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Test your basic knowledge |
PCAT Biology Genetics
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
pcat
,
biology
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
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. Transfer of genetic material between two bacteria that re temporarily joined
Translocation
Conjugation
Nonsense Mutation
Polypeptide Synthesis
2. Self replication ensures that its coded sequence will be passed on to successive generations
Heredity
Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase
Episomes
Alleles
3. Virus that infcts its host bacterium by attaching to it - boring a hole through the bacterial cell wall - and injecting its DNA while its protein coat remains attached to the cell wall and enters the host in either a lytic cycle or a lysogenic cycle
Punnet Square Diagram
Bacteriophage
Sex Linked Recessives
Nucleotide
4. System where the repressor is inactive until it combines with the corepressor
Complementary Base-Pairing
Monocistronic
Repressible Systems
Synonyms
5. If the bacterioophage does not lyse its host cell - it becomes integrated into the bacterial genome in a harmless form - lying dorant for one or more generations. the virus mays tay integrated indefinitely - replicating along with the bacterial gneom
Genetic Code
Triplet Code
Varions
Lysogenic Cycle
6. Phage DNA takes control of the bacterium's genetic machinery and manufactures numerous progeny - causing the cell to lyse - releasing new virions - each capable of infecting other bacteria -if initial infection takes place on a bacterial lawn - then
Lytic Cycle
Leading Strand
Codons
Mutable
7. Hydrogen bonds form between the mRNA codon in the A site and its complementary anticodon on the incoming aminoacyl-tRNA complex
Elongation
Ribosomal RNA (rRNA)
Okazaki fragments
Ribosomes
8. Either the failure of homologous chromosomes to separate properly during meiosis I or the failure of sister chromatids to separate properly during meiosis II -zygote might either have 3 copies of that chromosome (trisomy) or just a single copy (monos
Translocation
Nondisjunction
Gene
Punnet Square Diagram
9. Short segments from lagging strand
Okazaki fragments
Gene Mutation
Lagging Strand
Polypeptide Synthesis
10. Occurs while multiple alleles exist for a given gene and more than one of them is dominant -expression of both dominant alleles are simultaneous -ex: ABO blood group
Parental (P Generation)
Codominance
tRNA Job
Filial (F generations)
11. Basic unit of heredity
Chromosomal Breakage
Gene
Mendelian Genetics
Bacterial Replication
12. Ribonucleic acid -polynucleotide structurally similar to DNA except that its sugar is ribose -contains uracil instead of thymine -usually single stranded -found in both nucleus and cytoplasm -several types are involved with mRNA - tRNA - and rRNA
Purines
Ribosomes
Transfer RNA (tRNA)
RNA
13. Cell burst
Lyse
Mendelian Genetics
Monocistronic
Operator Gene
14. Plasmids that are capable of integration into the bacterial genome
Semiconservative
Heredity
Episomes
DNA
15. Include incomplete dominance - and codominance
Non-Mendelian Inheritance Patterns
Plasmid
Elongation
Codominance
16. Synthesized discontinuously in the 5'->3' direction (since DNA polymerase synthesizes only in that direction) as a series Okazaki fragments
Frameshift Mutation
Lagging Strand
Mendel's First Law: Law of Segregation (Four Principles)
Backcross
17. Fruit fly -produces often (short life cycle) -reproduces in large numbers (large sample size) -chromosomes (especially in the salivary gland) are large and easily recognizable in size and shape -its chromosomes are few (4 pairs - 2n=8) -Mutations occ
Lagging Strand
Crosses
Ribosomes
Drosophila Melanogaster
18. Occurs when linked genes are separated
Autosomes
Transcription
Operator Gene
Recombination
19. Chromosome fragment
DNA Replication
Monocistronic
Plasmid
Codons
20. Silent allele -usually assigned capital letters
Recessive Allele
Messenger mRNA
Plasmids
Purines
21. Sugar-phosphate chains on the outside of the helix and the bases on the inside -C-G - T-A -AKA Watson Crick DNA model
Complementary Base-Pairing
Heredity
Double-Stranded Helix
Episomes
22. Cytosine and thymine
Sex Linked Recessives
Pyrimidines
Punnet Square Diagram
Purines
23. Each new daughter helix contains an intact strand from the parent helix and a newly synthesized strand
Translation
Ribosomal RNA (rRNA)
Phenotype
Semiconservative
