ch 19 practice problems

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40) What does bacterial mating involve? A) exchange of egg and sperm B) formation of a cytoplasmic bridge for the transfer of "male" DNA C) sex pili that draw the cells together so that mRNA can be inserted D) integration of male and female DNA into a cytoplasmic bridge E) binary fission of a bacterial cell

B Topic: Concept 18.3 Skill: Knowledge

69) What would occur if the repressor of an inducible operon were mutated so it could not bind the operator? A) continuous transcription of the operon's genes B) reduced transcription of the operon's genes C) buildup of a substrate for the pathway controlled by the operon D) irreversible binding of the repressor to the promoter E) overproduction of catabolite activator protein (CAP)

A

10) Which of the following statements about the lysogenic cycle of lambda (λ) phage is incorrect? A) After infection the viral genes immediately turn the host cell into a lambda-producing factory, and the host cell then lyses. B) Most of the prophage genes are silenced by the product of a particular prophage gene. C) The phage genome replicates along with the host genome. D) Certain environmental triggers can cause the phage to exit the host genome, switching from the lysogenic to the lytic cycle. E) The phage DNA is incorporated by genetic recombination (crossing over) into a specific site on the host cell's DNA.

A Topic: Concept 18.1 Skill: Knowledge

1) Which of the following is (are) true about viruses? A) Viruses are classified below the cellular level of biological organization. B) A single virus particle contains both DNA and RNA. C) Even small virus particles are visible with light microscopes. D) Only A and B are true. E) A, B, and C are true.

A Topic: Concept 18.1 Skill: Knowledge

13) Viruses with single-stranded RNA that acts as a template for DNA synthesis are known as A) retroviruses. B) proviruses. C) viroids. D) bacteriophages. E) lytic phages.

A Topic: Concept 18.1 Skill: Knowledge

16) Viral envelopes contain proteins with covalently attached carbohydrate groups called A) glycoproteins. B) proteosugars. C) carbopeptides. D) peptidocarbs. E) carboproteins.

A Topic: Concept 18.1 Skill: Knowledge

7) Viruses are referred to as obligate parasites because A) they cannot reproduce outside of a host cell. B) viral DNA always inserts itself into host DNA. C) they invariably kill any cell they infect. D) they can incorporate nucleic acids from other viruses. E) they must use enzymes encoded by the virus itself.

A Topic: Concept 18.1 Skill: Knowledge

21) Which treatment could definitively determine whether or not the component is a viroid? I. treating the substance with nucleases that destroy all nucleic acids and then determining whether it is still infectious II. filtering the substance to remove all elements smaller than what can be easily seen under a light microscope III. culturing the substance by itself on nutritive medium, away from any plant cells IV. treating the sample with proteases that digest all proteins and then determining whether it is still infectious A) I B) II C) III D) IV E) first II and then III

A Topic: Concept 18.2 Skill: Application

27) The difference between vertical and horizontal transmission of plant viruses is that A) vertical transmission refers to the transmission of a virus from a parent plant to its progeny, and horizontal transmission refers to one plant spreading the virus to another plant. B) vertical transmission refers to the spread of viruses from upper leaves to lower leaves of the plant, and horizontal transmission refers to the spread of a virus among leaves at the same general level. C) vertical transmission refers to the spread of viruses from trees and tall plants to bushes and other smaller plants, and horizontal transmission refers to the spread of viruses among plants of similar size. D) vertical transmission refers to the transfer of DNA from one type of plant virus to another, and horizontal transmission refers to the exchange of DNA between two plant viruses of the same type. E) vertical transmission refers to the transfer of DNA from a plant of one species to a plant of a different species, and horizontal transmission refers to the spread of viruses among plants of the same species.

A Topic: Concept 18.2 Skill: Knowledge

28) What are prions? A) misfolded versions of normal brain protein B) tiny molecules of RNA that infect plants C) viral DNA that has had to attach itself to the host genome D) viruses that invade bacteria E) a mobile segment of DNA

A Topic: Concept 18.2 Skill: Knowledge

33) DNA is transferred from one bacterium to another by a virus. A. transduction B. transposition C. translation D. transformation E. conjugation

A Topic: Concept 18.3 Skill: Knowledge

37) In biotechnology, genes are commonly introduced into bacterial cells by incubating the cells together with DNA and high concentrations of calcium ions. This is an example of A) transformation. B) translocation. C) transduction. D) conjugation. E) transposition.

