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1.)A.)The lac operon is inducible by the presence of lactose. Loss-of-function mutations in the lacI gene, which encodes the lac repressor (pick all that apply):


A.)slow down the isomerization of lactose into allolactose
B.)decrease the amount of permease activity in the cell in the presence of lactose.
C.)prevent loss-of-function lacZ mutations from making the lac operon uninducible
D.)are recessive to wild type

B.)Mutations that eliminate the lacO operator site (pick all that apply):

A.)slow down the isomerization of lactose into allolactose
B.)decrease the amount of beta-galactosidase in the cell in the presence of lactose
C.)prevent lacS superrepressor mutations from making the lac operon uninducible
D.)are recessive to wild type

C.)Loss-of-function mutations in the lacZ gene, which encodes beta-galactosidase (pick all that apply):

A.)slow down the isomerization of lactose into allolactose
B.)decrease the amount of permease activity in the cell in the presence of lactose
C.)prevent lac repressor from binding the lacO operator site
D.)prevent IPTG from inducing the lac operon

D.)You are studying the Tory operon, which encodes the TorA and TorB genes, and is normally inducible by Torose. You find a mutation, m1, that causes the Tory operon to be uninducible. You examine the merodiploid (m1 TorA+ TorB-)/(+ ToryA- TorB+) and find that Tor A is uninducible and TorB is inducible. You conclude that:

A.)m1 acts in cis
B.)m1 acts in trans

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Nestor Rutherford
Nestor RutherfordLv2
28 Sep 2019
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