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Test your basic knowledge |
GRE Chromosomal And Molecular Basis Of Inheritance
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gre
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science
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biology
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
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Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Phenotypically female but are sterile because their sex organs do not mature. When provided with estrogen replacement therapy - girls with Turners develop secondary sex characteristics.
Monosomy X (XO)
Linked Genes
Nondisjunction
Reciprocal Translocation
2. A gene located on either sex chromosome. In humans - the term has historically referred specifically to a gene on the X chromosome so fathers pass sex-linked alleles to all of their daughters and none of their sons while mothers can pass sex-linked a
Hemophilia
Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
Sex-Linked Gene
Deletion
3. A way of expressing distances between genes - defining one map unit as equivalent to a 1% recombination frequency.
Helicase
Mismatch Repair
Map Units
Hemophilia
4. Y-shaped region at the end of a replication bubble where the new strands of DNA are elongating.
Replication Fork
Hemophilia
Linked Genes
DNA Polymerase
5. An enzyme that untwists the double helix at the replication forks - separating the two parental strands and making them available as template strands. This untwisting causes tighter twisting and strain ahead of the replication forks which is relieved
Helicase
Cri du Chat
Chromosome Theory of Inheritance
Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
6. The ___________ two genes are - the higher the probability that a crossover will occur between them and therefore the higher the recombination frequency. This process can occasionally break the physical connection between genes on the same chromosome
Primer
Farther apart
Klinefelter Syndrome
'The DNA Replication Machine'
7. An aneuploid condition. Usually the result of an extra chromosome 21 so that each body cell has a total of 47 chromosomes. Also termed trisomy 21. Includes characteristic facial feature - short stature - heart defects - susceptibility to respiratory
Primase
Chromosome Theory of Inheritance
Telomerase
Down Syndrome
8. The system for determining sex in birds - some fishes - and some insects. The sex chromosome present in the ovum determines the sex of offspring. The sex chromosomes are designated Z and W. Females are ZW and males are ZZ.
Barr body
The Z-W System
Law of Independent Assortment
Nuclease
9. The segments of the lagging strand that get added to the template strand. The segments get joined together by DNA ligase.
Topoisomerase
Genomic Imprinting
Okazaki Fragments
4 Type of Changes in Chromosome Structure as a Result of Chromosome Breakage
10. A method that maps chromosomes and locates genes with respect to chromosomal features - such as stained bands - that can be seen in the microscope. Ultimately show the physical distances between gene loci in DNA nucleotides.
Cytogenetic Maps
DNA Excision Repair
Reciprocal Translocation
Turner Syndrome
11. Occurs when a mismatched nucleotide evades proofreading by DNA polymerase or arise after DNA synthesis is completed.
Mismatch Repair
Helicase
Cytogenetic Maps
Process of DNA Polymerase Adding a Nucleotide
12. The two alleles for each gene separate during gamete formation.
Okazaki Fragments
Klinefelter Syndrome
Law of Segregation
Mismatch Repair
13. Genes located on the same chromosome that tend to be inherited together in genetic crosses. These results deviate from those expected from Mendel'S law of independent assortment.
Crossing Over
Primer
Linked Genes
Hemophilia
14. A result of nondisjuction of sex chromosomes. Females are healthy and cannot be distinguished phenotypically from other females.
Nitrogenous Bases of DNA
Mismatch Repair
Females with XXX
Translocation
15. The new strand of DNA moving in the direction away from the replication fork. Synthesized as a series of segments in contrast to the leading strand that elongates continuously.
Conservative Model of DNA Replication
Dispersive Model of DNA Replication
Lagging Strand
Extranuclear Genes
16. Alleles of genes on nonhomologous chromosome assort independently during gamete formation.
Law of Independent Assortment
Down Syndrome
Nondisjunction
Barr body
17. The process that accounts for the recombination of linked genes. Occurs while replicated homologous chromosomes are pair during prophase of meiosis I - one maternal chromatid and one paternal chromatid break at corresponding points and then are rejoi
DNA Excision Repair
Nuclease
Crossing Over
SRY
18. One of the first imprinted genes to be identified. Although this growth factor is required for normal prenatal growth - only the paternal allele is expressed.
