front 1 1) What is metagenomics? | back 1 Answer: D |
front 2 2) An early step in shotgun sequencing is to _____. | back 2 Answer: A |
front 3 3) Using modern techniques of sequencing by synthesis and the shotgun
approach, sequences are assembled into chromosomes by ______. C) computer analysis looking for sequence overlaps. | back 3 Answer: C |
front 4 4) Proteomics is defined as the _____. D) study of how amino acids are ordered in a protein | back 4 Answer: B |
front 5 5) Bioinformatics can be used to scan for short sequences that
specify known mRNAs, called _____. C) proteomes | back 5 Answer: A |
front 6 6) What is gene annotation in bioinformatics? | back 6 Answer: A |
front 7 7) Bioinformatics includes _____. A) I and II | back 7 Answer: D |
front 8 8) After finding a new medicinal plant, a pharmaceutical company
decides to determine if the plant has genes similar to those of other
known medicinal plants. To do this, the company annotates the genome
of the new plant to _____. B) determine what mRNA transcripts are produced | back 8 Answer: C |
front 9 9) If the sequence of a cDNA has matches with DNA sequences in the
genome, then this genomic DNA is likely to _____. C) be part of an intron | back 9 Answer: A |
front 10 10) In what sense are studies by nineteenth-century naturalists and
those by early twenty-first- century genomic biologists similar? C) Both took a reductionist approach by studying only one small part of a complex system. D) Both focused on observing and describing what exists in their realms of investigation. | back 10 Answer: D |
front 11 11) Which of the following techniques would be most appropriate to
test the hypothesis that humans and chimps differ in the expression of
a large set of shared genes? C) DNA sequencing | back 11 Answer: A |
front 12 12) A DNA microarray is a tool that owes its existence to earlier
genomics investigations. What essential contribution of genomics makes
microarrays possible? C) more efficient techniques for cDNA synthesis | back 12 Answer: D |
front 13 13) What can proteomics reveal that genomics cannot? | back 13 Answer: C |
front 14 14) A sequence database such as GenBank could be used to do all of
the following EXCEPT A) Compare cow and human insulin protein
sequences. C) Search for genes in a fruit fly that are similar to a human gene. D) Compare patterns of gene expression in cancerous and non-cancerous cells. | back 14 Answer: D |
front 15 15) Current analysis indicates that less than 2% of the human genome codes for proteins. Based on the systems approach employed by the ENCODE project, what percentage of the genome is estimated to contain functional elements (includes functional RNAs and regulatory sequences)? A) Less than 2% B) About 50% | back 15 Answer: C |
front 16 16) Which of the following is a representation of gene density? A) Humans have 2900 Mb per genome. D) Fritillaria has a genome 40 times the size of a human. | back 16 Answer: C |
front 17 17) Why might the cricket genome have eleven times as many base pairs
as that of Drosophila melanogaster? C) Crickets must have more noncoding DNA. D) Crickets must make many more proteins. | back 17 Answer: C |
front 18 18) The comparison between the number of human genes and those of
other animal species has led to many conclusions, including that
_____. C) most human DNA consists of genes for protein, tRNA, rRNA, and
miRNA | back 18 Answer: B |
front 19 19) It is more difficult to identify eukaryotic genes than
prokaryotic genes because in eukaryotes _____. C) there are no start codons | back 19 Answer: D |
front 20 20) If alternative splicing did NOT occur then _____. D) there would be many fewer genes devoted to metabolism in Arabidopsis and yeast | back 20 Answer: A |
front 21 21) A multigene family is composed of _____. C) a gene whose exons can be spliced in a number of different
ways | back 21 Answer: B |
front 22 22) Retrotransposons _____. | back 22 Answer: A |
front 23 23) In humans, the embryonic and fetal forms of hemoglobin have a
higher affinity for oxygen than that of adults. This is due to
_____. C) the attachment of methyl groups to cytosine following birth,
which changes the type of hemoglobin produced. | back 23 Answer: A |
front 24 24) Sequencing eukaryotic genomes is more difficult than sequencing
genomes of bacteria or archaea because of the _____. C) high proportion of G-C base pairs in eukaryotic DNA | back 24 Answer: D |
front 25 25) Because they both produce a reverse transcriptase, long
interspersed nuclear elements (LINEs) as transposable elements may be
related to _____. C) poliovirus | back 25 Answer: B |
front 26 26) Although transposable elements and short tandem repeats (STRs)
are repetitive DNAs, they differ in that _____. C) the repeated unit in STRs is clustered one after another;
transposable element repeats are scattered throughout the genome | back 26 Answer: C |
front 27 27) Which of the following can be duplicated in a genome? A) only DNA sequences D) DNA sequences, chromosomes, or sets of chromosomes | back 27 Answer: D |
