Top Banner
Semester I Exam Review 2014 Chapters 1-4
83

Chapters 1-4. A. Deoxyribose B. Adenine C. Glucose D. Phosphate.

Apr 01, 2015

Download

Documents

Duane Holby
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Semester I Exam Review 2014

Chapters 1-4

Page 2: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Which is the sugar component of a DNA nucleotide?

A. Deoxyribose B. Adenine C. Glucose D. Phosphate

Page 3: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

A. Deoxyribose

Page 4: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Which substances are components of a DNA nucleotide?

A. Ribose, phosphate, and uracil B. Phosphate, ribose, and adenine C. Phosphate, deoxyribose, and

uracil D. Thymine, deoxyribose, and

phosphate

Page 5: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

D. Thymine, deoxyribose, and phosphate

Page 6: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

The individuality of an organism is determined by the organism’s

Nitrogenous bases Transfer RNA molecules DNA nucleotide sequence Amino acids

Page 7: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

DNA nucleotide sequence

Page 8: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Which two bases are present in equal amounts in a double-stranded DNA molecule?

Cytosine and thymine Adenine and thymine Adenine and uracil Cytosine and uracil

Page 9: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Adenine and thymine

Page 10: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

During DNA replication, which enzyme is responsible for “unzipping” the DNA molecule?

DNA polymerase DNA restriction enzymes DNA ligase DNA helicase

Page 11: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

DNA helicase

Page 12: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

A human DNA segment was inserted into a bacterial cell and became incorporated into the bacterial DNA. This technique is an example of

Cloning Genetic counseling Artificial selection Genetic engineering

Page 13: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Genetic engineering

Page 14: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Which technique is used to alter bacteria in such a way that they produce human insulin?

Hydrolysis DNA replication Recombinant DNA formation Genetic screening

Page 15: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Recombinant DNA formation

Page 16: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

The insertion of a human DNA fragment into a bacterial cell might make it possible for

The bacterial cell to produce a human protein

The cloning of the human that donated that DNA fragment

Humans to become immune to an infection by this type of bacteria

The cloning of this type of bacteria

Page 17: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

The bacterial cell to produce a human protein

Page 18: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Many diabetics are now using insulin that was made by certain bacteria. The ability of these bacteria to produce insulin was most likely the result of Using radiation to trigger mutations Genetic mapping of bacterial DNA to

activate the gene for insulin production Deleting many DNA segments from

bacterial DNA Inserting a portion of human DNA into

the ring-shaped DNA of bacteria

Page 19: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Inserting a portion of human DNA into the ring-shaped DNA of bacteria

Page 20: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

A small amount of DNA was taken from a fossil of a mammoth found frozen in glacial ice. Genetic technology can be used to produce a large quantity of identical DNA from this mammoth’s DNA. In this technology, the original DNA sample is used to

a. stimulate differentiation in other mammoth cells.B. Act as a template for repeated replicationc. Provide fragments to replace certain human body chemicals.D. Trigger mitosis to obtain new base sequences

Page 21: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Act as a template for repeated replication

Page 22: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Scientists have cloned sheep, but not a human. The best explanation for this situation is that There are many ethical problems

involved in cloning humans The technology to clone humans has

not been explored Human reproduction is very different

from that of other mammals Cloning humans would take too long.

Page 23: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

What is the genetically engineered curdling agent in the cheese lab?

Rennen Chymosin Buttermilk Whole Milk

Page 24: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Chymosin

Page 25: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Why did scientists produce recombinant rennin?

1. Produce large quantities. 2. Cheaper.

Page 26: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Biuret solution is an indicator for what substance?

Starch Glucose Fats Proteins

Page 27: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Proteins

Page 28: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

What color does iodine turn in the presence of starch?

Rusty yellow. Clear Purple/blue Yellow/orange

Page 29: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Tomato plants in a garden are not growing well. The gardener hypothesizes that the soil is too acidic. To test this hypothesis accurately, the gardener could

Change the pH of the soil Plant seeds of a different kind of

plant Move the tomato plants to an area

with less sunlight Reduce the amount of water

available to the plant

Page 30: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Change the pH of the soil

Page 31: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

To locate a specimen on a prepared slide, a student should begin with the low-power objective rather that the high-power objective because the

Field of vision is smaller under low power than under high power

Field of vision is larger under low power than under high power

Specimen does not need to be stained for observation under low power but must be stained for observation under high power

Portion of the specimen that can be observed under low power is less than the portion that can be observed under high power.

Page 32: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Field of vision is larger under low power than under high power

Page 33: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

To measure 50 mL, which tool would be the most accurate?

Micropipet Pipet graduated cylinder Balance Microcentrifuge tube

Page 34: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Graduated cylinder

Page 35: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

5 kg is equal to _______g

500 5000 0.005 0.0005

Page 36: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

5000

Page 37: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Which group of measurements contains only metric units?

