AN INTRODUCTION TO GENETIC ANALYSIS
,Chapter 1 The Genetics Revolution
Multiple-Choice Questions
Section 1.1 (The Birth Of Genetics)
1. The Early 1900s Was An Important Period For Genetics Due To Which Of The
Following Major Events?
A) The Rediscovery Of Gregor Mendel’s Scientific Findings
B) Watson And Crick Solving The Structure Of Dna
C) Walter Sutton And Theodore Boveri Hypothesizing That Chromosomes Are
The Hereditary Elements
D) All Of The Answer Options Are Correct.
E) The Rediscovery Of Gregor Mendel’s Scientific Findings And Walter Sutton
And Theodore Boveri Hypothesizing That Chromosomes Are The Hereditary
Elements
Answer: E
2. A Sample Of Normal Double-Stranded Dna Was Found To Have A Guanine
Content Of 18%. What Is The Expected Proportion Of Adenine?
A) 9%
B) 32%
C) 36%
D) 68%
E) 82%
Answer: B
3. In One Strand Of Dna The Nucleotide Sequence Is 5'-Atgc-3'. The
Complementary Sequence In The Other Strand Must Be:
A) 3'-Atgc-5'.
B) 3'-Tacg-5'.
C) 5'-Atcg-3'.
D) 5'-Cgta-3'.
,E) 5'-Tacg-3'.
Answer: B
4. How Many Different Dna Molecules That Are Eight-Nucleotide Pairs Long
Are Theoretically Possible?
A) 24
B) 32
C) 64
D) 256
E) 65,536
Answer: E
5. Which Of The Following Is/Are False About Genes?
A) Genes Are Located On Chromosomes.
B) Genes Come In Variants Known As Alleles.
C) Genes Always Encode Protein Products.
D) All Of The Answer Options Are Correct.
E) None Of The Answer Options Are Correct.
Answer: C
6. Wild Cats (Felis Silvestris) And Common Mice (Mus Musculus) Are Diploid. In Wild
Cats 2n = 38, While In Common Mice 2n = 40. Based On This Information, We Can
Conclude That Wild Cat Cells Have:
A) Less Dna Than Common Mouse Cells.
B) Smaller Genomes Than Common Mouse Cells.
C) Fewer Dna Molecules Than Common Mouse Cells.
D) Fewer Genes Than Common Mouse Cells.
E) Fewer Sets Of Chromosomes Than Common Mouse Cells.
Answer: C
7. Which Of The Following Is A Component Of Dna?
A) Alanine
B) Arginine
C) Cysteine
D) Guanidine
E) Tyrosin
e Answer:
D
, 8. Which Of The Following Is/Are True Of The Dna Structure Solved By Watson
And Crick?
A) It Is A Double-Helical Structure.
B) Sugar–Phosphate Backbone Is Always Toward The Outside Of The Dna.
C) There Are Three Hydrogen Bonds Between A And T And Two Hydrogen Bonds
Between C And G.
D) All Of The Answer Options Are Correct.
E) It Is A Double-Helical Structure With The Sugar–Phosphate Backbone Always
Toward The Outside Of The Dna.
Answer: E
9. Which Of The Following Is A Correct Representation Of The Central Dogma?
A) Rna → Dna → Protein
B) Protein → Dna → Rna
C) Dna → Rna → Protein
D) Dna → Protein → Dna
E) None Of The Answer Options Are Correct.
Answer: C
Section 1.2 (After Cracking The Code)
10. A Gene Is Transcribed Into An Mrna, And This Mrna Is 110 Nucleotides Long.
Which Of The Following Proteins Could It Encode?
A) An Enzyme That Is 330 Amino Acids Long
B) A Ribosomal Protein That Is 360 Amino Acids Long
C) A Regulatory Protein That Is 36 Amino Acids Long
D) A Signaling Protein That Is 10 Amino Acids Long
E) A Structural Protein That Is 110 Amino Acids
Long Answer: D
11. The Nuclear Genome Of A Mouse Nerve Cell Is Compared To That Of A Mouse
Skin Cell. What Differences Can We Expect To See Between These Two Cells’
Nuclear Genomes?
A) The Two Cells Have Almost Identical Genomes, But The Nerve Cell Has More
Nerve- Specific Genes.
B) The Two Cells Have Almost Identical Genomes, But The Skin Cell Has More Skin-
Specific Genes.
C) The Two Cells Have Different Genomes: The Nerve Cell Has Nerve-Specific Genes
But Not Skin-Specific Genes, And The Skin Cell Has Skin-Specific Genes But No
Nerve-Specific Genes.
D) The Two Cells Have Similar Genomes, But The Nerve Cell Has More Nerve-
Specific Genes And The Skin Cell Has More Skin-Specific Genes.