AMT MOLECULAR DIAGNOSTICS TECHNOLOGIST (MDT) CERTIFICATION EXAM QUESTIONS AND CORRECT
ANSWERS (VERIFIED ANSWERS) PLUS RATIONALES 2026 Q&A | INSTANT DOWNLOAD PDF
Core Domains
Molecular Biology Foundations (DNA/RNA structure, replication, transcription, translation)
Analytical Techniques (PCR, RT-PCR, sequencing, microarrays, FISH)
Specimen Handling, Extraction, and Quality Control
Instrumentation, Calibration, and Maintenance
Mutations, Genetic Variation, and Pathogen Genomics
Clinical Applications (Oncology, Infectious Disease, Inherited Disorders)
Bioinformatics and Data Interpretation
Regulatory Compliance (CLIA, CAP, FDA, OSHA)
Laboratory Safety and Ethics
Quality Management and Troubleshooting
Introduction
*This assessment is designed to fully prepare candidates for the AMT Molecular Diagnostics Technologist (MDT)
Certification Examination. It evaluates foundational molecular biology knowledge, technical proficiency in
amplification and detection platforms, practical problem-solving in high-complexity testing, and compliance
with regulatory and ethical standards. The exam consists of 200 multiple-choice questions, including scenario-
based items that emphasize real-world decision-making, troubleshooting, and quality assurance. Each question
,provides a verified correct answer with a detailed rationale to reinforce understanding. This resource mirrors the
difficulty, structure, and content breadth of the actual certification exam.*
SECTION ONE: QUESTIONS 1–100
Question 1
A technologist notices that a real-time PCR amplification curve appears only after 38 cycles for a target that
typically crosses threshold at cycle 28. The negative control is flat, and the positive control is normal. What is the
most likely cause?
A. Contamination in the master mix
B. RNA degradation in the sample
C. Incorrect annealing temperature set too high
D. Pipetting error omitting the reverse primer
🟢B
🔴 RATIONALE: A delayed Ct (from 28 to 38) with normal positive control indicates poor template quality. RNA
degradation reduces amplifiable copies, shifting Ct later. Contamination would lower Ct. Omitted primer would
cause no amplification. High annealing temperature might reduce yield but usually causes no amplification or
very late Ct only if extremely high.
Question 2
Which enzyme is responsible for proofreading during DNA replication and is often included in high-fidelity PCR
mixes?
,A. Taq DNA polymerase
B. Reverse transcriptase
C. Pfu DNA polymerase
D. RNase H
🟢C
🔴 RATIONALE: Pfu DNA polymerase has 3'→5' exonuclease proofreading activity, increasing fidelity. Taq lacks
proofreading. Reverse transcriptase synthesizes cDNA from RNA. RNase H degrades RNA in RNA-DNA hybrids.
Question 3
A laboratory receives a sample for BRAF V600E mutation testing by real-time PCR. The result is negative, but the
pathologist later sees the expected mutation on a different platform. What pre-analytical error most likely
occurred?
A. Formalin fixation caused crosslinking
B. EDTA tube used instead of ACD tube
C. Centrifugation at 3000 g for 15 minutes
D. Delayed shipping at 4°C for 48 hours
🟢A
🔴 RATIONALE: Formalin fixation crosslinks nucleic acids and can cause PCR failure or false negatives for
specific alleles due to fragmentation or base modification. EDTA is acceptable for molecular testing.
Centrifugation and cold shipping are generally acceptable.
Question 4
In Sanger sequencing, the incorporation of a dideoxynucleotide (ddNTP) results in:
, A. Chain elongation with a modified base
B. Chain termination because no 3'-OH group is available
C. Increased processivity of DNA polymerase
D. Fluorescence enhancement for detection
🟢B
🔴 RATIONALE: ddNTPs lack a 3'-OH group, preventing addition of the next nucleotide, causing chain
termination. ddNTPs are labeled for detection but do not cause elongation or enhance processivity.
Question 5
Which of the following quality control measures is most critical before reporting a negative result for Chlamydia
trachomatis by nucleic acid amplification test (NAAT)?
A. Positive control within expected range
B. Internal control (IC) amplified correctly
C. Negative control shows no amplification
D. All of the above
🟢D
🔴 RATIONALE: For NAAT, a valid negative result requires: positive control works (assay capable), negative
control shows no contamination, and internal control amplifies (no inhibition). All three are mandatory for
reporting.