A Topic: Concept 18.3 Skill: Knowledge

42) Which of the following statements regarding transposons is not true? A) Transposons are genes that encode sex pili and enable plasmid transfers between bacteria. B) Transposons are found in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. C) Transposons can move from a plasmid to the bacterial circular chromosome. D) Transposons may replicate at an original site and insert a copy at another site. E) Transposons may carry only the genes necessary for insertion.

A Topic: Concept 18.3 Skill: Knowledge

43) An R plasmid can A) facilitate bacterial resistance to antibiotics. B) adjust the rates of metabolic pathways. C) repress gene expression. D) convert an F+ to an F- bacterium. E) reverse the direction of transcription.

A Topic: Concept 18.3 Skill: Knowledge

51) A mutation that inactivates the regulatory gene of a repressible operon in an E. coli cell would result in A) continuous transcription of the structural gene controlled by that regulator. B) complete inhibition of transcription of the structural gene controlled by that regulator. C) irreversible binding of the repressor to the operator. D) inactivation of RNA polymerase. E) both B and C

A Topic: Concept 18.4 Skill: Application

44) What does the operon model attempt to explain? A) the coordinated control of gene expression in bacteria B) bacterial resistance to antibiotics C) how genes move between homologous regions of DNA D) the mechanism of viral attachment to a host cell E) horizontal transmission of plant viruses

A Topic: Concept 18.4 Skill: Comprehension

45) All of the following are made up of nucleic acid except a A) repressor. B) structural gene. C) promoter. D) regulatory gene. E) operator.

A Topic: Concept 18.4 Skill: Knowledge

54) Which of the following statements about operons is (are) true? A) The tryptophan operon is a repressible operon. B) Tryptophan itself can bind to the trp operator and shut down production of tryptophan pathway enzymes. C) The lactose operon repressor binds to the operator and turns on the synthesis of the enzyme β-galactosidase. D) Only A and C are correct. E) A, B, and C are correct.

A Topic: Concept 18.4 Skill: Knowledge

65) RNA viruses require their own supply of certain enzymes because A) host cells rapidly destroy the viruses. B) host cells lack enzymes that can replicate the viral genome. C) these enzymes translate viral mRNA into proteins. D) these enzymes penetrate host cell membranes. E) these enzymes cannot be made in host cells.

B

66) Which of the following is descriptive of an R plasmid? A) Its transfer converts an F- cell into an F+ cell. B) It has genes for antibiotic resistance and maybe for sex pili. C) It is transferred between bacteria by transduction. D) It is a good example of a composite transposon. E) It makes bacteria resistant to phage.

B

36) A sequence of DNA is moved to alternative locations within the genome. A. transduction B. transposition C. translation D. transformation E. conjugation

B Topic: Concept 18.3 Skill: Comprehension

26) Which of the following represents a difference between viruses and viroids? A) Viruses infect many types of cells, whereas viroids infect only prokaryotic cells. B) Viruses have capsids composed of protein, whereas viroids have no capsids. C) Viruses contain introns; viroids have only exons. D) Viruses always have genomes composed of DNA, whereas viroids always have genomes composed of RNA. E) Viruses cannot pass through plasmodesmata; viroids can.

B Topic: Concept 18.2 Skill: Knowledge

14) What is the function of reverse transcriptase in retroviruses? A) It hydrolyzes the host cell's DNA. B) It uses viral RNA as a template for DNA synthesis. C) It converts host cell RNA into viral DNA. D) It translates viral RNA into proteins. E) It uses viral RNA as a template for making complementary RNA strands.

B Topic: Concept 18.1 Skill: Knowledge

20) RNA viruses appear to have higher rates of mutation because A) RNA nucleotides are more unstable than DNA nucleotides. B) replication of their genomes does not involve the proofreading steps of DNA replication. C) RNA viruses replicate faster. D) RNA viruses can incorporate a variety of nonstandard bases. E) RNA viruses are more sensitive to mutagens.

B Topic: Concept 18.2 Skill: Knowledge

18) Which of the following is a true statement? A) Viruses are uncommon. B) Viruses can cause diarrhea, colds, and measles. C) All viruses have a similar capsid and membranous envelope. D) All viruses contain the nucleic acid RNA. E) Viruses only invade animal cells.

B Topic: Concept 18.2 Skill: Knowledge

25) Which of the following is true of plant virus infections? A) They can be controlled by the use of antibiotics. B) They are spread throughout a plant by passing through the plasmodesmata. C) They have little effect on plant growth. D) Only A and B are correct. E) A, B, and C are correct.

B Topic: Concept 18.2 Skill: Knowledge

57) Allolactose induces the synthesis of the enzyme lactase. An E. coli cell is presented for the first time with the sugar lactose (containing allolactose) as a potential food source. Which of the following occurs when the lactose enters the cell? A) The repressor protein attaches to the regulator. B) Allolactose binds to the repressor protein. C) Allolactose binds to the regulator. D) The repressor protein and allolactose bind to RNA polymerase. E) RNA polymerase attaches to the regulator.