5 in, 3 kg, 40 oz

5 mm, 3 g, 40 lb

5 in, 3 lb, 40 mL

5 mm, 3 g, 40 mL

Page 38: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

5 mm, 3 g, 40 mL

Page 39: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Which objective of a compound microscope would show the largest field of view?

20x 5x 10x 44x

Page 40: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

5x

Page 41: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Proteins are synthesized from less complex organic compounds known as:

Carbons Starches Amino acids enzymes

Page 42: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Amino acids

Page 43: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

In what organelle is DNA found?

Cytoplasm Nucleus Endoplasmic reticulum Lysosome

Page 44: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

nucleus

Page 45: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Which enzyme “pastes” rDNA fragments together?

Transformation enzyme Restriction enzyme DNA ligase DNA polymerase Nuclease enzyme

Page 46: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

DNA ligase

Page 47: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

A product that has entered the product pipeline

Is ready for clinical testing to begin. Is being produced on a large scale by

the manufacturing department Has been determined safe and

effective Needs to be reviewed regularly with

a comprehensive product development plan.

Page 48: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Needs to be reviewed regularly with a comprehensive product development plan

Page 49: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Biotechnology research labs are commonly found at all of the following facilities except

Universities Medical clinics Companies Government agencies

Page 50: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Medical clinics

Page 51: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

The primary goal in a biotechnology company is to

Engage in “pure science” Cure all the diseases of the world Publish results in scientific journals Provide a product of service that is

useful to society and results in earnings

Page 52: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Provide a product of service that is useful to society and results in earnings

Page 53: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

What is meant by cell specialization?

Different cell lines (CHO & HeLa cells) are more suited to producing certain kinds of recombinant proteins.

Prokaryotic cells specialize in certain tasks and can therefore grow more rapidly than eukaryotic cells.

There is great cell variety in multicellular organisms in which different kinds of cells have different jobs to do.

All of the above

Page 54: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

There is great cell variety in multicellular organisms in which different kinds of cells have different jobs to do

Page 55: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Which of the following is an expression of concentration units?

µg/µL

mg/mL

µM

All of these

Page 56: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

all

Page 57: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

As a solution becomes dilute

The proportion of solute to solvent increases

The proportion of solvent to solute increases

The normality of the solution shifts Re-ionization begins to occur

Page 58: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

The proportion of solvent to solute increase

Page 59: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Nucleotides are bonded to each other on a nucleic acid by

Hydrogen bonds Antiparallel bonds Peptide bonds Phosphodiester bonds

Page 60: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Phosphodiester bonds

Page 61: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

A circular plasmid was cut with a restriction enzyme & three bands were visualized after electrophoresis. How many cuts were made in the plasmid?

1 2 3 4

Page 62: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

3

Page 63: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Which agarose concentration would work best for separating very large molecules? 3% 2% 0.8% All choices would work

Page 64: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

.08%

Page 65: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

During a DNA extraction, the purpose of smashing the fruit was to Break the phosphodiester bonds

between nucleotides Break open the nuclear membrane Break apart the cellulose in the plant

cells. Break apart the cell membrane.

Page 66: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Break apart the cellulose surrounding plant cells.

Page 67: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

The types of cells commonly used in biotechnology are

Bacteria Yeast Chinese hamster ovary cells All of the above

Page 68: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

all

Page 69: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Review micropipettor settings

P-1000 P-200 P-20

Page 70: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Metric conversions

Page 71: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

After an enzyme cuts DNA into smaller pieces, this enzyme is responsible for gluing the new DNA pieces together

DNA ligase DNA helicase DNA emporase Restriction enzymes

Page 72: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

DNA ligase

Page 73: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

What is the total magnification of an object if you are using 10X oculars and 4X objective?

14X 400X 40X 4X

Page 74: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

40X

Page 75: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

In gel electrophoresis, what makes the DNA migrate through the gel during electrophoresis?

Water Gravity Salt Electricity

Page 76: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Electricity

Page 77: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

In PCR, the purpose for the heating cycle is to

Kill the bacteria. Make the DNA glow. Separate the DNA strands. Move the DNA in the gel.

Page 78: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Separate the DNA strands

Page 79: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Antiparallel, with regard to DNA means that:

The strands cross each other The strands run parallel to each

other but run in opposite directions The strands run the same directions

and are parallel Strands run at right angles to each

other

Page 80: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

The strands run parallel to each other but run in opposite directions

Page 81: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

EcoRI is an example of which type of enzyme?

Restriction endonuclease RNA polymerase DNA polymerase DNA ligase

Page 82: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.

Restriction endonuclease

Page 83: Chapters 1-4.  A. Deoxyribose  B. Adenine  C. Glucose  D. Phosphate.