Exam #2

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6-10 How does the total number of replication origins in bacterial cells compare with the number of origins in human cells? (a) 1 versus 100 (b) 5 versus 500 (c) 10 versus 1000 (d) 1 versus 10,000

D

7-46 A mutation in the tRNA for the amino acid lysine results in the anticodon sequence 5′-UAU-3′ (instead of 5′-UUU-3′). Which of the following aberrations in protein synthesis might this tRNA cause? (a) read-through of stop codons (b) substitution of lysine for isoleucine (c) substitution of lysine for tyrosine (d) substitution of lysine for phenylalanine

B

10-11 During gel electrophoresis, DNA fragments _______________________. (a) travel through a matrix containing a microscopic network of pores. (b) migrate toward a negatively charged electrode. (c) can be visualized without stains or labels. (d) are separated on the basis of their sequence.

A

10-20 Figure Q10-20 depicts a strategy by which a DNA fragment produced by cutting with the EcoRI restriction nuclease can be joined to a DNA fragment produced by cutting DNA with the HaeIII restriction nuclease. Note that cutting DNA with EcoRI produces a staggered end, whereas cutting DNA with HaeIII produces a blunt end. Why must polymerase be added in this reaction? (a) Polymerase will fill in the staggered end to create a blunt end. (b) Polymerase is needed to seal nicks in the DNA backbone. (c) Polymerase will add nucleotides to the end produced by the HaeIII restriction nuclease. (d) Without polymerase, there will not be enough energy for the reaction to proceed.

A

10-25 A plasmid ______________. (a) can confer antibiotic resistance to a bacterium. (b) is a single-stranded circular DNA molecule that can undergo horizontal transfer among bacteria. (c) is a tool designed in the lab and never found in naturally occurring bacteria. (d) always becomes part of the bacterial chromosome during transformation.

A

10-30 You want to design a DNA probe used for hybridization to isolate a clone from a cDNA library. Which of the following statements about DNA probes is true? (a) The shorter the DNA probe used to probe the library, the greater the number of colonies to which the probe might hybridize. (b) A DNA probe that contains sequences that span two exons is better suited to the purpose than a DNA probe that only contains sequences from one exon. (c) A DNA probe that contains sequences immediately upstream of the DNA that codes for the first methionine in the open reading frame will usually not hybridize to clones in a cDNA library. (d) Hybridization of a DNA probe to the plasmid of interest will permit the detection of the clone of interest; labeling of the DNA probe is not necessary.

A

10-4 You have a circular plasmid that can be cut by the restriction nuclease HindIII, as diagrammed in Figure Q10-4. If you were to cut this circular piece of DNA with HindIII, which of the answers below best predicts what you would get? (a) one linear piece of DNA (b) two circular pieces of DNA (c) two semicircular pieces of DNA (d) two linear pieces of DNA

A

10-43 Which of the following limits the use of PCR to detect and isolate genes? (a) The sequence at the beginning and end of the DNA to be amplified must be known. (b) It also produces large numbers of copies of sequences beyond the 5′ or 3′ end of the desired sequence. (c) It cannot be used to amplify cDNAs or mRNAs. (d) It will amplify only sequences present in multiple copies in the DNA sample.

A

10-47 Why is an excess of normal deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate molecules (dNTPs) needed during dideoxy sequencing? (a) DNA polymerase uses the dNTPs to synthesize a DNA molecule complementary to the molecule being sequenced. (b) dNTPs are consumed as energy to fuel the sequencing reactions. (c) When dNTP levels are too low, there will be very few chain-termination events. (d) The dNTPs can hybridize to the fragment to be sequenced and serve as primers for DNA polymerase.

A

10-53 Which of the following techniques is not appropriate if you want to examine the transcriptome of a specific tissue? (a) in situ hybridization (b) production of a cDNA library (c) RNA-Seq (d) microarray analysis

A

11-1 Which of the following phenomena will be observed if a cell's membrane is pierced? (a) the membrane reseals (b) the membrane collapses (c) a tear is formed (d) the membrane expands

A

11-13 Which of the following phospholipid precursors is the most hydrophobic? (a) triacylglycerol (b) diacylglycerol (c) phosphate (d) glycerol

A

11-16 Water molecules readily form hydrogen bonds with other polar molecules, and when they encounter nonpolar molecules they must form hydrogen-bonding networks with neighboring water molecules. Which of the following molecules will cause a "cage" of water to form? (a) 2-methylpropane (b) acetone (c) methanol (d) urea

A

11-18 Membrane lipids are capable of many different types of movement. Which of these does not occur spontaneously in biological membranes? (a) switching between lipid layers (b) lateral movement (c) rotation (d) flexing of hydrocarbon chains

A

11-22 Most animal fats form a solid at room temperature, while plant fats remain liquid at room temperature. Which of the following is a feature of lipids in plant membranes that best explains this difference? (a) unsaturated hydrocarbons (b) longer hydrocarbon tails (c) higher levels of sterols (d) larger head groups

A

11-24 Membrane synthesis in the cell requires the regulation of growth for both halves of the bilayer and the selective retention of certain types of lipids on one side or the other. Which group of enzymes accomplishes both of these tasks? (a) flippases (b) phospholipases (c) convertases (d) glycosylases

A

11-28 A group of membrane proteins can be extracted from membranes only by using detergents. All the proteins in this group have a similar amino acid sequence at their C-terminus: -KKKKKXXC (where K stands for lysine, X stands for any amino acid, and C stands for cysteine). This sequence is essential for their attachment to the membrane. What is the most likely way in which the C-terminal sequence attaches these proteins to the membrane? (a) The cysteine residue is covalently attached to a membrane lipid. (b) The peptide spans the membrane as an α helix. (c) The peptide spans the membrane as part of a β sheet. (d) The positively charged lysine residues interact with an acidic integral membrane protein.

A

11-32 Porin proteins form large, barrel-like channels in the membrane. Which of the following is not true about these channels? (a) They are made primarily of α helices. (b) They are made primarily of β sheets. (c) They cannot form narrow channels. (d) They have alternating hydrophobic and hydrophilic amino acids.

A

11-4 Which type of lipids are the most abundant in the plasma membrane? (a) phospholipids (b) glycolipids (c) sterols (d) triacylglycerides

A

11-40 Plasma membranes are extremely thin and fragile, requiring an extensive support network of fibrous proteins. This network is called the ____________. (a) cortex. (b) attachment complex. (c) cytoskeleton. (d) spectrin.

A

7-67 When using a repeating trinucleotide sequence (such as 5′-AAC-3′) in a cell-free translation system, you will obtain: (a) three different types of peptides, each made up of a single amino acid (b) peptides made up of three different amino acids in random order (c) peptides made up of three different amino acids, each alternating with each other in a repetitive fashion (d) polyasparagine, as the codon for asparagine is AAC

A

11-44 The lateral movement of transmembrane proteins can be restricted by several different mechanisms. Which mechanism best describes the process by which a budding yeast cell designates the site of new bud formation during cell division? (a) proteins are tethered to the cell cortex (b) proteins are tethered to the extracellular matrix (c) proteins are tethered to the proteins on the surface of another cell (d) protein movement is limited by the presence of a diffusion barrier

A

11-50 Consider the apical location of a particular protein expressed in epithelial cells, illustrated in Figure Q11-50A. When a molecule that chelates calcium is added to the cell culture medium, you observe a redistribution of that protein around the entire cell, shown in Figure Q11-50B. Which is most likely to be true about the role of calcium in maintaining an apical distribution of protein A? (a) calcium is required to maintain the structural integrity of the junctional complex (b) calcium is required for the binding of the junctional proteins to the cell cortex (c) calcium is a structural component of protein A (d) calcium inhibits intracellular transport of protein A

A

11-55 The endothelial cells found closest to the site of an infection express proteins called lectins. Each lectin binds to a particular ____________ that is presented on the surface of a target cell. (a) oligosaccharide (b) aminophospholipid (c) polysaccharide (d) sphingolipid

A

6-13 DNA polymerase catalyzes the joining of a nucleotide to a growing DNA strand. What prevents this enzyme from catalyzing the reverse reaction? (a) hydrolysis of pyrophosphate (PPi) to inorganic phosphate (Pi) + Pi (b) release of PPi from the nucleotide (c) hybridization of the new strand to the template (d) loss of ATP as an energy source

A

6-18 What part of the DNA replication process would be most directly affected if a strain of bacteria lacking primase were used to make the cell extracts? (a) initiation of DNA synthesis (b) Okazaki fragment synthesis (c) leading-strand elongation (d) lagging-strand completion

A

6-20 What part of the DNA replication process would be most directly affected if a strain of bacteria lacking helicase were used to make the cell extracts? (a) initiation of DNA synthesis (b) Okazaki fragment synthesis (c) leading-strand elongation (d) lagging-strand completion

A

6-41 Which of the choices below represents the correct way to repair the mismatch shown in Figure Q6-41?

A

6-45 The repair of mismatched base pairs or damaged nucleotides in a DNA strand requires a multistep process. Which choice below describes the known sequence of events in this process? (a) DNA damage is recognized, the newly synthesized strand is identified by an existing nick in the backbone, a segment of the new strand is removed by repair proteins, the gap is filled by DNA polymerase, and the strand is sealed by DNA ligase. (b) DNA repair polymerase simultaneously removes bases ahead of it and polymerizes the correct sequence behind it as it moves along the template. DNA ligase seals the nicks in the repaired strand. (c) DNA damage is recognized, the newly synthesized strand is identified by an existing nick in the backbone, a segment of the new strand is removed by an exonuclease, and the gap is repaired by DNA ligase. (d) A nick in the DNA is recognized, DNA repair proteins switch out the wrong base and insert the correct base, and DNA ligase seals the nick.

A

6-49 Sometimes, chemical damage to DNA can occur just before DNA replication begins, not giving the repair system enough time to correct the error before the DNA is duplicated. This gives rise to mutation. If the cytosine in the sequence TCAT is deaminated and not repaired, which of the following is the point mutation you would observe after this segment has undergone two rounds of DNA replication? (a) TTAT (b) TUAT (c) TGAT (d) TAAT

A

6-58 Nonhomologous end joining can result in all but which of the following? (a) the recovery of lost nucleotides on a damaged DNA strand (b) the interruption of gene expression (c) loss of nucleotides at the site of repair (d) translocations of DNA fragments to an entirely different chromosome

A

7-13 Which of the following molecules of RNA would you predict to be the most likely to fold into a specific structure as a result of intramolecular base-pairing? (a) 5′-CCCUAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUAGGG-3′ (b) 5′-UGUGUGUGUGUGUGUGUGUGUGUGUGUGUGUGUGUGUGUG-3′ (c) 5′-AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA-3′ (d) 5′-GGAAAAGGAGAUGGGCAAGGGGAAAAGGAGAUGGGCAAGG-3′

A

7-26 Transcription in bacteria differs from transcription in a eukaryotic cell because __________________________. (a) RNA polymerase (along with its sigma subunit) can initiate transcription on its own. (b) RNA polymerase (along with its sigma subunit) requires the general transcription factors to assemble at the promoter before polymerase can begin transcription. (c) the sigma subunit must associate with the appropriate type of RNA polymerase to produce mRNAs. (d) RNA polymerase must be phosphorylated at its C-terminal tail for transcription to proceed.

A

7-27 Which of the following does not occur before a eukaryotic mRNA is exported from the nucleus? (a) The ribosome binds to the mRNA. (b) The mRNA is polyadenylated at its 3′ end. (c) 7-methylguanosine is added in a 5′-to-5′ linkage to the mRNA. (d) RNA polymerase dissociates.

A

7-33 Genes in eukaryotic cells often have intronic sequences coded for within the DNA. These sequences are ultimately not translated into proteins. Why? (a) Intronic sequences are removed from RNA molecules by the spliceosome, which works in the nucleus. (b) Introns are not transcribed by RNA polymerase. (c) Introns are removed by catalytic RNAs in the cytoplasm. (d) The ribosome will skip over intron sequences when translating RNA into protein.

