In this chapter, we focused on how DNA is organized at the chromosomal level.
Along the way, we found many opportunities to consider the methods and
reasoning by which much of this information was acquired. From the
explanations given in the chapter, what answers would you propose to the
following fundamental questions:
(a) How do we know that viral and bacterial chromosomes most often consist of
circular DNA molecules devoid of protein?
(b) What is the experimental basis for concluding that puffs in polytene
chromosomes and loops in lampbrush chromosomes are areas of intense
transcription of RNA?
(c) How did we learn that eukaryotic chromatin exists in the form of repeating
nucleosomes, each consisting of about 200 base pairs and an octamer of
histones?
(d) How do we know that satellite DNA consists of repetitive sequences and has
been derived from regions of the centromere?