front 1 1) For mapping studies of genomes, most of which were far along
before 2000, the three-stage method was often used. Which of the
following is the usual order in which the stages were performed,
assuming some overlap of the three? | back 1 Answer: B |
front 2 2) What is the difference between a linkage map and a physical map?
| back 2 Answer: A |
front 3 3) How is a physical map of the genome of an organism achieved?
| back 3 Answer: C |
front 4 4) Which of the following most correctly describes a shotgun
technique for sequencing a genome? | back 4 Answer: D |
front 5 5) The biggest problem with the shotgun technique is its tendency to
underestimate the size of the genome. Which of the following might
best account for this? | back 5 Answer: E |
front 6 6) What is metagenomics? | back 6 Answer: D |
front 7 7) Which procedure is not required when the shotgun approach to
sequencing is modified as sequencing by synthesis, in which many small
fragments are sequenced simultaneously? | back 7 Answer: C |
front 8 8) What is bioinformatics? | back 8 Answer: B |
front 9 9) What is proteomics? | back 9 Answer: B |
front 10 10) Bioinformatics can be used to scan sequences for probable genes
looking for start and stop sites for transcription and for
translation, for probable splice sites, and for sequences known to be
found in other known genes. Such sequences containing these elements
are called | back 10 Answer: A |
front 11 11) A microarray known as a GeneChip, with most now-known human
protein coding sequences, has been developed to aid in the study of
human cancer by first comparing two to three subsets of cancer
subtypes. What kind of information might be gleaned from this GeneChip
to aid in cancer prevention? | back 11 Answer: C |
front 12 12) What is gene annotation in bioinformatics? | back 12 Answer: A |
front 13 13) Why is it unwise to try to relate an organism's complexity with
its size or number of cells? | back 13 Answer: B |
front 14 14) Fragments of DNA have been extracted from the remnants of extinct
woolly mammoths, amplified, and sequenced. These can now be used to
| back 14 Answer: D |
front 15 15) If humans have 2,900 Mb, a specific member of the lily family has
120,000 Mb, and a yeast has ~13 Mb, why can't this data allow us to
order their evolutionary significance? | back 15 Answer: C |
front 16 16) Which of the following is a representation of gene density?
| back 16 Answer: C |
front 17 17) Why might the cricket genome have 11 times as many base pairs as
that of Drosophila melanogaster? | back 17 Answer: D |
front 18 18) The comparison between the number of human genes and those of
other animal species has led to many conclusions, including | back 18 Answer: B |
front 19 19) Barbara McClintock, who achieved fame for discovering that genes
could move within genomes, had her meticulous work ignored for nearly
four decades, but eventually won the Nobel Prize. Why was her work so
distrusted? | back 19 Answer: B |
front 20 20) What is the most probable explanation for the continued presence
of pseudogenes in a genome such as our own? | back 20 Answer: E |
front 21 21) What characteristic of short tandem repeat DNA makes it useful
for DNA fingerprinting? | back 21 Answer: A |
front 22 22) Alu elements account for about 10% of the human genome. What does
this mean? | back 22 Answer: C |
front 23 23) A multigene family is composed of | back 23 Answer: B |
front 24 24) Which of the following can be duplicated in a genome? | back 24 Answer: E |
front 25 25) In comparing the genomes of humans and those of other higher
primates, it is seen that humans have a large metacentric pair we call
chromosome 2 among our 46 chromosomes, whereas the other primates of
this group have 48 chromosomes and any pair like the human chromosome
2 pair is not present; instead, the primate groups each have two pairs
of midsize acrocentric chromosomes. What is the most likely
explanation? | back 25 Answer: A |
front 26 26) 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, known as hemoglobin Lepore, is known in the human
population. Hemoglobin Lepore has a deleted set of amino acids. If it
was caused by unequal crossing over, what would be an expected
consequence? | back 26 Answer: B |
front 27 27) When does exon shuffling occur? | back 27 Answer: C |
front 28 28) What are genomic "hot spots"? | back 28 Answer: E |
front 29 29) In order to determine the probable function of a particular
sequence of DNA in humans, what might be the most reasonable approach?
| back 29 Answer: C |
front 30 30) 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. Which of the following would you then expect?
| back 30 Answer: A |
front 31 31) Which of the following studies would not likely be characterized
as eco-devo? | back 31 Answer: C |
front 32 32) A recent report has indicated several conclusions about
comparisons of our genome with that of Neanderthals. This report
concludes, in part, that, at some period in evolutionary history,
there was an admixture of the two genomes. This is evidenced by
| back 32 Answer: B |
front 33 Figure 21.1 Types of DNA sequences in the human genome. | back 33 Answer: A |
front 34 Figure 21.1 Types of DNA sequences in the human genome. | back 34 Answer: E |
front 35 Figure 21.2 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. | back 35 Answer: D |
front 36 Figure 21.2 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. | back 36 Answer: A |
front 37 Multigene families include two or more nearly identical genes or
genes sharing nearly identical sequences. A classical example is the
set of genes for globin molecules, including genes on human
chromosomes 11 and 16. | back 37 Answer: D |
front 38 Multigene families include two or more nearly identical genes or
genes sharing nearly identical sequences. A classical example is the
set of genes for globin molecules, including genes on human
chromosomes 11 and 16. | back 38 Answer: E |
front 39 39) Bioinformatics includes all of the following except | back 39 Answer: C |
front 40 40) One of the characteristics of retrotransposons is that | back 40 Answer: A |
front 41 41) Homeotic genes | back 41 Answer: A |
front 42 42) Two eukaryotic proteins have one domain in common but are
otherwise very different. Which of the following processes is most
likely to have contributed to this similarity? | back 42 Answer: C |