B Topic: Concept 18.4 Skill: Comprehension

53) Transcription of the structural genes in an inducible operon A) occurs all the time. B) starts when the pathway's substrate is present. C) starts when the pathway's product is present. D) stops when the pathway's product is present. E) does not produce enzymes.

B Topic: Concept 18.4 Skill: Comprehension

61) Double-stranded viral DNA is incorporated into a host cell as a A) promotor. B) provirus. C) transposon. D) lac. E) homeoboxes.

B Topic: Web/CD Activity: HIV Reproductive Cycle

72) Which of the following characteristics or processes is common to both bacteria and viruses? A) binary fission B) ribosomes C) genetic material of nucleic acid D) mitosis E) conjugation

C

3) A researcher lyses a cell that contains nucleic acid molecules and capsomeres of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV). The cell contents are left in a covered test tube overnight. The next day this mixture is sprayed on tobacco plants. Which of the following would be expected to occur? A) The plants would develop some but not all of the symptoms of the TMV infection. B) The plants would develop symptoms typically produced by viroids. C) The plants would develop the typical symptoms of TMV infection. D) The plants would not show any disease symptoms. E) The plants would become infected, but the sap from these plants would be unable to infect other plants.

C Topic: Concept 18.1 Skill: Application

11) Virulent phages undergo a(n) ________ life cycle, whereas temperate phages are capable of undergoing a(n) ________ cycle. A) infective; retroviral B) lysogenic; lytic C) lytic; lysogenic D) retroviral; infective E) infective; benign

C Topic: Concept 18.1 Skill: Knowledge

9) Bacteriophage DNA that have become integrated into the host cell chromosome are called A) intemperate bacteriophages. B) transposons. C) prophages. D) T-even phages. E) plasmids.

C Topic: Concept 18.1 Skill: Knowledge

22) If you already knew that the infectious agent was either bacterial or viral, which treatment would allow you to distinguish between these two possibilities? I. treating the substance with nucleases that destroy all nucleic acids and then determining whether it is still infectious II. filtering the substance to remove all elements smaller than what can be easily seen under a light microscope III. culturing the substance by itself on nutritive medium, away from any plant cells IV. treating the sample with proteases that digest all proteins and then determining whether it is still infectious A) I B) II C) III D) IV E) either II or IV

C Topic: Concept 18.2 Skill: Application

17) The simplest infectious biological systems are A) bacteria. B) viruses. C) viroids. D) both A and B E) both B and C

C Topic: Concept 18.2 Skill: Knowledge

39) A scientist is studying a strain of bacteria that commonly transfers genes to other bacteria. Which of the following would provide evidence that the genes are being transferred through specialized transduction? A) Transmission of the genes is always accompanied by transfer of the F plasmid. B) Transmission of the genes is always accompanied by transfer of the R plasmid. C) The same one or several gene(s) are always transferred. D) The transmission of the genes is dramatically enhanced in the presence of calcium. E) The bacterial strain is often infected by a virulent phage.

C Topic: Concept 18.3 Skill: Application

49) A mutation in this section of DNA could influence the binding of RNA polymerase to the DNA. A. operon B. inducer C. promoter D. repressor E. corepressor

C Topic: Concept 18.4 Skill: Comprehension

56) For a repressible operon to be transcribed, which of the following must be true? A) A corepressor must be present. B) RNA polymerase and the active repressor must be present. C) RNA polymerase must bind to the promoter, and the repressor must be inactive. D) RNA polymerase cannot be present, and the repressor must be inactive. E) RNA polymerase must not occupy the promoter, and the repressor must be inactive.

C Topic: Concept 18.4 Skill: Comprehension

63) Which of these is not a component of the lac operon? A) lactose-utilization genes B) promoter C) regulatory gene D) operator E) promoter and operator

C Topic: Web/CD Activity: The lac Operon in E. coli

70) During conjugation between an Hfr cell and an F- cell, A) the F- cell becomes an F+ cell. B) the F- cell becomes an Hfr cell. C) the chromosome of the F-cell is degraded. D) genes from the Hfr cell may replace genes of the F- cell by recombination. E) DNA from the F- cell transfers to the Hfr cell, and DNA from the Hfr cell transfers to the F- cell.