24. Nitrogen bases are added - deleted - or substituted - thus crating different genes; inappropriate amino acids may be inserted into polypeptide chains - and a mutated protein may be produced
Gene Mutation
Dihybrid Cross
Synonyms
Sex Linked Recessives
25. An organism with a dominant phenotype of unknown genotype (Ax) is crossed with a phenotypically recessive organism
Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase
Genetic Code
Backcross
Genetics
26. The process whereby information coded in the base sequence of DNA is transcribed into a strand of mRNA that leaves the nucleus through nuclear pores. the remaining events of protein synthesis occur in the cytoplasm
Transcription
Varions
Sex Linked Recessives
Ribosomal RNA (rRNA)
27. Genes that are located on the X or Y chromosome -in humans - most are located on the X
Lagging Strand
Sex Linked
Drosophila Melanogaster
Inducer-Repressor Complex
28. May occur spontaneously or be induced by environmental factors
Chromosomal Breakage
Lytic Cycle
Gene Mutation
Dominant Allele
29. The ribosome advances three nucleotides along the mRNA in the 5' to 3' direction and the uncharged tRNA from the P site is expelled - and the peptidyl-tRNA from the A site moves into the P site and completes the cycle
Translocation
Nondisjunction
Punnet Square Diagram
Bacterial Genome
30. New codon may be a stop codon
Nonsense Mutation
Environmental Factors
Inducible Systems
Genetics
31. Double stranded DNA molecule unwinds and separates into two single strands
Lyse
DNA Replication
Virulent
Recombination
32. Only one trait is being studied in this particular mating
Monohybrid Cross
Okazaki fragments
Varions
Start Codon
33. True-breeding individuals (which - if self-crossed - produce progeny only with the parental phenotype) with different traits - mated them - and statistically analyzed the inheritance of the traits in the progeny
Ribosomal RNA (rRNA)
Antibody resistance
Alleles
Crosses
34. Progeny generations
Filial (F generations)
Recombination
Polyribosome
Okazaki fragments
35. (AUG) ribosome scans the mRNA until it bonds to this (methionine) and UAC on anticodon of tRNA
Recessive Allele
Termination Codons
Start Codon
Transcription
36. Nucleic acid is replaced by another nucleic acid
Point Mutation
Transcription
Filial (F generations)
Gene Mutation
37. Binds to the incoming aminoacyl-tRNA complex (Arriving site)
A-site
Mendel's Law of Dominance
Recombination
Inducible Systems
38. Genetic makeup of an individual
Mendel's Second Law: Law of Independent Assortment
Mendel's First Law: Law of Segregation (Four Principles)
Genotype
Messenger mRNA
39. One mRNA strand codes for one polypeptide
Monocistronic
Testcross
Non-Mendelian Inheritance Patterns
Inducible Systems
40. Recessive genes that are carried on the X chromosome will produce the recessive phenotypes whenever they occur in men because no dominant allele is present to mask them -ex: hemophilia and color blindness
Termination Codons
Monohybrid Cross
Sex Linked Recessives
Elongation
41. Degeneracy/redundancy of the genetic code since there are 64 different codons and only 20 amino acids
Synonyms
Nucleotide
Translocation
Transduction
42. Structure formed when many ribosomes simultaneously translate a single mRNA molecule
Plasmid
Polyribosome
Missense Mutation
Start Codon
43. Consists of a single circular chromosome located in the nucleoid region of the cell
Bacterial Genome
Nonsense Mutation
Codons
Termination Codons
44. The parents differ in two traits - as long as the genes are on separate chromosomes and assort independently during meiosis
tRNA Job
Mutations
Operator Gene
Dihybrid Cross
45. Location of genes on DNA
Mendel's Law of Dominance
Chromosomes
Inducible Systems
Silent Mutation
46. Regulation of gene expression and enables prokaryotes to control their metabolism
Bacterial Genome
Filial (F generations)
Transcription
Polyribosome
47. Carries the complement of a DNA sequence and transports it from the nucleus to the ribosomes -assembled from ribonucleotides that are complementary to the 'sense' strand of the DNA -monocistronic
Episomes
Messenger mRNA
Mendelian Genetics
Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase
48. Complementary to one of the mRNA codons
Heterozygous
Anticodon
Non-Mendelian Inheritance Patterns
Binary fission
49. Organisms that contain two copies of the same allele
Homozygous
Environmental Factors
Antibody resistance
Alleles
50. Nucleic acids are deleted or inserted into the genome sequence (lethal)
Varions
Frameshift Mutation
Synonyms
Codominance