In DNA-hybridization experiments on six species of plants in the genus Vicia, DN
ID: 227311 • Letter: I
Question
In DNA-hybridization experiments on six species of plants in the genus Vicia, DNA was isolated from each of the six species, denatured by heating, and sheared into small fragments (W. Y. Chooi. 1971. Genetics 68:213–230). In one experiment, DNA from each species and from E. coli was allowed to renature. The graph below shows the results of this renaturation experiment.
(Problem 37a) In DNA-hybridization experiments on six species of plants in the genus Vicia, DNA was isolated from each of the six species, denatured by heating, and sheared into small fragments (W. Y. Chooi. 1971. Genetics 68:213–230). In one experiment, DNA from each species and from E. coli was allowed to renature. The graph below shows the results of this renaturation experiment.
Can you explain why the E. coli DNA renatures at a much faster rate than does DNA from all of the Vicia species?
Explanation / Answer
Answer: (A)
The E. coli DNA sequences renature faster because the smaller E. coli genome results in a higher copy number than the plant DNA sequences for the same amount of DNA.
Explanation:
The E. coli genome is far smaller than the genomes of the plant species and therefore has lower complexity. Given the same concentration of DNA, the E. coli DNA sequences are at higher copy number than the plant DNA sequences, and therefore renature faster.