chapter 18
C) RNA polymerase must bind to the promoter, and the repressor must be inactive.
B) Allolactose binds to the repressor protein.
C) allowing the organism to adjust to changes in environmental conditions
Suppose an experimenter becomes proficient with a technique that allows her to move DNA sequences within a prokaryotic genome.
16) If she moves the promoter for the lac operon to the region between the beta galactosidase gene and the permease gene, which of the following would be likely?
A) Three structural genes will no longer be expressed. B) RNA polymerase will no longer transcribe permease.
C) The operon will no longer be inducible. D) Beta galactosidase will be produced.
E) The cell will continue to metabolize but more slowly.
D) Beta galactosidase will be produced.
E) The lac operon will function normally
C) have turned off or slowed down the process of transcription
D) epigenetic phenomena.
E) 1.5%
D) DNA methylation and histone acetylation.
A) transcription.
E) both euchromatin and histone acetylation.
B) cytoplasmic determinant.
A) histone acetylation of nucleosomes
B) bind to other proteins or to a sequence element within the promoter called the TATA box.
C) activator
D) repressor
E) terminator
D) binding to intracellular receptors and promoting transcription of specific genes.
B) decreased chromatin concentration
A) increased chromatin condensation
E) inactivation of the selected genes
C) abnormalities of mouse embryos
D) other transcription factors
B) removal of the 5ʹ cap
A) a cyclin that usually acts in G1, now that the cell is in G2
A) RNA interference.
D) It trims small double-stranded RNAs into molecules that can block translation.
E) Changes in technology as well as our ability to determine how much of the DNA is
expressed have now made this possible.
A researcher has arrived at a method to prevent gene expression from Drosophila embryonic genes. The following questions assume that he is using this method.
51) The researcher in question measures the amount of new polypeptide production in embryos from 2—8 hours following fertilization and the results show a steady and significant rise in polypeptide concentration over that time. The researcher concludes that
D) Spatial axes (anterior → posterior, etc.) begin to be determined.
A) differential gene expression.
A) differentiated cells retain all the genes of the zygote.
C) totipotent.
B) Stem cells can differentiate into specialized cells.
B) the occurrence of mRNAs for the production of tissue-specific proteins
C) transcription
A) cytoplasmic determinants such as mRNAs and proteins produced before fertilization
A) myosin
A) determination.
E) pattern formation
A) the anterior-posterior and dorsal-ventral axes
A) the anterior-posterior axis.
A) homeotic genes
C) egg-polarity genes
B) segmentation genes
D) morphogens
B) segmentation genes
B) cytoplasmic determinant.
D) Anterior structures would form in both sides of the embryo.
A) Their products act as transcription factors.
A) They can code for proteins associated with cell growth.
C) can encode proteins that promote DNA repair or cell-cell adhesion.
D) the longer we live, the more mutations we accumulate.
A) relaying a signal from a growth factor receptor
E) growth factor signaling to be hyperactive
A) colorectal only
E) all of the above
D) inherited inability to repair UV-induced mutation
A few decades ago, Knudsen and colleagues proposed a theory that, for a normal cell to become a cancer cell, a minimum of two genetic changes had to occur in that cell. Knudsen was studying retinoblastoma, a childhood cancer of the eye.
A) an earlier age of onset in child one
B) genes involved in control of the cell cycle
D) amino acid acts as a corepressor.
A) express different genes.
D) continuous transcription of the operonʹs genes
A) transcriptional control of gene expression.
C) normally leads to formation of head structures.
E) It is the same as the DNA in one of your heart cells.
A) production of tissue-specific proteins, such as muscle actin.
C) the removal of introns and splicing together of exons
B) the rate at which the mRNA is degraded.
B) Proto-oncogenes normally help regulate cell division.