Name: Date: Retinoic Acid/Embryo Laboratory Exam 1. What is the difference between a qualitative and a quantitative observation? A quantitative observation is one in which a numerical value can be assigned, while a qualitative observation depicts the quality or characteristic of an object. Examples: length vs color 2. Chronologically order the following research activities: (1 - first > 9 - last step) 5 acquire test equipment and specimens 3 review the scholarly literature on the research problem 9 confirm or revise hypothesis, and plan future experiment 7 analyze data by creating plots, comparing between experiment conditions 1 define the problem or research question 6 collect data from experimental system 8 interpret mean/significance of data 2 form an initial hypothesis 4 revise initial hypothesis in light of literature findings 3. A congenital defect is a health problem or physical abnormality that arises during development. 4. What does regulation of gene expression mean? The controlled activation and deactivation of genes needed for the synthesis of proteins. Gene expression can differ according to location in body(spatial), time of life(temporal), and stimulatory factor(such as RA). *Teacher s note the main idea is that students connect genes with protein production] 5. Retinoic acid is a metabolite of what vitamin? a) vitamin A b) vitamin B c) vitamin C d) vitamin D e) vitamin E 1
6. How did retinoic acid affect the developing chick embryo? (Name at least 3 effects) 1) stunted growth, 2) caused recession of vasculature, 3) effected eye pigmentation, 4) the 2mg/ml terminated embryo, 5) rate of growth decreased approximately 2 fold 7. In the context of causing birth defects, is elevated retinoic acid an environmental or a genetic factor? Explain. Retinoic acid induces defects in this case as an environmental factor. No genetic information has been removed or added to the chick embryo hence this is not a genetic factor. At the same time, retinoic acid regulates the expression of numerous genes, but this is different from directly manipulating the genome. Match the following vocabulary words with the correct definition: I teratogen A. formation and differential growth of an organism during development D birth defects B. lack of a particular quantity; often used in the context of nutrition A morphogenesis C. any substance produced during the process of metabolism C metabolite D. structural or functional abnormalities present at birth resulting in physical or mental disability B deficiency H gestation F endemic E. a logical incompatibility between two ideas, statements, or propositions F. natural to or characteristic of a specific people or place G. the proportion of sickness in a particular geographical location E contradiction H. the carrying of developing embryos in the womb; feature of mammalian reproduction G morbidity I. any agent that can disturb the development of an embryo or fetus 8. In our experiment, we examined only 1 embryo for each condition. Is this a sufficient number of specimens to draw conclusions from? Why or why not. No. Due to the potential variability between individual embryos, replicates of these test conditions must be performed before we can consider the results to be conclusive. Nevertheless, our results can be considered as preliminary data supporting the ill effects of excess vitamin A exposure. 2
Embryo Area, mm 2 9. The table below contains the cross-sectional area of the embryos we used earlier. Use the data to make of plot of the control and 1mg/ml RA treatment data in the graph provided. Be sure to appropriately label each data curve. Embryo Area(mm 2 ) Day 4 Day 5 Day 6 Day 7 Control 0.35 0.51 0.90 1.50 Retinoic Acid (1mg/ml) 0.25 0.48 0.74 1.01 Control RA 1mg/ml 1.7 1.5 1.3 1.1 0.9 0.7 0.5 0.3 0.1 Day 4 Day 5 Day 6 Day 7 10. How would you describe the data? a) the control curve is linear, but the 1mg/ml RA curve is exponential b) the control curve is exponential, but the 1mg/ml RA curve is linear c) both are linear d) both are exponential 11. How would you describe the relative of growth the RA treatment vs control? a) RA treatment grew more than control, but at a slower rate b) RA grew less than control, but at a faster rate c) RA and control grew at the same rate d) RA grew less than the control, and at a slower rate 3