A

7-40 Which amino acid would you expect a tRNA with the anticodon 5′-CUU-3′ to carry? (a) lysine (b) glutamic acid (d) leucine (d) phenylalanine

A

7-43 Below is the sequence from the 3′ end of an mRNA. 5′-CCGUUACCAGGCCUCAUUAUUGGUAACGGAAAAAAAAAAAAAA-3′ If you were told that this sequence contains the stop codon for the protein encoded by this mRNA, what is the anticodon on the tRNA in the P site of the ribosome when release factor binds to the A site? (a) 5′-CCA-3′ (b) 5′-CCG-3′ (c) 5′-UGG-3′ (d) 5′-UUA-3′

A

7-6 Figure Q7-6 shows a ribose sugar. RNA bases are added to the part of the ribose sugar pointed to by arrow _____. (a) 3. (b) 4. (c) 5. (d) 6.

A

8-10 Which of the following statements about transcriptional regulators is false? (a) Transcriptional regulators usually interact with the sugar-phosphate backbone on the outside of the double helix to determine where to bind on the DNA helix. (b) Transcriptional regulators will form hydrogen bonds, ionic bonds, and hydrophobic interactions with DNA. (c) The DNA-binding motifs of transcriptional regulators usually bind in the major groove of the DNA helix. (d) The binding of transcriptional regulators generally does not disrupt the hydrogen bonds that hold the double helix together.

A

8-13 Which of the following statements about the Lac operon is false? (a) The Lac repressor binds when lactose is present in the cell. (b) Even when the CAP activator is bound to DNA, if lactose is not present, the Lac operon will not be transcribed. (c) The CAP activator can only bind DNA when it is bound to cAMP. (d) The Lac operon only produces RNA when lactose is present and glucose is absent.

A

8-22 Which of the following proteins are likely to act as gene activators? (a) factors X and Y (b) factors X and Z (c) factors Y and Z (d) factor X only

A

8-23 Experiment 1 in Figure Q8-21 is the positive control, demonstrating that the region of DNA upstream of the gene for GFP results in a pattern of expression that we normally find for the LKP1 gene. Experiment 2 shows what happens when the sites for binding factors X, Y, and Z are removed. Which experiment above demonstrates that factor X alone is sufficient for expression of LPK1 in the kidney? (a) experiment 3 (b) experiment 5 (c) experiment 6 (d) experiment 7

A

8-30 Which proteins are likely to act as gene repressors? (a) G (b) H (c) J (d) both H and J

A

8-44 You are studying a set of mouse genes whose expression increases when cells are exposed to the hormone cortisol, and you believe that the same cortisol-responsive transcriptional activator regulates all of these genes. Which of the following statements below should be true if your hypothesis is correct? (a) The cortisol-responsive genes share a DNA sequence in their regulatory regions that binds the cortisol-responsive transcriptional activator. (b) The cortisol-responsive genes must all be in an operon. (c) The transcriptional regulators that bind to the regulatory regions of the cortisol-responsive genes must all be the same. (d) The cortisol-responsive genes must not be transcribed in response to other hormones.

A

8-50 In mammals, individuals with two X chromosomes are female, and individuals with an X and a Y chromosome are male. It had long been known that a gene located on the Y chromosome was sufficient to induce the gonads to form testes, which is the main male-determining factor in development, and researchers sought the product of this gene, the so-called testes-determining factor (TDF). For several years, the TDF was incorrectly thought to be a zinc finger protein encoded by a gene called BoY. Which of the following observations would most strongly suggest that BoY might not be the TDF? Explain your answer. (a) Some XY individuals that develop into females have mutations in a different gene, SRY, but are normal at BoY. (b) BoY is not expressed in the adult male testes. (c) Expression of BoY in adult females does not masculinize them. (d) A few of the genes that are known to be expressed only in the testes have binding sites for the BoY protein in their upstream regulatory sequences, but most do not.

A

8-56 miRNAs, tRNAs, and rRNAs all _____________. (a) do not code for proteins. (b) act in the nucleus. (c) are packaged with other proteins to form RISC. (d) form base pairs with mRNA molecules.

A

8-58 MicroRNAs ____________________. (a) are produced from a precursor miRNA transcript. (b) are found only in humans. (c) control gene expression by base-pairing with DNA sequences. (d) can degrade RNAs by using their intrinsic catalytic activity

A

8-60 The extent of complementarity of a miRNA with its target mRNA determines ___________________________. (a) whether the mRNA will be immediately degraded or whether the mRNA will first be transported elsewhere in the cell before degradation. (b) whether the mRNA will be transported to the nucleus. (c) whether RISC is degraded.

A

8-64 The modular nature of the Eve gene's regulatory region means that ______. (a) there are seven regulatory elements and each element is sufficient for driving expression in a single stripe. (b) all the regulatory elements for each stripe use the same transcriptional activators. (c) the E. coli LacZ gene is normally only expressed in a single stripe—unlike Eve, which is expressed in seven stripes. (d) transcription regulators only bind to the stripe 2 regulatory DNA segment in stripe 2.

A

9-1 Which of the following statements is false? (a) A mutation that arises in a mother's somatic cell often causes a disease in her daughter. (b) All mutations in an asexually reproducing single-celled organism are passed on to progeny. (c) In an evolutionary sense, somatic cells exist only to help propagate germ-line cells. (d) A mutation is passed on to offspring only if it is present in the germ line.

A

9-19 Which of the following statements about gene families is false? (a) Because gene duplication can occur when crossover events occur, genes are always duplicated onto homologous chromosomes. (b) Not all duplicated genes will become functional members of gene families. (c) Whole-genome duplication can contribute to the formation of gene families. (d) Duplicated genes can diverge in both their regulatory regions and their coding regions.

A

9-21 Which of the following statements about pseudogenes is false? (a) Pseudogenes code for microRNAs. (b) Pseudogenes share significant nucleotide similarity with functional genes. (c) Pseudogenes are no longer expressed in the cell. (d) There are estimated to be approximately 20,000 pseudogenes in the human genome.

A

9-25 Which of the following statements is true? (a) The intron structure of most genes is conserved among vertebrates. (b) The more nucleotides there are in an organism's genome, the more genes there will be in its genome. (c) Because the fly Drosophila melanogaster and humans diverged from a common ancestor so long ago, a gene in the fly will show more similarity to another gene from the same species than it will to a human gene. (d) An organism from the same Order as another will be more likely to have a genome of the same size than will a more evolutionarily diverged animal.

A

9-26 Which of the following statements about homologous genes is true? (a) For protein-coding genes, homologous genes will show more similarity in their amino acid sequences than in their nucleotide sequences. (b) Fewer than 1% of human genes have homologs in the nematode and the fruit fly. (c) Most homologous genes arose by gene duplication. (d) A gene in humans that has homologs in plants and prokaryotes will show the same level of similarity in nucleotide sequence when the human and prokaryotic sequences are compared as when the human and chimpanzee sequences are compared.

A

9-32 Which of the following regions of the genome is the least likely to be conserved over evolutionary time? (a) the upstream regulatory region of a gene that encodes the region conferring tissue specificity (b) the upstream regulatory region of a gene that binds to RNA polymerase (c) the portion of the genome that codes for proteins (d) the portion of the genome that codes for RNAs that are not translated into protein

A

9-41 Which of the following generalities about genomes is true? (a) All vertebrate genomes contain roughly the same number of genes. (b) All unicellular organisms contain roughly the same number of genes. (c) The larger an organism, the more genes it has. (d) The more types of cell an organism has, the more genes it has.

A

9-43 Mobile genetic elements are sometimes called "jumping genes," because they move from place to place throughout the genome. The exact mechanism by which they achieve this mobility depends on the genes contained within the mobile element. Which of the following mobile genetic elements carries both a transposase gene and a reverse transcriptase gene? (a) L1 (b) B1 (c) Alu (d) Tn3

A

9-5 You discover that the underlying cause of a disease is a protein that is now less stable than the non-disease-causing version of the protein. This change is most likely to be due to ________. (a) a mutation within a gene. (b) a mutation within the regulatory DNA of a gene. (c) gene duplication. (d) horizontal gene transfer.

A

9-57 Which of the following processes is not thought to contribute to diversity in the genome of human individuals? (a) exon shuffling (b) single-nucleotide polymorphisms (c) CA repeats (d) duplication and deletion of large blocks of sequence

A

9-62 Which of the following statements about what we have learned by comparing the modern-day human genome to other genomes is true? (a) Modern humans whose ancestors come from Europe or Asia share up to 4 percent of their genome with Neanderthals. (b) Accelerated changes, which were found when comparing the human genome to other mammalian genomes, were not found when comparing the modern-day human genome to the Neanderthal genome. (c) The human genome is far more gene-dense than the yeast genome. (d) In syntenic regions of the human and mouse genomes, both gene order and the placements of more than 95% of the mobile genetic elements are conserved.

A

6-44 A pregnant mouse is exposed to high levels of a chemical. Many of the mice in her litter are deformed, but when they are interbred with each other, all their offspring are normal. Which two of the following statements could explain these results? (a) In the deformed mice, somatic cells but not germ cells were mutated. (b) The original mouse's germ cells were mutated. (c) In the deformed mice, germ cells but not somatic cells were mutated. (d) The toxic chemical affects development but is not mutagenic.

A & D

11-56 You have isolated two mutants of a normally pear-shaped microorganism that have lost their distinctive shape and are now round. One of the mutants has a defect in a protein you call A and the other has a defect in a protein you call B. First, you grind up each type of mutant cell and normal cells separately and separate the plasma membranes from the cytoplasm, forming the first cell extract. Then you set aside a portion of each fraction for later testing. Next, you wash the remaining portion of the membrane fractions with a low concentration of urea (which will unfold proteins and disrupt their ability to interact with other proteins) and centrifuge the mixture. The membranes and their constituent proteins form a pellet, and the proteins liberated from the membranes by the urea wash remain in the supernatant. When you check each of the fractions for the presence of A or B, you obtain the results given below.Which of the following statements are consistent with your results (more than one answer may apply)? (a) Protein A is an integral membrane protein that interacts with B, a peripheral membrane protein that is part of the cell cortex. (b) Protein B is an integral membrane protein that interacts with A, a peripheral membrane protein that is part of the cell cortex. (c) Proteins A and B are both integral membrane proteins. (d) The mutation in A affects its ability to interact with B.

A&D

11-9 A bacterium is suddenly expelled from a warm human intestine into the cold world outside. Which of the following adjustments might the bacterium make to maintain the same level of membrane fluidity? (a) Produce lipids with hydrocarbon tails that are longer and have fewer double bonds. (b) Produce lipids with hydrocarbon tails that are shorter and have more double bonds. (c) Decrease the amount of cholesterol in the membrane. (d) Decrease the amount of glycolipids in the membrane.

B

10-17 Which of the following statements about gel-transfer hybridization (or Southern blotting) is false? (a) This technique involves the transfer of DNA molecules from gel onto nitrocellulose paper or nylon paper. (b) In this technique, single-stranded DNA is separated by electrophoresis. (c) A labeled DNA probe binds to the DNA by hybridization. (d) The DNA that is separated on a gel is not labeled.

B

10-19 Figure Q10-19 shows the cleavage sites of several restriction nucleases.You cut a vector using the PciI restriction nuclease. Which of the following restriction nucleases will generate a fragment that can be ligated into this cut vector with the addition of only ligase and ATP? (a) HindIII (b) NcoI (c) MmeI (d) NspV

B

10-2 Which of the following statements about restriction nucleases is false? (a) A reproducible set of DNA fragments will be produced every time a restriction nuclease digests a known piece of DNA. (b) Restriction nucleases recognize specific sequences on single-stranded DNA. (c) Some bacteria use restriction nucleases as protection from foreign DNA. (d) Some restriction nucleases cut in a staggered fashion, leaving short, single-stranded regions of DNA at the ends of the cut molecule.

B

10-26 Which of the following statements about DNA libraries is true? (a) Production of a DNA library involves the direct insertion of short DNA fragments into bacteria through transformation. (b) By placing the library DNA into bacteria, the bacteria can be used to amplify the desired DNA fragments from the DNA library. (c) Individual bacteria that have taken up most of the library DNA are selected for during the construction of a DNA library. (d) The library DNA within the bacteria will only be replicated when it hybridizes to a DNA probe.