Question 6
A molecular technologist observes that the high-resolution melt (HRM) curve for a known heterozygous SNP is
shifted compared to the expected heterozygote pattern. The most likely explanation is:
ANSWERS (VERIFIED ANSWERS) PLUS RATIONALES 2026 Q&A | INSTANT DOWNLOAD PDF
Core Domains
Molecular Biology Foundations (DNA/RNA structure, replication, transcription, translation)
Analytical Techniques (PCR, RT-PCR, sequencing, microarrays, FISH)
Specimen Handling, Extraction, and Quality Control
Instrumentation, Calibration, and Maintenance
Mutations, Genetic Variation, and Pathogen Genomics
Clinical Applications (Oncology, Infectious Disease, Inherited Disorders)
Bioinformatics and Data Interpretation
Regulatory Compliance (CLIA, CAP, FDA, OSHA)
Laboratory Safety and Ethics
Quality Management and Troubleshooting
Introduction
*This assessment is designed to fully prepare candidates for the AMT Molecular Diagnostics Technologist (MDT)
Certification Examination. It evaluates foundational molecular biology knowledge, technical proficiency in
amplification and detection platforms, practical problem-solving in high-complexity testing, and compliance
with regulatory and ethical standards. The exam consists of 200 multiple-choice questions, including scenario-
based items that emphasize real-world decision-making, troubleshooting, and quality assurance. Each question
,provides a verified correct answer with a detailed rationale to reinforce understanding. This resource mirrors the
difficulty, structure, and content breadth of the actual certification exam.*
SECTION ONE: QUESTIONS 1–100
Question 1
A technologist notices that a real-time PCR amplification curve appears only after 38 cycles for a target that
typically crosses threshold at cycle 28. The negative control is flat, and the positive control is normal. What is the
most likely cause?
A. Contamination in the master mix
B. RNA degradation in the sample
C. Incorrect annealing temperature set too high
D. Pipetting error omitting the reverse primer
🟢B
🔴 RATIONALE: A delayed Ct (from 28 to 38) with normal positive control indicates poor template quality. RNA
degradation reduces amplifiable copies, shifting Ct later. Contamination would lower Ct. Omitted primer would
cause no amplification. High annealing temperature might reduce yield but usually causes no amplification or
very late Ct only if extremely high.
Question 2
Which enzyme is responsible for proofreading during DNA replication and is often included in high-fidelity PCR
mixes?
,A. Taq DNA polymerase
B. Reverse transcriptase
C. Pfu DNA polymerase
D. RNase H
🟢C
🔴 RATIONALE: Pfu DNA polymerase has 3'→5' exonuclease proofreading activity, increasing fidelity. Taq lacks
proofreading. Reverse transcriptase synthesizes cDNA from RNA. RNase H degrades RNA in RNA-DNA hybrids.
Question 3
A laboratory receives a sample for BRAF V600E mutation testing by real-time PCR. The result is negative, but the
pathologist later sees the expected mutation on a different platform. What pre-analytical error most likely
occurred?
A. Formalin fixation caused crosslinking
B. EDTA tube used instead of ACD tube
C. Centrifugation at 3000 g for 15 minutes
D. Delayed shipping at 4°C for 48 hours
🟢A
🔴 RATIONALE: Formalin fixation crosslinks nucleic acids and can cause PCR failure or false negatives for
specific alleles due to fragmentation or base modification. EDTA is acceptable for molecular testing.
Centrifugation and cold shipping are generally acceptable.
Question 4
In Sanger sequencing, the incorporation of a dideoxynucleotide (ddNTP) results in:
, A. Chain elongation with a modified base
B. Chain termination because no 3'-OH group is available
C. Increased processivity of DNA polymerase
D. Fluorescence enhancement for detection
🟢B
🔴 RATIONALE: ddNTPs lack a 3'-OH group, preventing addition of the next nucleotide, causing chain
termination. ddNTPs are labeled for detection but do not cause elongation or enhance processivity.
Question 5
Which of the following quality control measures is most critical before reporting a negative result for Chlamydia
trachomatis by nucleic acid amplification test (NAAT)?
A. Positive control within expected range
B. Internal control (IC) amplified correctly
C. Negative control shows no amplification
D. All of the above
🟢D
🔴 RATIONALE: For NAAT, a valid negative result requires: positive control works (assay capable), negative
control shows no contamination, and internal control amplifies (no inhibition). All three are mandatory for
reporting.
Question 6
A molecular technologist observes that the high-resolution melt (HRM) curve for a known heterozygous SNP is
shifted compared to the expected heterozygote pattern. The most likely explanation is: