Answer:
tertiary; quaternary
Explanation:
The orientation of all the atoms of a protein in three dimensions represents its tertiary structure. It includes the folding of the polypeptide chains in a way that brings are far apart amino acids of its secondary structure close together. Various segments of a polypeptide chain interact to form tertiary structures and these segments are held together by different kinds of weak interactions.
However, disulfide cross-links between the segments of polypeptide chains also stabilize the tertiary structure of some proteins. Likewise, disulfide bonds also hold the protein subunits of some proteins together and thereby, contribute to the quaternary structure. For example, two light chains of an antibody are joined together by disulfide bonds.
Answer:
The correct answer is option b. "cause a change in the reading frame of mRNA codons".
Explanation:
Frameshift mutations are among the most drastic mutations because in most cases, result in the translation of a completely different protein. Frameshift mutations are the result of insertions or deletion of one or more nucleotides, resulting in a change in the reading frame of mRNA codons. In consequence, the ribosome translates a different amino acid sequence, based on the new reading frame of mRNA codons.
Complete question
- It has to be E. coli because it is positive for gapA
- It can't be Salmonella, because it is negative for the invA marker but still makes people sick
- It has to be used because it is positive for the apeE marker
Answer:
<u>1. It can't be Salmonella, because it is negative for the invA marker but still makes people sick </u>
- A combination of positive results from the multiplex PCR inva, apee and gapa is used to definitively identify Salmonella.
- Pathogenic, or disease causing Salmonella is definitely not present, as inva is required for it to be pathogenic. The test did not detect the inva sequence, thus it is truly negative for this particular pathogen.
<u>2. It has to be E. coli because it is positive for gapA </u>
- E. coli may be present, as gapa was detected- a presumptive positive. However, this may need to be definitively determined through further methods of sample analysis, such as 2D-gel electrophoresis.
- apee may belong to another type of bacteria present within the initial sample, or there may be sample contamination
Explanation:
Polymerase chain reactions, PCRs are a form of nucleic acid amplification testing NAAT that exploit the mechanism of transcription by using a thermostable DNA polymerase. These require a sample of genetic material such as RNA or DNA; specific regions of the gene sequence are targeted for replication by primers. In the presence of these specific gene sequences, the primers make billions of copies of the sequences.
However, if these gene sequences are absent, the primers are not capable of identifying and amplifying the sequence. This reaction is highly specific. Positives obtained have a high chance of being true positives and negatives have a high chance of being true negatives
.
Pathogens or infectious agents that are capable of causing disease i.e. making people sick. Both E. coli and Salmonella are genuses of enteric bacteria capable of causing disease via fecal contamination. Common symptoms include
- abdominal cramps
- vomiting
- fever
- diarrhea
This test would include primers for the detection of each sequence: gapa, apee, inva. Salmonella's inva was not detected, thus it is not present.
Further steps may include a 2 D gel electrophoresis- here an electrical current is utilized to separate bands of DNA within the sample. This should correspond with an expected DNA size in base pairs or bp for E.coli- this should be determined by running the sample in the gel with a positive control, containing genetic material for E coli, and a negative control, of purified water to determine contamination.