B

10-39 Starting with one double-stranded DNA molecule, how many cycles of PCR would you have to perform to produce about 100 double-stranded copies (assuming 100% efficiency per cycle)? (a) 2 (b) 7 (c) 25 (d) 100

B

10-40 Which of the following statements about PCR is false? (a) PCR uses a DNA polymerase from a thermophilic bacterium. (b) PCR is particularly powerful because after each cycle of replication, there is a linear increase in the amount of DNA available. (c) For PCR, every round of replication is preceded by the denaturation of the double-stranded DNA molecules. (d) The PCR will generate a pool of double-stranded DNA molecules, most of which will have DNA from primers at the 5′ ends.

B

10-5 You have a piece of circular DNA that can be cut by the restriction nucleases XhoI and SmaI, as indicated in Figure Q10-5. If you were to cut this circular piece of DNA with both XhoI and SmaI, how many fragments of DNA would you end up with? (a) 1 (b) 2 (c) 3 (d) 4

B

7-38 The piece of RNA below includes the region that codes for the binding site for the initiator tRNA needed in translation. 5′-GUUUCCCGUAUACAUGCGUGCCGGGGGC-3′ Which amino acid will be on the tRNA that is the first to bind to the A site of the ribosome? (a) methionine (b) arginine (c) cysteine (d) valine

B

10-58 Insulin is a small protein that regulates blood sugar level and is given to patients who suffer from diabetes. Many years ago, diabetics were given insulin that had been purified from pig pancreas. Once recombinant DNA techniques became available, the DNA encoding insulin could be placed into an expression vector and insulin could be produced in bacteria. Which of the following is NOT a reason why purifying insulin from bacteria is a better way to produce insulin for diabetics than using insulin purified from a pig pancreas. (a) Insulin can be easily produced in large quantities from cells carrying the cloned DNA sequence. (b) The creation of transgenic pigs that expressed insulin was very expensive compared to the cost of creating bacteria that expressed insulin. (c) Insulin made from a bacterial culture and then purified will be free of any possible contaminating viruses that pigs (and any other animals) harbor. Since pigs are more closely related to people than bacteria are, their viruses are more likely to be harmful to people than are viruses that might infect bacteria. (d) The pig protein has slight amino acid differences compared to the human protein, so human insulin produced by bacteria will work better in people.

B

10-64 Figure Q10-64A depicts the restriction map of one segment of the human genome for four restriction nucleases W, X, Y, and Z. Figure Q10-64B depicts the restriction maps of four individual BAC clones that contain segments of human DNA from the region depicted in Figure Q10-64A.From this information, how would you order these BAC clones, from left to right? (a) 1, 2, 3, 4 (b) 2, 1, 4, 3 (c) 3, 4, 2, 1 (d) 4, 1, 3, 2

B

10-9 You have a linear piece of DNA that can be cut by the restriction nucleases HindIII and EcoRI, as diagrammed in Figure Q10-9. If you were to cut this linear DNA with HindIII, what type of DNA fragments do you predict you will obtain? (a) three linear pieces of DNA (b) two linear pieces of DNA, only one of which can be cut by EcoRI (c) two linear pieces of DNA, both of which can be cut by EcoRI (d) two linear pieces of DNA, only one of which can be cut by HindIII

B

11-15 Where does most new membrane synthesis take place in a eukaryotic cell? (a) in the Golgi apparatus (b) in the endoplasmic reticulum (c) in the plasma membrane (d) in the mitochondria (e) on ribosomes

B

11-19 There are two properties of phospholipids that affect how tightly they pack together: the length of the hydrocarbon chain and the number of double bonds. The degree of packing, in turn, influences the relative mobility of these molecules in the membrane. Which of the following would yield the most highly mobile phospholipid (listed as number of carbons and number of double bonds, respectively)? (a) 24 carbons with 1 double bond (b) 15 carbons with 2 double bonds (c) 20 carbons with 2 double bonds (d) 16 carbons with no double bonds

B

11-2 The plasma membrane serves many functions, many of which depend on the presence of specialized membrane proteins. Which of the following roles of the plasma membrane could still occur if the bilayer were lacking these proteins? (a) intercellular communication (b) selective permeability (c) cellular movement (d) import/export of molecules

B

11-27 Membrane proteins, like membrane lipids, can move laterally by exchanging positions with other membrane components. Which type of membrane proteins is expected to be the least mobile, based on their function? (a) channels (b) anchors (c) receptors (d) enzymes

B

11-34 The amino acid sequences below represent the sequences of transmembrane helices. The characteristics of α helices that form a channel are different from those that form a single transmembrane domain. Select the helix that forms a single transmembrane domain. (a) VGHSLSIFTLVISLGIFVFF (b) IMIVLVMLLNIGLAILFVHF (c) ILHFFHQYMMACNYFWMLCE (d) VTLHKNMFLTYILNSMIIII

B

11-38 We know the detailed molecular structure and mechanism of action of the transmembrane protein bacteriorhodopsin. This protein uses sunlight as the source of energy to pump ______ out of the cell. (a) ATP (b) H+ (c) K+ (d) Na+

B

11-39 In the photosynthetic archaean Halobacterium halobium, a membrane transport protein called bacteriorhodopsin captures energy from sunlight and uses it to pump protons out of the cell. The resulting proton gradient serves as an energy store that can later be tapped to generate ATP. Which statement best describes how bacteriorhodopsin operates? (a) The absorption of sunlight triggers a contraction of the β barrel that acts as the protein's central channel, squeezing a proton out of the cell. (b) The absorption of sunlight triggers a shift in the conformation of the protein's seven, membrane spanning α helices, allowing a proton to leave the cell. (c) The absorption of sunlight triggers a restructuring of bacteriorhodopsin's otherwise unstructured core to form the channel through which a proton can exit the cell. (d) The absorption of sunlight triggers the activation of an enzyme that generates ATP.

B

11-45 The lateral movement of transmembrane proteins can be restricted by several different mechanisms. Which mechanism best describes the process by which focal adhesions are formed to promote cell motility? (a) proteins are tethered to the cell cortex (b) proteins are tethered to the extracellular matrix (c) proteins are tethered to the proteins on the surface of another cell (d) protein movement is limited by the presence of a diffusion barrier

B

11-49 Consider the apical location of a particular protein expressed in epithelial cells, illustrated in Figure Q11-49A. Which type of defect described below is the most likely to cause the redistribution of that protein around the entire cell, shown in Figure Q11-49B? (a) a nonfunctional protein glycosylase (b) the deletion of a junctional protein (c) the truncation of a protein found in the extracellular matrix (d) a nonfunctional flippase

B

11-59 It is possible to follow the movement of a single molecule or a small group of molecules. This requires the use of antibodies linked to small particles of gold, which appear as dark spots when tracked through video microscopy. What is this method called? What does the abbreviation stand for? (a) SDS (b) SPT (c) GFP (d) FRAP

B

11-7 Formation of a lipid bilayer is energetically favorable. How does this arrangement result in higher entropy for the system, and thus make bilayer formation energetically favorable? (a) Polar head groups form a hydrogen-bonding network at the interface with water. (b) Water molecules form cagelike structures around hydrophobic molecules. (c) Hydrogen bonds form between neighboring polar head groups in the bilayer. (d) Fatty acid tails are highly saturated and flexible.

B

8-32 Which proteins do you predict are bound to the promoter in experiment #8? (a) only H and J (b) only G and H (c) only G and J (d) only J

C

6-17 Which of the following statements is true with respect to this in vitro replication system? (a) There will be only one leading strand and one lagging strand produced using this template. (b) The leading and lagging strands compose one half of each newly synthesized DNA strand. (c) The DNA replication machinery can assemble at multiple places on this plasmid. (d) One daughter DNA molecule will be slightly shorter than the other.

B

6-21 What part of the DNA replication process would be most directly affected if a strain of bacteria lacking single-strand binding protein were used to make the cell extracts? (a) initiation of DNA synthesis (b) Okazaki fragment synthesis (c) leading-strand elongation (d) lagging-strand completion

B

6-3 The classic experiments conducted by Meselson and Stahl demonstrated that DNA replication is accomplished by employing a ________________ mechanism. (a) continuous (b) semiconservative (c) dispersive (d) conservative

B

6-31 DNA polymerases are processive, which means that they remain tightly associated with the template strand while moving rapidly and adding nucleotides to the growing daughter strand. Which piece of the replication machinery accounts for this characteristic? (a) helicase (b) sliding clamp (c) single-strand binding protein (d) primase

B

6-35 Which of the following statements about sequence proofreading during DNA replication is false? (a) The exonuclease activity is in a different domain of the DNA polymerase. (b) The exonuclease activity cleaves DNA in the 5′-to-3′ direction. (c) The DNA proofreading activity occurs concomitantly with strand elongation. (d) If an incorrect base is added, it is "unpaired" before removal.

B

6-37 The DNA duplex consists of two long covalent polymers wrapped around each other many times over their entire length. The separation of the DNA strands for replication causes the strands to be "overwound" in front of the replication fork. How does the cell relieve the torsional stress created along the DNA duplex during replication? (a) Nothing needs to be done because the two strands will be separated after replication is complete. (b) Topoisomerases break the covalent bonds of the backbone allowing the local unwinding of DNA ahead of the replication fork. (c) Helicase unwinds the DNA and rewinds it after replication is complete. (d) DNA repair enzymes remove torsional stress as they replace incorrectly paired bases.

B

6-39 Sickle-cell anemia is an example of an inherited disease. Individuals with this disorder have misshapen (sickle-shaped) red blood cells caused by a change in the sequence of the β-globin gene. What is the nature of the change? (a) chromosome loss (b) base-pair change (c) gene duplication (d) base-pair insertion

B

6-4 Initiator proteins bind to replication origins and disrupt hydrogen bonds between the two DNA strands being copied. Which of the factors below does not contribute to the relative ease of strand separation by initiator proteins? (a) replication origins are rich in A-T base pairs (b) the reaction can occur at room temperature (c) they only separate a few base pairs at a time (d) once opened, other proteins of the DNA replication machinery bind to the origin

B

6-48 In somatic cells, if a base is mismatched in one new daughter strand during DNA replication, and is not repaired, what fraction of the DNA duplexes will have a permanent change in the DNA sequence after the second round of DNA replication? (a) 1/2 (b) 1/4 (c) 1/8 (d) 1/16

B

6-52 Which of the following statements is not an accurate statement about thymine dimers? (a) Thymine dimers can cause the DNA replication machinery to stall. (b) Thymine dimers are covalent links between thymidines on opposite DNA strands. (c) Prolonged exposure to sunlight causes thymine dimers to form. (d) Repair proteins recognize thymine dimers as a distortion in the DNA backbone.

B

6-59 Homologous recombination is an important mechanism in which organisms use a "backup" copy of the DNA as a template to fix double-strand breaks without loss of genetic information. Which of the following is not necessary for homologous recombination to occur? (a) 3′ DNA strand overhangs (b) 5′ DNA strand overhangs (c) a long stretch of sequence similarity (d) nucleases

B

6-8 How many replication forks are formed when an origin of replication is opened? (a) 1 (b) 2 (c) 3 (d) 4

B

7-18 You have a piece of DNA that includes the following sequence: 5′-ATAGGCATTCGATCCGGATAGCAT-3′ 3′-TATCCGTAAGCTAGGCCTATCGTA-5′ Which of the following RNA molecules could be transcribed from this piece of DNA? (a) 5′-UAUCCGUAAGCUAGGCCUAUGCUA-3′ (b) 5′-AUAGGCAUUCGAUCCGGAUAGCAU-3′ (c) 5′-UACGAUAGGCCUAGCUUACGGAUA-3′ (d) none of the above

B

7-24 There are several reasons why the primase used to make the RNA primer for DNA replication is not suitable for gene transcription. Which of the statements below is not one of those reasons? (a) Primase initiates RNA synthesis on a single-stranded DNA template. (b) Primase can initiate RNA synthesis without the need for a base-paired primer. (c) Primase synthesizes only RNAs of about 5-20 nucleotides in length. (d) The RNA synthesized by primase remains base-paired to the DNA template.