D

73) Emerging viruses arise by A) mutation of existing viruses. B) the spread of existing viruses to new host species. C) the spread of existing viruses more widely within their host species. D) all of the above E) none of the above

D

64) A bacterium is infected with an experimentally constructed bacteriophage composed of the T2 phage protein coat and T4 phage DNA. The new phages produced would have A) T2 protein and T4 DNA. B) T2 protein and T2 DNA. C) a mixture of the DNA and proteins of both phages. D) T4 protein and T4 DNA. E) T4 protein and T2 DNA.

D

68) If a particular operon encodes enzymes for making an essential amino acid and is regulated like the trp operon, then A) the amino acid inactivates the repressor. B) the enzymes produced are called inducible enzymes. C) the repressor is active in the absence of the amino acid. D) the amino acid acts as a corepressor. E) the amino acid turns on transcription of the operon.

D

2) Which of the following is not a reason scientists suspected that something other than bacteria was the cause of tobacco mosaic disease? A) Passing infectious sap through a fine filter failed to remove the infectious agent. B) Treating infectious sap with alcohol failed to remove the infectious agent. C) No cells could be seen in the infectious sap using a light microscope. D) The infectious agent in the sap could reproduce, as its ability to cause disease was undiluted even after many transfers from plant to plant. E) The infectious agent could not be cultivated on nutrient media in petri dishes or in test tubes.

D Topic: Concept 18.1 Skill: Knowledge

4) Which of the following is a characteristic of all viruses? A) a nucleic acid genome B) a protein capsid C) a viral envelope D) A and B only E) A, B, and C

D Topic: Concept 18.1 Skill: Knowledge

8) Which of the following is characteristic of the lytic cycle? A) Many bacterial cells containing viral DNA are produced. B) Viral DNA is incorporated into the host genome. C) The viral genome replicates without destroying the host. D) A large number of phages are released at a time. E) The virus-host relationship usually lasts for generations.

D Topic: Concept 18.1 Skill: Knowledge

23) Which treatment would you use to determine if the agent is a prion? I. treating the substance with nucleases that destroy all nucleic acids and then determining whether it is still infectious II. filtering the substance to remove all elements smaller than what can be easily seen under a light microscope III. culturing the substance by itself on nutritive medium, away from any plant cells IV. treating the sample with proteases that digest all proteins and then determining whether it is still infectious A) I only B) II only C) III only D) IV only E) either I or IV

D Topic: Concept 18.2 Skill: Application

24) Which of the following contributes to the emergence of viral disease? A) production of new virus strains through mutation B) spread of existing virus from one host species to another C) transformation from lytic to lysogenic activity D) A and B only E) A, B, and C

D Topic: Concept 18.2 Skill: Knowledge

19) Which of the following can be effective against viral diseases? A) vaccination B) nucleoside analogs that inhibit DNA synthesis C) antibiotics D) A and B only E) A, B, and C

D Topic: Concept 18.2 Skill: Knowledge

30) Reproduction in bacteria requires A) the production of a mitotic spindle. B) a plasmid. C) cyclic AMP. D) replication of DNA. E) both B and D

D Topic: Concept 18.3 Skill: Comprehension

32) External DNA is assimilated by a cell. A. transduction B. transposition C. translation D. transformation E. conjugation

D Topic: Concept 18.3 Skill: Knowledge

38) The process by which host cell DNA is accidentally packaged within a phage capsid and transferred to another cell instead of the phage DNA is called A) translocation. B) conjugation. C) specialized transduction. D) generalized transduction. E) transformation.

D Topic: Concept 18.3 Skill: Knowledge

58) Of the following, which is least related to the others? A) corepressor B) repressor C) inducer D) transposon E) cAMP receptor protein

D Topic: Concept 18.4 Skill: Comprehension

48) This protein is produced by a regulatory gene. A. operon B. inducer C. promoter D. repressor E. corepressor

D Topic: Concept 18.4 Skill: Knowledge

55) How does active CAP induce expression of the genes of the lactose operon? A) It terminates production of repressor molecules. B) It degrades the substrate allolactose. C) It stimulates splicing of the encoded genes. D) It stimulates the binding of RNA polymerase to the promoter. E) It binds steroid hormones and controls translation.

D Topic: Concept 18.4 Skill: Knowledge

62) The operon model of the regulation of gene expression in bacteria was proposed by A) Watson and Crick. B) Franklin. C) Darwin. D) Jacob and Monod. E) Mendel.

D Topic: Web/CD Activity: The lac Operon in E. coli

67) Transposition differs from other mechanisms of genetic recombination because it A) occurs only in bacteria. B) moves genes between homologous regions of the DNA. C) plays little or no role in evolution. D) occurs only in eukaryotes. E) scatters genes to new loci in the genome.