front 28 28) Unequal crossing over during prophase I can result in one sister chromosome with a deletion and another with a duplication. A mutated form of hemoglobin, so-called hemoglobin Lepore, exists in the human population. Hemoglobin Lepore has a deleted series of amino acids. If this mutated form was caused by unequal crossing over, what would be an expected consequence? A) There should also be persons whose hemoglobin contains two copies of the series of amino acids that is deleted in hemoglobin Lepore. B) Each of the genes in the hemoglobin gene family must show the same deletion. C) The deleted gene must have undergone exon shuffling. | back 28 Answer: A |
front 29 The figure above shows a diagram of blocks of genes on human chromosome 16 and the locations of blocks of similar genes on four chromosomes of the mouse. 29) The movement of these blocks suggests that _____. | back 29 Answer: D |
front 30 30) Humans have twenty-three pairs of chromosomes and chimps have
twenty-four pairs of chromosomes. What is the most likely explanation
for these differences in human and chimp genomes? B) In the evolution of chimps, new adaptations resulted from
additional chromosomal material. C) At some point in evolution, human
and chimp ancestors reproduced with each other. | back 30 Answer: A |
front 31 31) Exon shuffling occurs during _____. A) splicing of DNA D) translation | back 31 Answer: C |
front 32 32) When gene duplication occurs to its ultimate extent by doubling
all genes in a genome, what has occurred? C) creation of a polyploid | back 32 Answer: C |
front 33 33) Mutations that occur in one member of a gene pair that arose from
gene duplication may create _____. C) a gene family with two distinct but related members | back 33 Answer: D |
front 34 34) Based on the data in the Amino Acid Identity Table, which two
members of the human globin gene family are the most divergent? C) a1 and a2 | back 34 Answer: B |
front 35 35) Fragments of DNA have been extracted from the remnants of extinct
woolly mammoths, amplified, and sequenced. These can now be used to
_____. C) appreciate the reasons why mammoths went extinct | back 35 Answer: D |
front 36 36) Homeotic genes contain a homeobox sequence that is highly
conserved among very diverse species. The homeobox is the code for
that domain of a protein that binds to DNA in a regulatory
developmental process. Therefore, you would expect that _____. B) homeoboxes cannot be expressed in nonhomeotic genes C) homeotic genes in apes and humans are very different D) all organisms must have homeotic genes | back 36 Answer: A |
front 37 37) A recent study compared the Homo sapiens genome with that of
Neanderthals. The results of the study indicated that there was a
mixing of the two genomes at some period in evolutionary history.
Additional data consistent with this hypothesis could be the discovery
of _____. B) a few modern H. sapiens with some Neanderthal sequences | back 37 Answer: B |
front 38 38) Several of the different globin genes are expressed in humans,
but at different times in development. What mechanism could allow for
this? C) differential translation of mRNAs | back 38 Answer: D |
front 39 39) Biologists now routinely test for homology between genes in
different species. If genes are determined to be homologous, it means
that they are related _____. C) by chance mutations | back 39 Answer: A |
front 40 40) A current view of how the human and chimpanzee can share most of
their nucleotide sequence yet exhibit significant phenotypic
differences is that many of the most important sequence differences
alter _____. B) the number of repeated sequences C) regulatory sequences | back 40 Answer: C |
front 41 41) Studies in knockout mice have demonstrated an important role of the FOXP2 transcription factor in the development of vocalizations. Recent sequence comparisons of the FOXP2 gene in Neanderthals and modern humans show that while the DNA sequence may be different, the protein sequence it codes for is identical. What might logically be inferred from this information? A) There was a problem with the experiment because different DNA
sequences cannot result in the same protein sequence. C) Human and Neanderthal vocalizations may have been more similar than previously thought. D) The experiments in mice demonstrating the function of the FOXP2 gene are not relevant to humans and Neanderthals because they are not primates. | back 41 Answer: C |
front 42 42) Comparisons of DNA sequences within the human species have
revealed many variations. Which of the following variations involves
duplication of relatively long stretches of chromosomes, often
including the duplication of protein-coding genes? B) SNPs | back 42 Answer: A |
front 43 43) A microarray is a tool used in genetic research to determine the mRNAs being produced in a particular tissue, and their relative level of expression. Known genes can therefore be assayed for their expression in different situations. One use of the technology is in cancer diagnosis and treatment. If a known gene functions as a tumor suppressor, predict which of the following pieces of evidence would be most useful in diagnosis of a cancer due to a mutation in this tumor- suppressor gene. A) The tissue sample shows a high level of gene expression relative
to a control (noncancerous) sample. D) The mRNAs for cyclins and kinases show unusually high levels of expression. | back 43 Answer: C |