B

7-25 You have a bacterial strain with a mutation that removes the transcription termination signal from the Abd operon. Which of the following statements describes the most likely effect of this mutation on Abd transcription? (a) The Abd RNA will not be produced in the mutant strain. (b) The Abd RNA from the mutant strain will be longer than normal. (c) Sigma factor will not dissociate from RNA polymerase when the Abd operon is being transcribed in the mutant strain. (d) RNA polymerase will move in a backward fashion at the Abd operon in the mutant strain.

B

7-30 Which of the following statements about RNA splicing is false? (a) Conventional introns are not found in bacterial genes. (b) For a gene to function properly, every exon must be removed from the primary transcript in the same fashion on every mRNA molecule produced from the same gene. (c) Small RNA molecules in the nucleus perform the splicing reactions necessary for the removal of introns. (d) Splicing occurs after the 5′ cap has been added to the end of the primary transcript.

B

7-37 Which of the following statements about the genetic code is correct? (a) All codons specify more than one amino acid. (b) The genetic code is redundant. (c) All amino acids are specified by more than one codon. (d) All codons specify an amino acid.

B

7-48 What do you predict would happen if you created a tRNA with an anticodon of 5′-CAA-3′ that is charged with methionine, and added this modified tRNA to a cell-free translation system that has all the normal components required for translating RNAs? (a) methionine would be incorporated into proteins at some positions where glutamine should be (b) methionine would be incorporated into proteins at some positions where leucine should be (c) methionine would be incorporated into proteins at some positions where valine should be (d) translation would no longer be able to initiate

B

7-53 A poison added to an in vitro translation mixture containing mRNA molecules with the sequence 5′-AUGAAAAAAAAAAAAUAA-3′ has the following effect: the only product made is a Met-Lys dipeptide that remains attached to the ribosome. What is the most likely way in which the poison acts to inhibit protein synthesis? (a) It inhibits peptidyl transferase activity. (b) It inhibits movement of the small subunit relative to the large subunit. (c) It inhibits release factor. (d) It mimics release factor.

B

7-54 In eukaryotes, but not in prokaryotes, ribosomes find the start site of translation by ____________________________. (a) binding directly to a ribosome-binding site preceding the initiation codon. (b) scanning along the mRNA from the 5′ end. (c) recognizing an AUG codon as the start of translation. (d) binding an initiator tRNA.

B

7-55 Which of the following statements about prokaryotic mRNA molecules is false? (a) A single prokaryotic mRNA molecule can be translated into several proteins. (b) Ribosomes must bind to the 5′ cap before initiating translation. (c) mRNAs are not polyadenylated. (d) Ribosomes can start translating an mRNA molecule before transcription is complete.

B

7-57 You have discovered a protein that inhibits translation. When you add this inhibitor to a mixture capable of translating human mRNA and centrifuge the mixture to separate polyribosomes and single ribosomes, you obtain the results shown in Figure Q7-57. Which of the following interpretations is consistent with these observations? (a) The protein binds to the small ribosomal subunit and increases the rate of initiation of translation. (b) The protein binds to sequences in the 5′ region of the mRNA and inhibits the rate of initiation of translation. (c) The protein binds to the large ribosomal subunit and slows down elongation of the polypeptide chain. (d) The protein binds to sequences in the 3′ region of the mRNA and prevents termination of translation.

B

7-65 You are studying a disease that is caused by a virus, but when you purify the virus particles and analyze them you find they contain no trace of DNA. Which of the following molecules are likely to contain the genetic information of the virus? (a) high-energy phosphate groups (b) RNA (c) lipids (d) carbohydrates

B

8-12 The tryptophan operator ___________________________. (a) is an allosteric protein. (b) binds to the tryptophan repressor when the repressor is bound to tryptophan. (c) is required for production of the mRNA encoded by the tryptophan operon. (d) is important for the production of the tryptophan repressor.

B

8-15 What do you predict would happen if you replace the Lac operator DNA from the Lac operon with the DNA from the operator region from the tryptophan operon? (a) The presence of lactose will not cause allosteric changes to the Lac repressor. (b) The Lac operon will not be transcribed when tryptophan levels are high. (c) The lack of glucose will no longer allow CAP binding to the DNA. (d) RNA polymerase will only bind to the Lac promoter when lactose is present.

B

8-18 Which of the following proteins are likely to act as gene repressors? (a) MetA only (b) MetB only (c) MetC only (d) Both MetA and MetC

B

8-2 The distinct characteristics of different cell types in a multicellular organism result mainly from the differential regulation of the _________________. (a) replication of specific genes. (b) transcription of genes transcribed by RNA polymerase II. (c) transcription of housekeeping genes. (d) proteins that directly bind the TATA box of eukaryotic genes.

B

8-36 How are most eukaryotic transcription regulators able to affect transcription when their binding sites are far from the promoter? (a) by binding to their binding site and sliding to the site of RNA polymerase assembly (b) by looping out the intervening DNA between their binding site and the promoter (c) by unwinding the DNA between their binding site and the promoter (d) by attracting RNA polymerase and modifying it before it can bind to the promoter

B

8-43 Combinatorial control of gene expression __________________________. (a) involves every gene using a different combination of transcriptional regulators for its proper expression. (b) involves groups of transcriptional regulators working together to determine the expression of a gene. (c) involves only the use of gene activators used together to regulate genes appropriately. (d) is seen only when genes are arranged in operons.

B

8-45 Which of the following statements about iPS cells is false? (a) iPS cells are created by adding a combination of transcription regulators to a fibroblast. (b) iPS cells created from mouse cells can differentiate into almost any human cell type. (c) Stimulation by extracellular signal molecules causes iPS cells to differentiate. (d) During the de-differentiation process to become an iPS, the fibroblast will undergo changes to its gene expression profile.

B

8-47 Which of the following statements about the Ey transcriptional regulator is false? (a) Expression of Ey in cells that normally form legs in the fly will lead to the formation of an eye in the middle of the legs. (b) The Ey transcription factor must bind to the promoter of every eye-specific gene in the fly. (c) Positive feedback loops ensure that Ey expression remains switched on in the developing eye. (d) A homolog of Ey is found in vertebrates; this homolog is also used during eye development.

B

8-54 Which of the following statements about mRNA half-life is false? (a) The half-life of mRNAs produced from different genes will vary more than the half-life of mRNAs produced from the same gene. (b) The half-life of most eukaryotic-cell mRNAs is >24 hours. (c) The half-life of most bacterial mRNAs is shorter than the half-life of a typical eukaryotic mRNA. (d) The 5′ and 3′ untranslated regions of an mRNA often contain specific sequences that determine the lifetime of the mRNA molecule.

B

8-6 Investigators performed nuclear transplant experiments to determine whether DNA is altered irreversibly during development. Which of the following statements about these experiments is true? (a) Because the donor nucleus is taken from an adult animal, the chromosomes from the nucleus must undergo recombination with the DNA in the egg for successful development to occur. (b) The embryo that develops from the nuclear transplant experiment is genetically identical to the donor of the nucleus. (c) The meiotic spindle of the egg must interact with the chromosomes of the injected nuclei for successful nuclear transplantation to occur. (d) Although nuclear transplantation has been successful in producing embryos in some mammals with the use of foster mothers, evidence of DNA alterations during differentiation has not been obtained for plants.

B

8-62 Which of the following statements about RNAi is true? (a) The RNAi mechanism is found only in plants and animals. (b) RNAi is induced when double-stranded, foreign RNA is present in the cell. (c) RISC uses the siRNA duplex to locate complementary foreign RNA molecules. (d) siRNAs bind to miRNAs to induce RNAi.

B

8-63 The owners of a local bakery ask for your help in improving a special yeast strain they use to make bread. They would like you to help them design experiments using RNA interference to turn off genes, to allow them to test their hypothesis that certain genes are important for the good flavors found in their bread. Of the components in the following list, which is the most important to check for in this yeast strain if you'd like this project to succeed? (a) the presence of foreign double-stranded RNA (b) the presence of genes in the genome that code for RISC proteins (c) the presence of miRNA genes in the genome (d) the presence of single-stranded siRNAs within the cell

B

9-11 Two individuals are represented in Figure Q9-11; individual 1 is one of the parents of individual 2. The asterisk indicates the occurrence of a single mutation.What is the chance that individual 2 will inherit the mutation in individual 1? (a) 100% (b) 50% (c) 1 in 100,000 (d) none

B

9-28 Given the evolutionary relationship between higher primates shown in Figure Q9-28, which of the following statements is false?(a) The last common ancestor of humans, chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans lived about 14 million years ago. (b) Chimpanzees are more closely related to gorillas than to humans. (c) Humans and chimpanzees diverged about 6 million years ago. (d) Orangutans are the most divergent of the four species shown in Figure Q9-28.

B

9-45 Which of the following DNA sequences is not commonly carried on a DNA-only transposon? (a) transposase gene (b) reverse transcriptase gene (c) recognition site for transposase (d) antibiotic-resistance gene

B

9-48 In humans and in chimpanzees, 99% of the Alu retrotransposons are in corresponding positions. Which of the following statements below is the most likely explanation for this similarity? (a) The Alu retrotransposon is not capable of transposition in humans. (b) Most of the Alu sequences in the chimpanzee genome underwent duplication and divergence before humans and chimpanzees diverged. (c) The Alu retrotransposons are in the most beneficial position in the genome for primates. (d) The Alu retrotransposons must also be in the same position in flies.

B

9-50 Which of the following statements about retroviruses is false? (a) Retroviruses are packaged with a few molecules of reverse transcriptase in each virus particle. (b) Retroviruses use the host-genome integrase enzyme to create the provirus. (c) The production of viral RNAs can occur long after the initial infection of the host cell by the retrovirus. (d) Viral RNAs are translated by host-cell ribosomes to produce the proteins required for the production of viral particles.

B

9-55 The nucleotide sequences between individuals differ by 0.1%, yet the human genome is made up of about 3 × 109 nucleotide pairs. Which of the following statements is false? (a) In most human cells, the homologous autosomes differ from each other by 0.1%. (b) All changes between human individuals are single-nucleotide polymorphisms. (c) Any two individuals (other than identical twins) will generally have more than 3 million genetic differences in their genomes. (d) Much of the variation between human individuals was present 100,000 years ago, when the human population was small

B

9-59 The number of distinct protein species found in humans and other organisms can vastly exceed the number of genes. This is largely due to ______________. (a) protein degradation. (b) alternative splicing. (c) homologous genes. (d) mutation.

B

10-1 Recombinant DNA technologies involve techniques that permit the creation of custom-made DNA molecules that can be introduced back into living organisms. These technologies were first developed in the ______. (a) 1930s. (b) 1950s. (c) 1970s. (d) 1990s.

C

10-14 A double-stranded DNA molecule can be separated into single strands by heating it to 90°C because _______________________. (a) heat disrupts the hydrogen bonds holding the sugar-phosphate backbone together. (b) DNA is negatively charged. (c) heat disrupts hydrogen-bonding between complementary nucleotides. (d) DNA is positively charged.

C

10-16 During DNA renaturation, two DNA strands will ________. (a) break the covalent bonds that hold the nucleotides together while maintaining the hydrogen bonds that hold the two strands together. (b) break the hydrogen bonds that hold the two strands together with no effect on the covalent bonds that hold the nucleotides together. (c) re-form a double helix if the two strands have complementary sequences. (d) re-form a double helix if the two strands are identical in sequence.

C

10-27 Which of the following statements about genomic DNA libraries is false? (a) The larger the size of the fragments used to make the library, the fewer colonies you will have to examine to find a clone that hybridizes to your probe. (b) The larger the size of the fragments used to make the library, the more difficult it will be to find your gene of interest once you have identified a clone that hybridizes to your probe. (c) The larger the genome of the organism from which a library is derived, the larger the fragments inserted into the vector will tend to be. (d) The smaller the gene you are seeking, the more likely it is that the gene will be found on a single clone.

