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Bimolecular Homework Help

This document provides 9 practice problems related to bimolecular homework involving DNA, proteins, peptides, inorganic and organic materials, and biological assembly techniques. Students are asked to propose experiments and designs to isolate DNA sequences, template inorganic materials for bone growth, align carbon nanotubes using biological molecules, test for life on Mars, self-assemble layered materials, encapsulate and deliver DNA, and use peptides to bind gold nanoparticles.
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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
14 views

Bimolecular Homework Help

This document provides 9 practice problems related to bimolecular homework involving DNA, proteins, peptides, inorganic and organic materials, and biological assembly techniques. Students are asked to propose experiments and designs to isolate DNA sequences, template inorganic materials for bone growth, align carbon nanotubes using biological molecules, test for life on Mars, self-assemble layered materials, encapsulate and deliver DNA, and use peptides to bind gold nanoparticles.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Problems
Practice Set C

1. Suppose you want to capture a specific DNA sequence out a collection of


25 sequences in a test tube.

a) at approach would you take to isolate the sequence?


b) What simple test would you do to know that you have bound and isolated
the sequence?
c) What variables could you use to test for less than perfect matches?
d) What would be the consequence of having AT-rich versus GC rich
sequences?
2. You have the idea to enhance bone material Ca3(PO4)2 at the site of a
bone injury. You know that natural proteins in the bone act to template the
crystal structure of these materials. You decide to make some synthetic
peptides to increase bone deposition at a particular location.

a) What types of amino acid sequences would you expect to see for these
proteins?

b) Design a self-assembled monolayer system to practice templating bone.

c) Consider ways to deliver your synthetic peptide to a bone location that


requires healing.
3. Propose a mechanism for aligning a carbon nanotube between two gold
electrodes using any biological molecules. You don’t have to synthesize the
electrodes and you can order them in any size and spacing you need.

4. You are working for NASA and a Mars rock is brought in that under
inspection with a scanning electron microscope contains 2-micrometer
spherical objects that are thought to be a life form. Using typical bacterial
growth media you are able to get the spheres to reproduce. Devise a set of
experiments to see what biological materials are responsible for carrying
the genetic information. Think about the “transforming principle”
experiments.

5. Design a system that would allow you to self-assemble and template an


inorganic material above and below an organic layer. Yellow is inorganic, red
is organic

6. Design an experiment to self-assemble in inorganic sphere with an


organic interior.
7. Design an experiment to assemble an organic outer layer with an interior
inorganic material.

8. Design an experiment to assemble a sphere with an inorganic exterior an


organic middle and an inorganic interior.

8. Design a material that could encapsulate a DNA molecule of interest and


target it to be delivered to a tumor cell.

9. Give an example of a 5 amino acid peptide that could only bind one gold
particle. Give an example of a 5 amino acid peptide that could bind two gold
particles.
How would you design the
follow structures out of DNA,
label the ends
Solutions:

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