Lagging Strand
Barr body
Monosomy X (XO)
Insulin-like Growth Factor 2 (Igf2)
19. Disorder caused by structurally altered chromosomes - specifically a deletion in chromosome 5. A child born with this deletion is mentally retarded - has a small head with unusual facial features - and has a cry that sounds like the mewing of a cat.
Klinefelter Syndrome
Barr body
Cri du Chat
Males with XYY
20. Traits that depend on which parent passed along the alleles for those traits. An exception to the display of Mendelian inheritance.
Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
Replication Fork
Genetic Map
Genomic Imprinting
21. Or phages. Viruses that infect bacteria.
Primase
Semiconservative Model of DNA Replication
Bacteriophages
Cytogenetic Maps
22. The most common type of translocation. A type of change in chromosome structure as a result of some sort of chromosomal breakage. In this - nonhomologous chromosome exchange fragments.
Cri du Chat
Reciprocal Translocation
Linked Genes
Transformation
23. The short initial nucleotide chain put in place before DNA polymerase begins synthesizing in the 5' to 3' direction. May consist of either DNA or RNA. In initiating the replication of cellular DNA - the primer is a short stretch of RNA with an availa
Monosomic
Down Syndrome
Mismatch Repair
Primer
24. Offspring that have new combinations of their parent'S phenotypes. When 50% of offspring are recombinants - geneticists say that there is a 50% frequency of recombination and is observed for any two genes that are located on different chromosomes.
Recombinant Types (or Recombinants)
Bacteriophages
Turner Syndrome
Reciprocal Translocation
25. Nucleotide sequences found in eukaryotic chromosomal DNA that make up for the fact that DNA polymerases cannot replicate the ends of DNA strands since there is no 3' end there. Do not contain genes but rather the DNA has multiple repetitions of one s
Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia (CML)
Aneuploidy
Extranuclear Genes
Telomeres
26. Genes located in organelles in the cytoplasm. Mitochondria and plastids contain small circular DNA molecules that carry genes coding for proteins and RNA and do not display Mendelian inheritance. For example - almost all the mitochondria come from th
Extranuclear Genes
Translocation
Polyploidy
Monosomy X (XO)
27. A result of nondisjuction of sex chromosomes.
Cri du Chat
Males with XYY
Turner Syndrome
Reciprocal Translocation
28. A compact object that is the inactive X in each cell of a female. Although female mammals inherit two X chromosomes - one becomes almost completely inactivated during embryonic development and lies along the inside of the nuclear envelope. Most genes
Crossing Over
Semiconservative Model of DNA Replication
Cytogenetic Maps
Barr body
29. A type of change in chromosome structure as a result of some sort of chromosomal breakage. Occurs when a chromosomal fragment lacking a centromere is lost. The affected chromosome is then missing certain genes.
Deletion
Polyploidy
Females with XXX
Signal-strand Binding Protein
30. A type of change in chromosome structure as a result of some sort of chromosomal breakage. Occurs when a chromosomal fragment repeats a segment. In some cases - if meiosis is in progress - a deleted fragment may become as an extra segment to a sister
Monosomy X (XO)
Nitrogenous Bases of DNA
Duplication
Dispersive Model of DNA Replication
31. The mammalian system for determining sex. The sex of the offspring depends on whether the sperm cell contains an X chromosome or a Y.
The X-Y System
Cri du Chat
Barr body
Nondisjunction
32. A type of change in chromosome structure as a result of some sort of chromosomal breakage. Occurs when a chromosomal fragment breaks and joins a nonhomologous chromosome.
Translocation
Insulin-like Growth Factor 2 (Igf2)
Process of DNA Polymerase Adding a Nucleotide
Mismatch Repair
33. The system for determining sex in most species of bees and ants. There are no sex chromosomes in these species - Females develop from fertilized ova and are thus diploid. Males - however - develop from unfertilized ova and are haploid; they have no f
The Haplo-diploid System
Primer
4 Type of Changes in Chromosome Structure as a Result of Chromosome Breakage
Monosomic
34. The general term for a chromosomal alteration in which an organism has more than two complete chromosome sets. There are more specific terms like triploidy (3n) and tetraploidy (4n) indicating 3 or 4 chromosomal sets - respectively.