C

10-3 You have purified DNA from your recently deceased goldfish. Which of the following restriction nucleases would you use if you wanted to end up with DNA fragments with an average size of 70 kilobase pairs (kb) after complete digestion of the DNA? The recognition sequence for each enzyme is indicated in the right-hand column. (a) Sau3AI GATC (b) BamHI GGATCC (c) NotI GCGGCCGC (d) XzaI GAAGGATCCTTC

C

10-38 PCR was invented in _______. (a) the 1800s. (b) the 1950s. (c) the 1980s. (d) 2009.

C

10-45 Your friend works at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and has discovered a brand-new virus that has recently been introduced into the human population. She has just developed a new assay that allows her to detect the virus by using PCR products made from the blood of infected patients. The assay uses primers in the PCR assay that hybridize to sequences in the viral genome. Your friend is distraught because of the result she obtained (see Figure Q10-45) when she looked at PCR products made using the blood of three patients suffering from the viral disease, using her own blood, and using a leaf from her petunia plant. You advise your friend not to panic, as you believe she is missing an important control. Which one of the choices listed below is the best control for clarifying the results of her assay? Explain your answer. (a) a PCR assay using blood from a patient who is newly infected but does not yet show symptoms (b) a PCR assay using blood from a dog (c) a PCR assay using blood from an uninfected person (d) repeating the experiments she has already done with a new tube of polymerase

C

10-48 Why are dideoxyribonucleoside triphosphates used during DNA sequencing? (a) They cannot be incorporated into DNA by DNA polymerase. (b) They are incorporated into DNA particularly well by DNA polymerases from thermophilic bacteria. (c) Incorporation of a dideoxyribonucleoside triphosphate leads to the termination of replication for that strand. (d) Dideoxyribonucleoside triphosphates are more stable than deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates.

C

10-51 With fully automated Sanger sequencing, all four chain-terminating ddNTPs can be added into a single reaction. This is different from the traditional slab gel Sanger sequencing, where a different reaction had to be carried out for each ddNTP. The mixing of all four ddNTPs can be carried out because ______________. (a) the fully automated Sanger sequencing reactions are loaded onto a capillary gel. (b) the fully automated Sanger sequencing reactions utilize ddNTPs each labeled with a different fluorescent tag, which allows all four ddNTPs to be incorporated into a single molecule of DNA. (c) the fully automated Sanger sequencing reactions generate a set of products, each of which carries a single fluorescent tag whose color reveals the identity of the base that is at the end of the product. (d) the fully automated Sanger sequencing reactions do not require DNA polymerase because the bases are read as the DNA is pulled through a tiny pore at the end of the capillary gel.

C

10-55 You create a recombinant DNA molecule that fuses the coding sequence of green fluorescent protein to the regulatory DNA sequences that control the expression of your favorite genes. Which of the following pieces of information can you NOT gain by examining the expression of this reporter gene? (a) the tissue where the protein encoded by this gene is expressed (b) the cell in which the protein encoded by this gene is expressed (c) the specific location within the cell of the protein encoded by this gene (d) when, during an organism's development, this gene is expressed

C

10-56 Which of the following statements about RNA interference (or RNAi) is false? (a) RNAi is a natural mechanism used to regulate genes. (b) During the process of RNAi, hybridization of a small RNA molecule with the mRNA degrades the mRNA. (c) Because RNAi depends on the introduction of a double-stranded RNA into a cell or an organism, it is not a process that can cause heritable changes in gene expression. (d) In C. elegans, RNAi can be introduced into the animals by feeding them with bacteria that produce the inhibitory RNA molecules.

C

10-59 Which of the following describes a feature found in bacterial expression vectors but not in cloning vectors? (a) origin of replication (b) cleavage sites for restriction nucleases (c) promoter DNA sequences (d) a polyadenylation signal

C

11-14 Three phospholipids X, Y, and Z are distributed in the plasma membrane as indicated in Figure Q11-14. For which of these phospholipids does a flippase probably exist? (a) X only (b) Z only (c) X and Y (d) Y and Z

C

11-23 New membrane phospholipids are synthesized by enzymes bound to the _____________ side of the _________________ membrane. (a) cytosolic, mitochondrial (b) luminal, Golgi (c) cytosolic, endoplasmic reticulum (d) extracellular, plasma

C

11-35 Unlike soluble, cytosolic proteins, membrane proteins are more difficult to purify. Which of the following substances is most commonly used to help purify a membrane protein? (a) high salt solution (b) sucrose (c) detergent (d) ethanol

C

11-46 The lateral movement of transmembrane proteins can be restricted by several different mechanisms. Which mechanism best describes the process by which neutrophils are recruited by endothelial cells? (a) proteins are tethered to the cell cortex (b) proteins are tethered to the extracellular matrix (c) proteins are tethered to the proteins on the surface of another cell (d) protein movement is limited by the presence of a diffusion barrier

C

11-48 The lateral movement of transmembrane proteins can be restricted by several different mechanisms. Which mechanism best describes the process by which an antigen-presenting cell triggers an adaptive immune response? (a) proteins are tethered to the cell cortex (b) proteins are tethered to the extracellular matrix (c) proteins are tethered to the proteins on the surface of another cell (d) protein movement is limited by the presence of a diffusion barrier

C

11-52 Which of the following statements about the carbohydrate coating of the cell surface is false? (a) It is not usually found on the cytosolic side of the membrane. (b) It can play a role in cell-cell adhesion. (c) The arrangement of the oligosaccharide side chains is highly ordered, much like the peptide bonds of a polypeptide chain. (d) Specific oligosaccharides can be involved in cell-cell recognition.

C

11-54 Both glycoproteins and proteoglycans contribute to the carbohydrate layer on the surface of the cell. Which of the following is not true of glycoproteins? (a) They can be secreted into the extracellular environment. (b) They have only one transmembrane domain. (c) They have long carbohydrate chains. (d) They are recognized by lectins.

C

11-8 Which of the following statements is true? (a) Phospholipids will spontaneously form liposomes in nonpolar solvents. (b) In eukaryotes, all membrane-enclosed organelles are surrounded by one lipid bilayer. (c) Membrane lipids diffuse within the plane of the membrane. (d) Membrane lipids frequently flip-flop between one monolayer and the other.

C

6-1 The process of DNA replication requires that each of the parental DNA strands be used as a ___________________ to produce a duplicate of the opposing strand. (a) catalyst (b) competitor (c) template (d) copy

C

6-12 The chromatin structure in eukaryotic cells is much more complicated than that observed in prokaryotic cells. This is thought to be the reason that DNA replication occurs much faster in prokaryotes. How much faster is it? (a) 2× (b) 5× (c) 10× (d) 100×

C

6-2 DNA replication is considered semiconservative because ____________________________. (a) after many rounds of DNA replication, the original DNA double helix is still intact. (b) each daughter DNA molecule consists of two new strands copied from the parent DNA molecule. (c) each daughter DNA molecule consists of one strand from the parent DNA molecule and one new strand. (d) new DNA strands must be copied from a DNA template.

C

6-43 Beside the distortion in the DNA backbone caused by a mismatched base pair, what additional mark is there on eukaryotic DNA to indicate which strand needs to be repaired? (a) a nick in the template strand (b) a chemical modification of the new strand (c) a nick in the new strand (d) a sequence gap in the new strand

C

6-51 Sometimes, chemical damage to DNA can occur just before DNA replication begins, not giving the repair system enough time to correct the error before the DNA is duplicated. This gives rise to mutation. If the adenosine in the sequence TCAT is depurinated and not repaired, which of the following is the point mutation you would observe after this segment has undergone two rounds of DNA replication? (a) TCGT (b) TAT (c) TCT (d) TGTT

C

6-54 Several members of the same family were diagnosed with the same kind of cancer when they were unusually young. Which one of the following is the most likely explanation for this phenomenon? It is possible that the individuals with the cancer have _______________________. (a) inherited a cancer-causing gene that suffered a mutation in an ancestor's somatic cells. (b) inherited a mutation in a gene required for DNA synthesis. (c) inherited a mutation in a gene required for mismatch repair. (d) inherited a mutation in a gene required for the synthesis of purine nucleotides.

C

6-57 Select the option that best completes the following statement: Nonhomologous end joining is a process by which a double-stranded DNA end is joined ___________________. (a) to a similar stretch of sequence on the complementary chromosome. (b) after repairing any mismatches. (c) to the nearest available double-stranded DNA end. (d) after filling in any lost nucleotides, helping to maintain the integrity of the DNA sequence.

C

6-60 In addition to the repair of DNA double-strand breaks, homologous recombination is a mechanism for generating genetic diversity by swapping segments of parental chromosomes. During which process does swapping occur? (a) DNA replication (b) DNA repair (c) meiosis (d) transposition

C

7-14 Which one of the following is the main reason that a typical eukaryotic gene is able to respond to a far greater variety of regulatory signals than a typical prokaryotic gene or operon? (a) Eukaryotes have three types of RNA polymerase. (b) Eukaryotic RNA polymerases require general transcription factors. (c) The transcription of a eukaryotic gene can be influenced by proteins that bind far from the promoter. (d) Prokaryotic genes are packaged into nucleosomes.

C

7-22 The sigma subunit of bacterial RNA polymerase ___________________. (a) contains the catalytic activity of the polymerase. (b) remains part of the polymerase throughout transcription. (c) recognizes promoter sites in the DNA. (d) recognizes transcription termination sites in the DNA.

C

8-31 Your colleague looks at your data above and predicts that protein G will bind more strongly to the DNA at site A, compared to protein H. Which experiment above is critical for this prediction? (a) #2 (b) #3 (c) #5 (d) #6

C

7-3 Consider two genes that are next to each other on a chromosome, as arranged in Figure Q7-3. Which of the following statements is true? (a) The two genes must be transcribed into RNA using the same strand of DNA. (b) If gene A is transcribed in a cell, gene B cannot be transcribed. (c) Gene A and gene B can be transcribed at different rates, producing different amounts of RNA within the same cell. (d) If gene A is transcribed in a cell, gene B must be transcribed.

C

7-4 RNA in cells differs from DNA in that ___________________. (a) it contains the base uracil, which pairs with cytosine. (b) it is single-stranded and cannot form base pairs. (c) it is single-stranded and can fold up into a variety of structures. (d) the sugar ribose contains fewer oxygen atoms than does deoxyribose.

C

7-41 Which of the following pairs of codons might you expect to be read by the same tRNA as a result of wobble? (a) CUU and UUU (b) GAU and GAA (c) CAC and CAU (d) AAU and AGU

C

7-45 A strain of yeast translates mRNA into protein inaccurately. Individual molecules of a particular protein isolated from this yeast have variations in the first 11 amino acids compared with the sequence of the same protein isolated from normal yeast cells, as listed in Figure Q7-45. What is the most likely cause of this variation in protein sequence? (a) a mutation in the DNA coding for the protein (b) a mutation in the anticodon of the isoleucine-tRNA (tRNAIle) (c) a mutation in the isoleucyl-tRNA synthetase that decreases its ability to distinguish between different amino acids (d) a mutation in the isoleucyl-tRNA synthetase that decreases its ability to distinguish between different tRNA molecules

C

7-50 The ribosome is important for catalyzing the formation of peptide bonds. Which of the following statements is true? (a) The number of rRNA molecules that make up a ribosome greatly exceeds the number of protein molecules found in the ribosome. (b) The large subunit of the ribosome is important for binding to the mRNA. (c) The catalytic site for peptide bond formation is formed primarily from an rRNA. (d) Once the large and small subunits of the ribosome assemble, they will not separate from each other until degraded by the proteasome.

C

7-51 Which of the following statements is true? (a) Ribosomes are large RNA structures composed solely of rRNA. (b) Ribosomes are synthesized entirely in the cytoplasm. (c) rRNA contains the catalytic activity that joins amino acids together. (d) A ribosome binds one tRNA at a time.