12. Select the best order for collecting data from images files. a) open image, measure feature, save measurement, calibrate image b) save measurement, calibrate image, open image, measure feature c) measure feature, open image, save measurement, calibrate image d) open image, calibrate image, measure feature, save measurement 13. What does calibrate image mean? Why is it important? Calibrate image means to set the pixel dimension to the true physical scale of the object in the image. Due to microscope magnification, imaged objects look much larger than their true length. Since we are interested in knowing the actual size of these objects, calibration is an important step in data analysis. 14. In the context of our ex-ovo chick experiment, which of the following statements are true about global and local defects? a) local defects are those in our community, which are competing against worldwide defects b) a local defects is one that occurs at the location of treatment, while global defects are ones that affect the entire organism c) local defects can induce global defects d) local defects cannot induce global defects e) both b and c Use the figure from excerpt #3 below and your knowledge of the retinoic acid metabolic pathway to answer the following questions. Remember, words in line with the arrows are retinoids(or metabolites), while words above the lines are retinoid converting enzymes. Fig. 1. Very simplified schematic of the many molecules involved in retinoid biosynthesis and handling, and of the transcriptional processes influenced by binding of RA to its nuclear receptors. These include the various retinoids, the enzymes implicated in their biosynthesis, the retinoid-binding proteins that help regulate their location and activity, and the nuclear receptors and cofactors through which the retinoids act to regulate transcription. -Drager, U. Retinoic acid signaling in the functioning brain. Science STKE. 2006 (324) pg10, Figure 1 4
15. Retinoic acid binds to nuclear receptors to regulate (note nuclear receptors are attached to DNA) a) the expression of specific genes b) the spatial expression of growth factors c) the synthesis of specific proteins d) all of the above e) none of the above 16. Carrots are a great source of beta-carotene, but what converting enzyme is needed to input it into the retinoic acid pathway? dioxygenase 17. Retinoic acid activates gene transcription when it a) is not bound to the RAR/RXR receptors b) is bound to the RAR/RXR receptors c) has time d) none of the above retinoic acid doesn t regulate gene transcription 18. In the reading, we learned that removal of retinaldehyde dehyrodenase(raldh) causes the most severe form of retinoic acid deficient symptoms. From the figure, why do you think RALDH is so critical compared to the other retinoid converting enzymes? RALDH is the main producer of retinoic acid, the critical retinoid for gene regulation, from vitamin A derivatives. As there are two paths leading up to RALDH, one from beta carotene and another from retinyl ester, removal of one of the converting enzyme in these paths would not completely turn off supply to RALDH. But as RALDH is the only enzyme making retinoic acid, insufficient compensation occurs with its removal. 19. Vitamin deficiency is a serious problem in developing countries among mothers and newborn infants. What are two treatment techniques currently used to help with this deficiency? a) clinical and subclinical b) supplementing the vitamin diet of the fathers and grandfathers c) oral vitamin supplements to pregnant mothers, and supplements to newborns d) there are currently no treatments for this vitamin deficiency 20. How could our data assist with this vitamin deficiency problem? Our results demonstrated the importance of optimizing vitamin A dosage to the patient, as even small changes in dosage could have lethal consequences. Vitamin A excess had a stunting effect, again underlining importance of finding correct dosage. Upper bound dosages for infants could be approximated from this study s data by scaling according to body weight, or blood volume. 5
Reflection: The following questions will not be graded, but will be used to improve future versions of this curriculum. Please select your level of agreement with the questions according to this scale. 1 strongly disagree 2 disagree 3 indifferent 4 agree 5 strongly agree R1. I found this curriculum experience too challenging. 1 2 3 4 5 R2. I found this curriculum experience challenging, but enjoyed being pushed 1 2 3 4 5 to learn new, difficult things. R3. The journal excerpts were difficult and I did not understand them. 1 2 3 4 5 R4. The journal excerpts were difficult, but I did understand them by the end. 1 2 3 4 5 R5. I liked acquiring science information from technical journal excerpts. 1 2 3 4 5 R6. I liked acquiring science information from the experimental data. 1 2 3 4 5 R7. This curriculum changed by view of how science is done. 1 2 3 4 5 (if you agree with this statement, please state how your view changed) R8. Because of this curriculum, I am better informed about what it takes 1 2 3 4 5 to be a scientist. R9. This curriculum experience increased my interest in a science career. 1 2 3 4 5 R10. If there was one thing you would change about the curriculum, what would it be? a) More background literature reading b) More data collection and analysis c) More time spent defining the scientific problem d) Other, please specify below 6