Skip to main content

The Hershey-Chase Experiment exam Flashcards

Back
The Hershey-Chase Experiment exam
1/29

Related practice sets

More sets
  • Hershey-Chase Experiment

    An experiment in 1952 that confirmed DNA is the genetic material, not protein.
  • Bacteriophage

    A virus that infects and replicates within bacteria.
  • What did the Hershey-Chase experiment use to label viral proteins?

    Radioactive sulfur.
  • What did the Hershey-Chase experiment use to label viral DNA?

    Radioactive phosphorus.
  • What was the main conclusion of the Hershey-Chase experiment?

    DNA is the genetic material, not protein.
  • What remained outside the bacterial cells during the Hershey-Chase experiment?

    The viral protein coat.
  • What entered the bacterial cells during the Hershey-Chase experiment?

    The viral DNA.
  • Alfred Hershey

    One of the scientists who conducted the Hershey-Chase experiment.
  • Martha Chase

    One of the scientists who conducted the Hershey-Chase experiment.
  • What did the Hershey-Chase experiment resolve?

    The debate over whether DNA or protein is the genetic material.
  • What is the significance of the Hershey-Chase experiment in molecular biology?

    It established DNA as the carrier of genetic information.
  • What is a nucleic acid core?

    The central part of a bacteriophage containing DNA or RNA.
  • What did scientists initially believe could be the genetic material before the Hershey-Chase experiment?

    Proteins.
  • What did the radioactive sulfur label in the Hershey-Chase experiment?

    The viral protein coat.
  • What did the radioactive phosphorus label in the Hershey-Chase experiment?

    The viral DNA.
  • What did the Hershey-Chase experiment demonstrate about bacteriophage infection?

    Only viral DNA enters the bacterial cell, not the protein coat.
  • What is the external protein coat of a bacteriophage?

    The outer layer of a bacteriophage that surrounds the nucleic acid core.
  • What was the method used to trace viral particles in the Hershey-Chase experiment?

    Radioactive labeling.
  • What did the Hershey-Chase experiment confirm about the role of DNA?

    DNA serves as the genetic material.
  • What did the Hershey-Chase experiment show about the viral protein coat?

    It remains outside the bacterial cell during infection.
  • What was the key evidence from the Hershey-Chase experiment?

    Radioactively labeled DNA was found inside bacterial cells.
  • What did the Hershey-Chase experiment use to infect bacteria?

    Bacteriophages.
  • What was the controversy before the Hershey-Chase experiment?

    Whether DNA or protein was the genetic material.
  • What did the Hershey-Chase experiment help to understand?

    The mechanism of bacteriophage infection.
  • What did the Hershey-Chase experiment use to differentiate between DNA and protein?

    Radioactive isotopes.
  • What was the role of bacteriophages in the Hershey-Chase experiment?

    To demonstrate that DNA is the genetic material.
  • What did the Hershey-Chase experiment contribute to genetics?

    It provided conclusive evidence that DNA is the genetic material.
  • What did the Hershey-Chase experiment reveal about the nature of genetic material?

    That it is DNA, not protein.
  • What was the impact of the Hershey-Chase experiment on scientific skepticism?

    It convinced most scientists that DNA is the genetic material.