C

7-58 The concentration of a particular protein, X, in a normal human cell rises gradually from a low point, immediately after cell division, to a high point, just before cell division, and then drops sharply. The level of its mRNA in the cell remains fairly constant throughout this time. Protein X is required for cell growth and survival, but the drop in its level just before cell division is essential for division to proceed. You have isolated a line of human cells that grow in size in culture but cannot divide, and on analyzing these mutants, you find that levels of X mRNA in the mutant cells are normal. Which of the following mutations in the gene for X could explain these results? (a) the introduction of a stop codon that truncates protein X at the fourth amino acid (b) a change of the first ATG codon to CCA (c) the deletion of a sequence that encodes sites at which ubiquitin can be attached to the protein (d) a change at a splice site that prevents splicing of the RNA

C

7-61 Which of the following statements about the proteasome is false? (a) Ubiquitin is a small protein that is covalently attached to proteins to mark them for delivery to the proteasome. (b) Proteases reside in the central cylinder of a proteasome. (c) Misfolded proteins are delivered to the proteasome, where they are sequestered from the cytoplasm and can attempt to refold. (d) The protein stoppers that surround the central cylinder of the proteasome use the energy from ATP hydrolysis to move proteins into the proteasome inner chamber.

C

7-62 Which of the following molecules is thought to have arisen first during evolution? (a) protein (b) DNA (c) RNA

C

7-64 Ribozymes catalyze which of the following reactions? (a) DNA synthesis (b) transcription (c) RNA splicing (d) protein hydrolysis

C

7-7 Figure Q7-6 shows a ribose sugar. The part of the ribose sugar that is different from the deoxyribose sugar used in DNA is pointed to by arrow ____. (a) 1. (b) 4. (c) 5. (d) 6.

C

7-8 Figure Q7-6 shows a ribose sugar. The part of the ribose sugar where a new ribonucleotide will attach in an RNA molecule is pointed to by arrow ____. (a) 1. (b) 3. (c) 4. (d) 5.

C

8-1 A neuron and a white blood cell have very different functions. For example, a neuron can receive and respond to electrical signals while a white blood cell defends the body against infection. This is because ______. (a) the proteins found in a neuron are completely different from the proteins found in a white blood cell. (b) the neuron and the white blood cell within an individual have the same genome. (c) the neuron expresses some mRNAs that the white blood cell does not. (d) neurons and white blood cells are differentiated cells and thus no longer need to transcribe and translate genes.

C

8-11 Operons ___________________________. (a) are commonly found in eukaryotic cells. (b) are transcribed by RNA polymerase II. (c) contain a cluster of genes transcribed as a single mRNA. (d) can only be regulated by gene activator proteins.

C

8-19 Which transcription factors are normally bound to the Psf promoter in the presence of Mg2+ only? (a) none (b) MetA only (c) MetA and Met B (d) MetA, MetB, and MetC

C

8-20 Which transcription factors are normally bound to the Psf promoter in the presence of both Mg2+ and Ca2+? (a) MetA and MetB (b) MetB and MetC (c) MetA and MetC (d) MetA, MetB, and MetC

C

8-21 Which of the following proteins is likely to act as a gene repressor? (a) factor X (b) factor Y (c) factor Z (d) none of the above

C

8-24 In what tissue is factor Z normally present and bound to the DNA? (a) kidney (b) liver (c) heart (d) none of the above

C

8-3 The human genome encodes about 21,000 protein-coding genes. Approximately how many such genes does the typical differentiated human cell express at any one time? (a) 21,000—all of them (b) between 18,900 and 21,000—at least 90% of the genes (c) between 5000 and 15,000 (d) less than 2100

C

8-37 The expression of the BRF1 gene in mice is normally quite low, but mutations in a gene called BRF2 lead to increased expression of BRF1. You have a hunch that nucleosomes are involved in the regulation of BRF1 expression and so you investigate the position of nucleosomes over the TATA box of BRF1 in normal mice and in mice that lack either the BRF2 protein (BRF2-) or part of histone H4 (HHF-) (histone H4 is encoded by the HHF gene). Table Q8-37 summarizes your results. A normal functional gene is indicated by a plus sign (+). Which of the following conclusions cannot be drawn from your data? Explain your answer. (a) BRF2 is required for the repression of BRF1. (b) BRF2 is required for the specific pattern of nucleosome positions over the BRF1 upstream region. (c) The specific pattern of nucleosome positioning over the BRF1 upstream region is required for BRF1 repression. (d) The part of histone H4 missing in HHF- mice is not required for the formation of nucleosomes.

C

8-40 Which of the following statements about nucleosomes is true? (a) Nucleosomes activate transcription when bound to the promoter. (b) Although RNA polymerase can access DNA packed within nucleosomes, the general transcription factors and transcriptional regulators cannot. (c) Histone acetyltransferases affect transcription by both altering chromatin structure to allow accessibility to the DNA and by adding acetyl groups to histones that can bind proteins that promote transcription. (d) Histone deacetylases remove lysines from histone tails.

C

8-41 In principle, how many different cell types can an organism having four different types of transcription regulator and thousands of genes create? (a) up to 4 (b) up to 8 (c) up to 16 (d) thousands

C

8-46 Which of the following statements about how fruit flies can develop an eye in the middle of a leg is true? (a) When the Ey gene is expressed in adult leg cells, these cells de-differentiate and become eye cells. (b) The Ey gene encodes a transcription regulator that is the only transcription regulator used to produce a fruit-fly eye. (c) When the Ey gene is introduced into cells that would normally give rise to a leg, the transcription regulators used to control its expression in the leg are different from those that are normally used to control Ey expression in the eye. (d) All the eye cells found in the adult leg are a single cell type and have identical characteristics.

C

8-48 The MyoD transcriptional regulator is normally found in differentiating muscle cells and participates in the transcription of genes that produce muscle-specific proteins, such as those needed in contractile tissue. Amazingly, expression of MyoD in fibroblasts causes these cells derived from skin connective tissue to produce proteins normally only seen in muscles. However, some other cell types do not transcribe muscle-specific genes when MyoD is expressed in them. Which of the following statements below is the best explanation of why MyoD can cause fibroblasts to express muscle-specific genes? (a) Unlike some other cell types, fibroblasts have not lost the muscle-specific genes from their genome. (b) The muscle-specific genes must be in heterochromatin in fibroblasts. (c) During their developmental history, fibroblasts have accumulated some transcriptional regulators in common with differentiating muscle cells. (d) The presence of MyoD is sufficient to activate the transcription of muscle-specific genes in all cell types.

C

8-57 Which of the following is not involved in post-transcriptional control? (a) the spliceosome (b) Dicer (c) Mediator (d) RISC

C

8-61 Which of the following statements about miRNAs is false? (a) One miRNA can regulate the expression of many genes. (b) miRNAs are transcribed in the nucleus from genomic DNA. (c) miRNAs are produced from rRNAs. (d) miRNAs are made by RNA polymerase.

C

9-18 Which of the following changes is least likely to arise from a point mutation in a regulatory region of a gene? (a) a mutation that changes the time in an organism's life during which a protein is expressed (b) a mutation that eliminates the production of a protein in a specific cell type (c) a mutation that changes the subcellular localization of a protein (d) a mutation that increases the level of protein production in a cell

C

9-2 Your friend works in a lab that is studying why a particular mutant strain of Drosophila grows an eye on its wing. Your friend discovers that this mutant strain of Drosophila is expressing a transcription factor incorrectly. In the mutant Drosophila, this transcription factor, which is normally expressed in the primordial eye tissue, is now misexpressed in the primordial wing tissue, thus turning on transcription of the set of genes required to produce an eye in the wing primordial tissue. If this hypothesis is true, which of the following types of genetic change would most likely lead to this situation? (a) a mutation within the transcription factor gene that leads to a premature stop codon after the third amino acid (b) a mutation within the transcription factor gene that leads to a substitution of a positively charged amino acid for a negatively charged amino acid (c) a mutation within an upstream enhancer of the gene (d) a mutation in the TATA box of the gene

C

9-27 Figure Q9-27 shows the nucleotide sequence from a protein-coding region of a gene in humans, chimpanzees, and gorillas and the protein sequence produced from this gene. The seventeen amino acids encoded by this DNA are numbered below. The two codons that are not conserved in all three species have been boxed. These two codons code for amino acids 3 and 15.Which of these statements is consistent with these sequence-comparison data? (a) The gorilla sequence is more similar to the chimp sequence than to the human sequence. (b) Since these sequences are so similar, this protein must also be found in invertebrates. (c) The chimp DNA sequence has likely diverged at the DNA coding for amino acid 15 from the sequence found in the last common ancestor of humans and chimps. (d) The last common ancestor of chimps and gorillas most likely used AAA to code for amino acid number 3.

C

9-29 You are interested in finding out how the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is so good at making bread and have collected five new related species from the wild. You sequence the genomes of all of these new species and also consult with a fungal biologist to help you construct the phylogenetic tree shown in Figure Q9-29. You find that species V, W, and X make pretty good bread whereas species Y and Z do not, suggesting that the last common ancestor of species X and S. cerevisiae may have the genes necessary for making good bread. You compare the gene sequences of species X and S. cerevisiae and find many identical coding sequences, but you also identify nucleotides that differ between the two species. Which species would be the best to examine to determine what the sequence was in the last common ancestor of species X and S. cerevisiae? (a) species V (b) species W (c) species Y (d) species Z

C

9-33 The evolutionary relationships between seven different species-G, H, J, K, L, M, and N-are diagrammed in Figure Q9-33.Given this information, which of the following statements is false? (a) These are all highly related species, because the sequence divergence between the most divergent species is 3%. (b) Species M is just as related to species G as it is to species J. (c) Species N is more closely related to the last common ancestor of all of these species than to any of the other species shown in the diagram. (d) Species G and H are as closely related to each other as species J and K are to each other.

C

9-46 HIV is a human retrovirus that integrates into the host cell's genome and will eventually replicate, produce viral proteins, and ultimately escape from the host cell. Which of the following proteins is not encoded in the HIV genome? (a) reverse transcriptase (b) envelope protein (c) RNA polymerase (d) capsid protein

C

9-51 A finished draft of the human genome was published in ______. (a) 1965. (b) 1984. (c) 2004. (d) 2012.

C

9-61 Alternative exons can arise through the duplication and divergence of existing exons. What type of mutation below would be least tolerated during the evolution of a new exon? (a) a nucleotide change of A to G (b) a deletion of three consecutive bases (c) mutation of the first nucleotide in the intron (d) a nucleotide change that alters a TT dinucleotide to AA

C

9-65 The yeast genome was sequenced more than 15 years ago, yet the total number of genes continues to be refined. The sequencing of closely related yeast species was important for validating the identity of short (less than 100 nucleotides long) open reading frames (ORFs) that were otherwise difficult to predict. What is the main reason that these short ORFs are hard to find without the genomes of other yeast for comparison? (a) Short ORFs are found only in yeast. (b) The short ORFs code for RNAs. (c) Many short stretches of DNA may lack a stop codon simply by chance, making it difficult to distinguish those DNA sequences that code for proteins from those that do not. (d) Short ORFs occur mainly in gene-rich regions, making them difficult to identify by computer programs.

C

9-8 What is the most likely explanation of why the overall mutation rates in bacteria and in humans are roughly similar? (a) Cell division needs to be fast. (b) Most mutations are silent. (c) There is a narrow range of mutation rates that offers an optimal balance between keeping the genome stable and generating sufficient diversity in a population. (d) It benefits a multicellular organism to have some variability among its cells.

C

10-15 You are interested in a single-stranded DNA molecule that contains the following sequence:Which molecule can be used as a probe that will hybridize to your sequence of interest? (a) 5′-GATTGCAT-3′ (b) 5′-TACGTTAG-3′ (c) 5′-CTAACGTA-3′ (d) 5′-ATGCAATC-3′

D

10-18 DNA ligase is an enzyme used when making recombinant DNA molecules in the lab. In what normal cellular process is DNA ligase involved? (a) none, it is only found in virally infected cells (b) transcription (c) transformation (d) DNA replication

D

10-21 DNA can be introduced into bacteria by a mechanism called ____________. (a) transcription. (b) ligation. (c) replication. (d) transformation.