Telomerase
Polyploidy
Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia (CML)
Leading Strand
35. A human sex-linked disorder. A disease characterized by progressive weakening of the muscles and loss of coordination. Affected individuals rarely live past their early 20s. A result of the absence of a key muscle protein called dystrophin.
Helicase
Primer
Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
The X-O System
36. Predicted by Watson and Crick. Suggests that when a double helix replicates - each of the two daughter molecules will have one old strand - derived from the parent molecule - and one newly made strand.
Semiconservative Model of DNA Replication
Nitrogenous Bases of DNA
Mutant Phenotypes
Cytogenetic Maps
37. Each nucleotide added to a growing DNA strand is a nucleoside triphosphate - which is a sugar and a base with three phosphate groups. The triphosphate monomers used are chemically reactive - partly because their triphosphate tails have an unstable cl
DNA Polymerase
Process of DNA Polymerase Adding a Nucleotide
Monosomic
Genomic Imprinting
38. An enzyme that can start an RNA chain from scratch. Joins RNA nucleotides together one at a time - making a primer complimentary to the template strand at the location where initiation of the new DNA strand will occur.
The X-O System
Primase
Trisomic
Lagging Strand
39. Helps relieve strain from the DNA double helix when helicase untwists it at the replication forks - causing tighter twisting ahead of the forks.
Down Syndrome
Helicase
Turner Syndrome
Topoisomerase
40. The strand of DNA that is added on to the template strand one at a time as the fork progresses--with the DNA polymerase nestled in the replication fork. Moves in the 5' to 3' direction.
Farther apart
Leading Strand
Dispersive Model of DNA Replication
Hemophilia
41. A sex-linked recessive disorder. Defined by the absence of one or more of the proteins required for blood clotting. When injured - people with this disease have prolonged bleeding because a firm clot is slow to form. Patients receive intravenous inje
Hemophilia
Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
Map Units
Lagging Strand
42. A result of nondisjuction of sex chromosomes. In this case - it is the result of an extra X chromosome in a male - producting XXY. People have male sex organs - but the testes are abnormally small and the man is sterile. Some breast enlargement and o
Klinefelter Syndrome
The X-O System
Law of Independent Assortment
Crossing Over
43. Traits that are alternatives to the wild type because they are due to alleles assumed to have arisen as changes - or mutations - in the wild-type allele.
DNA Structure
Inversion
Mutant Phenotypes
Transformation
44. The various proteins that participate in DNA replication actually form a single large complex since many of the protein-protein interactions actually facilitate the efficiency of the machine as a whole.
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45. Helps in repairing and proofreading DNA. An enzyme that cuts out a segment of the strand of DNA containing damage - creating a gap which is filled in with nucleotides properly paired with the nucleotides in the undamaged strand by DNA polymerase and
Nuclease
Barr body
Monosomic
Conservative Model of DNA Replication
46. The system for determining sex in grasshoppers - cockroaches - and some other insects. In these insects - there is only one type of chromosome - the X. Females are XX and males are XO. Sex of the offspring is determined by whether the sperm cell cont
DNA Structure
The X-O System
Polyploidy
Insulin-like Growth Factor 2 (Igf2)
47. A molecule that binds unpaired DNA strands - after its been separated by helicase - and stabilizes them until they serve as templates for the synthesis of new complementary strands.
Law of Segregation
Transformation
Wild Type
Signal-strand Binding Protein
48. A genetic map based on recombination frequencies.
DNA Excision Repair
The Z-W System
Insulin-like Growth Factor 2 (Igf2)
Linkage Map
49. In this - all four strands of DNA following replication have a mixture of old and new DNA. Proved incorrect and support came out for the semiconservative model.
Cytogenetic Maps
Signal-strand Binding Protein
4 Type of Changes in Chromosome Structure as a Result of Chromosome Breakage
Dispersive Model of DNA Replication
50. 1. deletion 2. duplication 3. inversion 4. translocation
Recombinant Types (or Recombinants)
Dispersive Model of DNA Replication
Barr body
4 Type of Changes in Chromosome Structure as a Result of Chromosome Breakage