E

71) Genetic variation in bacterial populations never results from A) transduction. B) transformation. C) conjugation. D) mutation. E) meiosis.

E

15) The membrane making up the viral envelope can come from A) the virus itself, using enzymes encoded by the virus. B) the nuclear membrane of an infected cell. C) the plasma membrane of an infected cell. D) both A and B E) both B and C

E Topic: Concept 18.1 Skill: Knowledge

5) Viral genomes can consist of any of the following except A) double-stranded DNA. B) double-stranded RNA. C) single-stranded DNA. D) single-stranded RNA. E) helical capsomeres.

E Topic: Concept 18.1 Skill: Knowledge

12) What is the function of the single-stranded RNA in certain animal viruses? A) It can serve directly as mRNA. B) It can serve as a template for mRNA synthesis. C) It can serve as a template for DNA synthesis. D) Only A and C are correct. E) A, B, and C are correct.

E Topic: Concept 18.1 Skill: Knowledge

6) The host range of a virus is determined by A) the proteins on its surface. B) whether its nucleic acid is DNA or RNA. C) the proteins on the surface of the host cell. D) the enzymes produced by the virus before it infects the cell. E) both A and C

E Topic: Concept 18.1 Skill: Knowledge

29) Most molecular biologists think that viruses originated from fragments of cellular nucleic acid. Which of the following observations supports this theory? A) Viruses contain either DNA or RNA. B) Viruses are enclosed in protein capsids rather than plasma membranes. C) Viruses can reproduce only inside host cells. D) Viruses can infect both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. E) Viral genomes are usually more similar to the genome of the host cell than to the genomes of viruses that infect other cell types.

E Topic: Concept 18.2 Skill: Comprehension

41) An Hfr bacterium is one that has A) at least one plasmid present in the cytosol. B) a special recognition site that will take up closely related DNA from its environment. C) several insertion sequences scattered throughout its chromosome. D) several copies of a single transposon repeated randomly throughout its chromosome. E) a plasmid that has become integrated into its chromosome.

E Topic: Concept 18.3 Skill: Knowledge

31) What is the most common source of genetic diversity in a bacterial colony? A) transposons B) plasmids C) meiotic recombination D) crossing over E) mutation

E Topic: Concept 18.3 Skill: Knowledge

34) A group of F+ bacteria is mixed with a group of F- bacteria. After several days, all of the bacteria are F+. A. transduction B. transposition C. translation D. transformation E. conjugation

E Topic: Concept 18.3 Skill: Knowledge

35) A plasmid is exchanged between bacteria through a pilus. A. transduction B. transposition C. translation D. transformation E. conjugation

E Topic: Concept 18.3 Skill: Knowledge

46) The role of a metabolite that controls a repressible operon is to A) bind to the promoter region and decrease the affinity of RNA polymerase for the promoter. B) bind to the operator region and block the attachment of RNA polymerase to the promoter. C) increase the production of inactive repressor proteins. D) bind to the repressor protein and inactivate it. E) bind to the repressor protein and activate it.

E Topic: Concept 18.4 Skill: Comprehension

52) The lactose operon is likely to be transcribed when A) there is more glucose in the cell than lactose. B) the cyclic AMP levels are low. C) there is lactose but no glucose in the cell. D) the cyclic AMP and lactose levels are both high within the cell. E) both C and D

E Topic: Concept 18.4 Skill: Comprehension

47) The tryptophan operon is a repressible operon that is A) permanently turned on. B) turned on only when tryptophan is present in the growth medium. C) turned off only when glucose is present in the growth medium. D) turned on only when glucose is present in the growth medium. E) turned off whenever tryptophan is added to the growth medium.

E Topic: Concept 18.4 Skill: Comprehension

50) A lack of this nonprotein molecule would result in the inability of the cell to "turn off" genes. A. operon B. inducer C. promoter D. repressor E. corepressor

E Topic: Concept 18.4 Skill: Comprehension

60) In the lysogenic cycle A) host DNA is destroyed and viral DNA is replicated. B) a bacterium replicates without passing viral DNA to its daughter cells. C) viral DNA is destroyed and host DNA is replicated. D) a bacterium divides once before the lytic cycle is initiated. E) viral DNA is replicated along with host DNA

E Topic: Web/CD Activity: Phage Lysogenic and Lytic Cycles

59) The lytic cycle of bacteriophage infection ends with the A) replication of viral DNA. B) entry of the phage protein coat into the host cell. C) assembly of viral particles into phages. D) the injection of phage DNA into a bacterium. E) rupture of the bacterium.

E Topic: Web/CD Activity: Phage Lytic Cycle


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