D

11-6 Which of the following membrane lipids does not contain a fatty acid tail? (a) phosphatidylcholine (b) a glycolipid (c) phosphatidylserine (d) cholesterol

D

10-28 A DNA library has been constructed by purifying chromosomal DNA from mice, cutting the DNA with the restriction enzyme NotI, and inserting the fragments into the NotI site of a plasmid vector. What information cannot be retrieved from this library? (a) gene regulatory sequences (b) intron sequences (c) sequences of the telomeres (the ends of the chromosomes) (d) amino acid sequences of proteins

D

10-29 You want to design a DNA probe used for hybridization to isolate a clone from a cDNA library. Which of the following concerns about DNA probe design is the most legitimate? (a) You must be careful when designing your probe to take into account which DNA strand was transcribed in mRNA and choose a probe complementary to the mRNA. (b) You must be careful not to include any DNA sequences in your probe that are upstream (5′) of the AUG start codon. (c) You must make sure that all the DNA sequences in your probe lie within an exon, and do not span two exons. (d) You must make sure that all the DNA sequences in your probe are not located downstream (3′) of the polyadenylation signal.

D

10-41 PCR involves a heating step, followed by a cooling step, and then DNA synthesis. What is the primary reason for why this cooling step is necessary? (a) Cooling the reaction ensures the integrity of the covalent bonds holding the nucleotides together in the DNA strand. (b) Cooling the reaction gives the DNA polymerase an opportunity to rest from the previous cycle so that it will be ready for the next round of synthesis. (c) Transcription takes place during the cooling step. (d) Cooling the reaction brings the temperature down to a level that is compatible with the short primers forming stable hydrogen bonds with the DNA to be amplified.

D

10-50 You have sequenced a fragment of DNA and produced the gel shown in Figure Q10-50. Near the top of the gel, there is a section where there are bands in all four lanes (indicated by the arrow). Which of the following mishaps would account for this phenomenon? Explain your answer.(a) You mistakenly added all four dideoxynucleotides to one of the reactions. (b) You forgot to add deoxynucleotides to the reactions. (c) Your primer hybridizes to more than one area of the fragment of DNA you are sequencing. (d) A restriction nuclease cut a fraction of the DNA you are sequencing.

D

10-52 Second-generation sequencing differs from Sanger sequencing because _____________. (a) second-generation sequencing does not depend on chain-terminator ddNTPs. (b) second-generation sequencing does not require DNA polymerase. (c) for the cost per base sequenced, second-generation sequencing is much more expensive than Sanger sequencing. (d) second-generation sequencing can sequence tens of millions of pieces of DNA at the same time on a single glass slide.

D

10-57 You have been hired to create a cat that will not cause allergic reactions in cat-lovers. Your coworkers have cloned the gene encoding a protein found in cat saliva, expressed the protein in bacteria, and shown that it causes violent allergic reactions in people. But you soon realize that even if you succeed in making a knockout cat lacking this gene, anyone who buys one will easily be able to make more hypoallergenic cats just by breeding them. Which of the following will ensure that people will always have to buy their hypoallergenic cats from you? (a) Inject the modified embryonic stem (ES) cells into embryos that have a genetic defect to prevent the mature adult from reproducing. (b) Implant the injected embryos into a female cat that is sterile as a result of a genetic defect. (c) Sell only the offspring from the first litter of the female cat implanted with the injected embryos. (d) Surgically remove the sexual organs of all the knockouts before you sell them.

D

10-6 You have a piece of circular DNA that can be cut by the restriction nucleases EcoRI, HindIII, and NotI, as indicated in Figure Q10-6.Which of the following statements is false? (a) One piece of DNA will be obtained when this DNA is cut by NotI. (b) A piece of DNA that cannot be cut by EcoRI will be obtained by cutting this DNA with both NotI and HindIII. (c) Two DNA fragments that cannot be cut by HindIII will be obtained when this DNA is cut by EcoRI and NotI. (d) Two DNA fragments of unequal size will be created when this DNA is cut by both HindIII and EcoRI.

D

11-12 Some lipases are able to cleave the covalent bonds between the glycerol backbone and the attached fatty acid. What final products do you expect to accumulate through the action of the enzyme monoacylglycerol lipase? (a) phosphoglycerol and free fatty acid (b) sterol and glycerol (c) free phosphate and glycerol (d) glycerol and free fatty acid

D

11-21 Cholesterol serves several essential functions in mammalian cells. Which of the following is not influenced by cholesterol? (a) membrane permeability (b) membrane fluidity (c) membrane rigidity (d) membrane thickness

D

11-25 Membrane curvature is influenced by the differential lipid composition of the two membrane monolayers. Which factor do you think has the largest impact on the curvature of biological membranes? (a) amount of cholesterol (b) charge of the lipid head group (c) length of the hydrocarbon tails (d) size of the lipid head group

D

11-41 Red blood cells have been very useful in the study of membranes and the protein components that provide structural support. Which of the following proteins is the principal fibrous protein in the cortex of the red blood cell? (a) tubulin (b) attachment proteins (c) actin (d) spectrin

D

11-47 The lateral movement of transmembrane proteins can be restricted by several different mechanisms. Which mechanism best describes the process by which nutrients are taken up at the apical surface of the epithelial cells that line the gut and released from their basal and lateral surfaces? (a) proteins are tethered to the cell cortex (b) proteins are tethered to the extracellular matrix (c) proteins are tethered to the proteins on the surface of another cell (d) protein movement is limited by the presence of a diffusion barrier

D

11-51 Diversity among the oligosaccharide chains found in the carbohydrate coating of the cell surface can be achieved in which of the following ways? (a) varying the types of sugar monomers used (b) varying the types of linkages between sugars (c) varying the number of branches in the chain (d) all of the above

D

11-58 We can estimate the relative mobility of a population of molecules along the surface of a living cell by fluorescently labeling the molecules of interest, bleaching the label in one small area, and then measuring the speed of signal recovery as molecules migrate back into the bleached area. What is this method called? What does the abbreviation stand for? (a) SDS (b) SPT (c) GFP (d) FRAP

D

6-11 Which of the following statements correctly explains what it means for DNA replication to be bidirectional? (a) The replication fork can open or close, depending on the conditions. (b) The DNA replication machinery can move in either direction on the template strand. (c) Replication-fork movement can switch directions when the fork converges on another replication fork. (d) The replication forks formed at the origin move in opposite directions.

D

6-19 What part of the DNA replication process would be most directly affected if a strain of bacteria lacking the exonuclease activity of DNA polymerase were used to make the cell extracts? (a) initiation of DNA synthesis (b) Okazaki fragment synthesis (c) leading-strand elongation (d) lagging-strand completion

D

6-22 What part of the DNA replication process would be most directly affected if a strain of bacteria lacking DNA ligase were used to make the cell extracts? (a) initiation of DNA synthesis (b) Okazaki fragment synthesis (c) leading-strand elongation (d) lagging-strand completion

D

6-23 Which of the following statements about the newly synthesized strand of a human chromosome is true? (a) It was synthesized from a single origin solely by continuous DNA synthesis. (b) It was synthesized from a single origin by a mixture of continuous and discontinuous DNA synthesis. (c) It was synthesized from multiple origins solely by discontinuous DNA synthesis. (d) It was synthesized from multiple origins by a mixture of continuous and discontinuous DNA synthesis.

D

6-24 You have discovered an "Exo-" mutant form of DNA polymerase in which the 3′-to-5′ exonuclease function has been destroyed but the ability to join nucleotides together is unchanged. Which of the following properties do you expect the mutant polymerase to have? (a) It will polymerize in both the 5′-to-3′ direction and the 3′-to-5′ direction. (b) It will polymerize more slowly than the normal Exo+ polymerase. (c) It will fall off the template more frequently than the normal Exo+ polymerase. (d) It will be more likely to generate mismatched base pairs.

D

6-25 A molecule of bacterial DNA introduced into a yeast cell is imported into the nucleus but fails to replicate with the yeast DNA. Where do you think the block to replication arises? Choose the protein or protein complex below that is most probably responsible for the failure to replicate bacterial DNA. Give an explanation for your answer. (a) primase (b) helicase (c) DNA polymerase (d) initiator proteins

D

6-27 Which diagram accurately represents the directionality of DNA strands at one side of a replication fork?

D

6-38 Telomeres serve as caps at the ends of linear chromosomes. Which of the following is not true regarding the replication of telomeric sequences? (a) The lagging-strand telomeres are not completely replicated by DNA polymerase. (b) Telomeres are made of repeating sequences. (c) Additional repeated sequences are added to the template strand. (d) The leading strand doubles back on itself to form a primer for the lagging strand.

D

6-40 Even though DNA polymerase has a proofreading function, it still introduces errors in the newly synthesized strand at a rate of 1 per 107 nucleotides. To what degree does the mismatch repair system decrease the error rate arising from DNA replication? (a) 2-fold (b) 5-fold (c) 10-fold (d) 100-fold

D

6-46 Human beings with the inherited disease xeroderma pigmentosum have serious problems with lesions on their skin and often develop skin cancer with repeated exposure to sunlight. What type of DNA damage is not being recognized in the cells of these individuals? (a) chemical damage (b) X-ray irradiation damage (c) mismatched bases (d) ultraviolet irradiation damage

D

6-47 You are examining the DNA sequences that code for the enzyme phosphofructokinase in skinks and Komodo dragons. You notice that the coding sequence that actually directs the sequence of amino acids in the enzyme is very similar in the two organisms but that the surrounding sequences vary quite a bit. What is the most likely explanation for this? (a) Coding sequences are repaired more efficiently. (b) Coding sequences are replicated more accurately. (c) Coding sequences are packaged more tightly in the chromosomes to protect them from DNA damage. (d) Mutations in coding sequences are more likely to be deleterious to the organism than mutations in noncoding sequences.

D

6-5 If the genome of the bacterium E. coli requires about 20 minutes to replicate itself, how can the genome of the fruit fly Drosophila be replicated in only 3 minutes? (a) The Drosophila genome is smaller than the E. coli genome. (b) Eukaryotic DNA polymerase synthesizes DNA at a much faster rate than prokaryotic DNA polymerase. (c) The nuclear membrane keeps the Drosophila DNA concentrated in one place in the cell, which increases the rate of polymerization. (d) Drosophila DNA contains more origins of replication than E. coli DNA.

D

6-61 Recombination has occurred between the chromosome segments shown in Figure Q6-61. The genes A and B, and the recessive alleles a and b, are used as markers on the maternal and paternal chromosomes, respectively. After alignment and homologous recombination, the specific arrangements of A, B, a, and b have changed. Which of the choices below correctly indicates the gene combination from the replication products of the maternal chromosome? (a) AB and aB (b) ab and Ab (c) AB and Ab (d) aB and Ab

D

6-62 The events listed below are all necessary for homologous recombination to occur properly: A. Holliday junction cut and ligated B. strand invasion C. DNA synthesis D. DNA ligation E. double-strand break F. nucleases create uneven strands Which of the following is the correct order of events during homologous recombination? (a) E, B, F, D, C, A (b) B, E, F, D, C, A (c) C, E, F, B, D, A (d) E, F, B, C, D, A

D

7-11 Which of the following statements is false? (a) A new RNA molecule can begin to be synthesized from a gene before the previous RNA molecule's synthesis is completed. (b) If two genes are to be expressed in a cell, these two genes can be transcribed with different efficiencies. (c) RNA polymerase is responsible for both unwinding the DNA helix and catalyzing the formation of the phosphodiester bonds between nucleotides. (d) Unlike DNA, RNA uses a uracil base and a deoxyribose sugar.

D

7-12 Unlike DNA, which typically forms a helical structure, different molecules of RNA can fold into a variety of three-dimensional shapes. This is largely because ___________________. (a) RNA contains uracil and uses ribose as the sugar. (b) RNA bases cannot form hydrogen bonds with each other. (c) RNA nucleotides use a different chemical linkage between nucleotides compared to DNA. (d) RNA is single-stranded.

