S bacteria and live R bacteria = infection with a polysaccharide coat
- R cells have undergone a ‘transformation’ → hereditary material has passed from the S bacteria to the R bacteria, changing the genotype.
Describe how Avery, Macleod & Mccarthy (1944) tested which molecules are responsible for the transformation Griffith observed
- They systematically destroyed each component of the S strain using enzymes (that are specific to each type of molecule) then combined with R strain to test for transformation
= In order for bacteria to be virulent, they need the DNA encoding for the polysaccharide coat but not the polysaccharides themselves
Outline Hershey & Chase’s bacteriophage experiment
- Used bacteriophage T2
1. Label bacteriophage DNA or protein by growing them in radioactive medium (containing phosphorous-32 / sulfur-35)
2. Infect unlabelled bacteria with radioactive phage
3. Separate phage ghosts from infected bacteria using a blender
4. Centrifuge to separate phage ghosts (supernatant) and bacteria (pellet) by weight
5. Test radioactivity with a Geiger counter
What were the results of Hershey & Chase’s bacteriophage experiment?
Radioactivity found in phage ghosts (labelled protein)
Radioactivity found in bacteria (labelled DNA)
= Radioactive DNA is carried over from gen to gen