Guest Meninger Posted April 24, 2003 Posted April 24, 2003 I am currently enrolled in molecular genetics taught by Don Meninger (Harvard graduate) who has worked with scientists such as Messelson, Holliday, and such. This is one of his questions which I thought was a bit confusing at first. He seems to think that the question makes perfect sense. It may be a bit difficult for some of you nevertheless it is a practical problem having to do with practical logic skills which does not require one to be proficient in genetics. After you answer the question, please comment on a scale of 1-5 on how difficult you thought the question was and if there was any ambiguity in how the question was phrased. E coli has a base content of A=.247, G=.260, T=.236, C=.257. Recombination hot spots (X sites) are reported to exist every 5000 base pairs. Is the distribution of X sites random? Briefly explain your answer. The chi site sequence is 5' GCTGGTGG 3'.{for those of you who don't remember, dna is made up of four different kinds of nucleotides, each different nucleotide made up of either A, G, T, or C}
Guest cjdf Posted July 9, 2003 Posted July 9, 2003 Interesting question...I just thought I would hazard an logical educated guess to it for a laugh....this how i would try and answer it.... E. coli - prokaryotic, mostly coding sequence. Distribution of four bases is approximately equal - i.e each base accounts for approximately a quarter of the strands. The chi sequence given is 75% G/C and 25% A/T, therefore presumably the X sites would be restricted to areas of high GC content and therefore NOT random. Probably a messy answer but I'd be interested to see if its what you got, or to compare it to anyone elses...?
Dr_666 Posted June 27, 2005 Posted June 27, 2005 Let's assume that the frequency of each nucleotide is about 1/4 (0.25). The probability of getting the GCTGGTGG sequence just by chance would be: (1/4)^8 = 0.25 to the power of 8 = 0,000015 that means 1 every 65536 sequences of eight nucleotides. You find that sequence every 5000, so they happen less often than they would be expected just by chance. Hope this helps.
Bluenoise Posted June 27, 2005 Posted June 27, 2005 Given this frequency of bases the sequence would appear randomly every 249151.8567 bases.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now