D

7-20 You have a segment of DNA that contains the following sequence: 5′-GGACTAGACAATAGGGACCTAGAGATTCCGAAA-3′ 3′-CCTGATCTGTTATCCCTGGATCTCTAAGGCTTT-5′ You know that the RNA transcribed from this segment contains the following sequence: 5′-GGACUAGACAAUAGGGACCUAGAGAUUCCGAAA-3′ Which of the following choices best describes how transcription occurs? (a) the top strand is the template strand; RNA polymerase moves along this strand from 5′ to 3′ (b) the top strand is the template strand; RNA polymerase moves along this strand from 3′ to 5′ (c) the bottom strand is the template strand; RNA polymerase moves along this strand from 5′ to 3′ (d) the bottom strand is the template strand; RNA polymerase moves along this strand from 3′ to 5′

D

7-23 Which of the following might decrease the transcription of only one specific gene in a bacterial cell? (a) a decrease in the amount of sigma factor (b) a decrease in the amount of RNA polymerase (c) a mutation that introduced a stop codon into the DNA that precedes the gene's coding sequence (d) a mutation that introduced extensive sequence changes into the DNA that precedes the gene's transcription start site

D

7-28 Total nucleic acids are extracted from a culture of yeast cells and are then mixed with resin beads to which the polynucleotide 5′-TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT-3′ has been covalently attached. After a short incubation, the beads are then extracted from the mixture. When you analyze the cellular nucleic acids that have stuck to the beads, which of the following is most abundant? (a) DNA (b) tRNA (c) rRNA (d) mRNA

D

7-34 snRNAs ___________________. (a) are translated into snRNPs. (b) are important for producing mature mRNA transcripts in bacteria. (c) are removed by the spliceosome during RNA splicing. (d) can bind to specific sequences at intron-exon boundaries through complementary base-pairing.

D

7-5 Transcription is similar to DNA replication in that ___________________. (a) an RNA transcript is synthesized discontinuously and the pieces are then joined together. (b) it uses the same enzyme as that used to synthesize RNA primers during DNA replication. (c) the newly synthesized RNA remains paired to the template DNA. (d) nucleotide polymerization occurs only in the 5′-to-3′ direction.

D

7-60 Which of the following methods is not used by cells to regulate the amount of a protein in the cell? (a) Genes can be transcribed into mRNA with different efficiencies. (b) Many ribosomes can bind to a single mRNA molecule. (c) Proteins can be tagged with ubiquitin, marking them for degradation. (d) Nuclear pore complexes can regulate the speed at which newly synthesized proteins are exported from the nucleus into the cytoplasm.

D

7-63 According to current thinking, the minimum requirement for life to have originated on Earth was the formation of a _______________. (a) molecule that could provide a template for the production of a complementary molecule. (b) double-stranded DNA helix. (c) molecule that could direct protein synthesis. (d) molecule that could catalyze its own replication.

D

7-68 You have discovered an alien life-form that surprisingly uses DNA as its genetic material, makes RNA from DNA, and reads the information from RNA to make protein using ribosomes and tRNAs, which read triplet codons. Because it is your job to decipher the genetic code for this alien, you synthesize some artificial RNA molecules and examine the protein products produced from these RNA molecules in a cell-free translation system using purified alien tRNAs and ribosomes. You obtain the results shown in Table Q7-68. From this information, which of the following peptides can be produced from poly UAUC? (a) Ile-Phe-Val-Tyr (b) Tyr-Ser-Phe-Ala (c) Ile-Lys-His-Tyr (d) Cys-Pro-Lys-Ala

D

7-69 An extraterrestrial organism (ET) is discovered whose basic cell biology seems pretty much the same as that of terrestrial organisms except that it uses a different genetic code to translate RNA into protein. You set out to break the code by translation experiments using RNAs of known sequence and cell-free extracts of ET cells to supply the necessary protein-synthesizing machinery. In experiments using the RNAs below, the following results were obtained when the 20 possible amino acids were added either singly or in different combinations of two or three: RNA 1: 5′-GCGCGCGCGCGCGCGCGCGCGCGCGCGC-3′ RNA 2: 5′-GCCGCCGCCGCCGCCGCCGCCGCCGCCGCC-3′ Using RNA 1, a polypeptide was produced only if alanine and valine were added to the reaction mixture. Using RNA 2, a polypeptide was produced only if leucine and serine and cysteine were added to the reaction mixture. Assuming that protein synthesis can start anywhere on the template, that the ET genetic code is nonoverlapping and linear, and that each codon is the same length (like the terrestrial triplet code), how many nucleotides does an ET codon contain? (a) 2 (b) 3 (c) 4 (d) 5 (e) 6

D

8-17 Which of the following proteins are likely to act as gene activators? (a) MetA only (b) MetB only (c) MetC only (d) Both MetA and MetC

D

8-29 Which proteins are likely to act as gene activators? (a) G (b) H (c) J (d) both H and J

D

8-34 You know that Gip1 is only expressed in adult liver cells and not in the liver of embryos. You also know that Jk8 and Pa5 behave similarly on other promoters in the embryo or in the adult, in terms of whether they act as repressors or gene activators. Given the data, use of which of the following mechanisms would make the most sense for regulating the Jk8 and Pa5 proteins: (a) Jk8 is ubiquitylated and targeted for destruction in adult cells. (b) Jk8, but not Pa5, is transcribed in embryonic liver cells. (c) Jk8 binds to the promoter of the gene that encodes Jk8 in embryonic liver cells. (d) Pa5 binds to the promoter of the gene that encodes Jk8 in embryonic liver cells.

D

8-4 Which of the following is not a good example of a housekeeping protein? (a) DNA repair enzymes (b) histones (c) ATP synthase (d) hemoglobin

D

8-5 Which of the following statements about differentiated cells is true? (a) Cells of distinct types express nonoverlapping sets of transcription factors. (b) Once a cell has differentiated, it can no longer change its gene expression. (c) Once a cell has differentiated, it will no longer need to transcribe RNA. (d) Some of the proteins found in differentiated cells are found in all cells of a multicellular organism.

D

9-60 You are studying a gene that has four exons and can undergo alternative splicing. Exon 1 has two alternatives, exon 2 has five alternatives, exon 3 has three alternatives, and exon 4 has four alternatives. If all possible splicing combinations were used, how many different splice isoforms could be produced for this gene? (a) 22 (b) 30 (c) 60 (d) 120

D

8-51 Which of the following is not a general mechanism that cells use to maintain stable patterns of gene expression as cells divide? (a) a positive feedback loop, mediated by a transcriptional regulator that activates transcription of its own gene in addition to other cell-type-specific genes (b) faithful propagation of condensed chromatin structures as cells divide (c) inheritance of DNA methylation patterns when cells divide (d) proper segregation of housekeeping proteins when cells divide

D

8-52 Which of the following statements about DNA methylation in eukaryotes is false? (a) Appropriate inheritance of DNA methylation patterns involves maintenance methyltransferase. (b) DNA methylation involves a covalent modification of cytosine bases. (c) Methylation of DNA attracts proteins that block gene expression. (d) Immediately after DNA replication, each daughter helix contains one methylated DNA strand, which corresponds to the newly synthesized strand.

D

8-55 Using genetic engineering techniques, you remove the sequences that code for the ribosome-binding sequences of the bacterial LacZ gene. The removal of these sequences will lead to ___________. (a) more LacZ protein produced due to faster ribosome movement across the LacZ mRNA. (b) transcriptional repression, resulting in fewer mRNA molecules produced from this gene. (c) a longer half-life for the LacZ mRNA. (d) translational inhibition of the LacZ mRNA.

D

9-16 Figure Q9-16 shows an experiment used to determine the spontaneous mutation rate in E. coli. If the spontaneous mutation rate in E. coli is 1 mistake in every 109 nucleotides copied, about how many colonies would you expect to see on the plates lacking histidine if you were to assay 1011 cells from the culture for their ability to form colonies?(a) 1 (b) 2 (c) 10 (d) 100

D

9-20 Which of the following statements about the globin gene family is true? (a) The globin protein, which can carry oxygen molecules throughout an organism's body, was first seen in ancient vertebrate species about 500 million years ago. (b) The gene duplication that led to the expansion of the globin gene family led to the separation and distribution of globin on many chromosomes in mammals, such that no chromosome has more than a single functional member of the globin gene family. (c) As globin gene family members diverged over the course of evolution, all the DNA sequence variations that have accumulated between family members are within the regulatory DNA sequences that affect when and how strongly each globin gene is expressed. (d) Some of the duplicated globin genes that arose during vertebrate evolution acquired inactivating mutations and became pseudogenes in modern vertebrates.

D

9-22 Figure Q9-22 shows the evolutionary history of the globin gene family members.Given this information, which of the following statements is true? (a) The ancestral globin gene arose 500 million years ago. (b) The α-globin gene is more closely related to the ε-globin gene than to the δ-globin gene. (c) The nucleotide sequences of the two γ-globins will be most similar because they are the closest together on the chromosome. (d) The fetal β-globins arose from a gene duplication that occurred 200 million years ago, which gave rise to a β-globin expressed in the fetus and a β-globin expressed in the adult.

D

9-24 Which of the following would contribute most to successful exon shuffling? (a) shorter introns (b) a haploid genome (c) exons that code for more than one protein domain (d) introns that contain regions of similarity to one another

D

9-30 Which of the following statements is false? (a) The human genome is more similar to the orangutan genome than it is to the mouse genome. (b) A comparison of genomes shows that 90% of the human genome shares regions of conserved synteny with the mouse genome. (c) Primates, dogs, mice, and chickens all have about the same number of genes. (d) Genes that code for ribosomal RNA share significant similarity in all eukaryotes but are much more difficult to recognize in archaea.

D

9-31 The pufferfish, Fugu rubripes, has a genome that is one-tenth the size of mammalian genomes. Which of the following statements is not a possible reason for this size difference? (a) Intron sequences in Fugu are shorter than those in mammals. (b) Fugu lacks the repetitive DNA found in mammals. (c) The Fugu genome seems to have lost sequences faster than it has gained sequences over evolutionary time. (d) Fugu has lost many genes that are part of gene families.

D

9-40 Which of the following functions do you not expect to find in the set of genes found in all organisms on Earth? (a) DNA replication (b) DNA repair (c) protein production (d) RNA splicing

D

9-42 Which of the following statements about mobile genetic elements is true? (a) Mobile genetic elements can sometimes rearrange the DNA sequences of the genome in which they are embedded by accidentally excising neighboring chromosomal regions and reinserting these sequences into different places within the genome. (b) DNA-only transposons do not code for proteins but instead rely on transposases found in cells that are infected by viruses. (c) The two major families of transposable sequences found in the human genome are DNA-only transposons that move by replicative transposition. (d) During cut-and-paste transposition, the donor DNA will no longer have the mobile genetic element embedded in its sequence when transposition is complete.

D

9-44 Which of the following is true of a retrovirus but not of the Alu retrotransposon? (a) It requires cellular enzymes to make copies. (b) It can be inserted into the genome. (c) It can be excised and moved to a new location in the genome. (d) It encodes its own reverse transcriptase.

D

9-49 Viral genomes _________. (a) can be made of DNA. (b) can be made of RNA. (c) can be either double-stranded or single-stranded. (d) All answers above are true.

D

9-54 Which of the following statements about the human genome is false? (a) About 50% of the human genome is made up of mobile genetic elements. (b) More of the human genome comprises intron sequences than exon sequences. (c) About 1.5% of the human genome codes for exons. (d) Only the exons are conserved between the genomes of humans and other mammals.

D

9-6 You isolate a pathogenic strain of E. coli from a patient and discover that this E. coli strain is resistant to an antibiotic. Common laboratory strains of E. coli are not resistant to this antibiotic, nor are any other previously isolated pathogenic E. coli strains. However, such resistance has been observed in other bacteria in the hospital in which the patient was treated. This newly discovered antibiotic resistance in E. coli is most likely due to _______. (a) a mutation within a gene. (b) a mutation within the regulatory DNA of a gene. (c) gene duplication. (d) horizontal gene transfer.

D


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