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Example Questions
Example Question #141 : Macromolecule Structures And Functions
Which statement concerning DNA methylation in mammals is false?
Deamination of unmethylated cytosine gives uracil
DNA methyltransferase adds a methyl group to cytosines of the dinucleotide CpG
None of the other answers is false
CpG sites are mutation hot spots
Deamination of methylated cytosine gives thymine
None of the other answers is false
Unmethylated cytosine spontaneously deaminates to uracil. Over time, methylated cytosine is spontaneously deaminated to thymine. Random deamination of methylcytosines causes mutation, creating hot spots. The vast majority of DNA methylations in mammals occurs at CpG (cytosine-phospate-guanine) sites.
Example Question #2 : Modifications And Epigenetics
Which of the following describes a mutation in which a segment of DNA detaches from a chromosome and reattaches to another chromosome?
Inversion
Point mutation
Translocation
Null mutation
Deletion
Translocation
A null mutation is one that deactivates a gene entirely. Point mutations are those that occur within a single, small site in a gene. Inversion involves the reversal of orientation of a DNA segment. Deletion occurs when a whole part of a chromosome is removed, joining two ends that were far apart. Translocation involves the exchange of genetic material from two chromosomes that are not homologous.
Example Question #3 : Modifications And Epigenetics
Generally, silencing of a gene is accomplished by __________?
Acetylation
Decarboxylation
Methylation
Ligation
Phosphorylation
Methylation
The silencing of a gene is most often accomplished via methylation of the DNA. The methyl groups are added to the gene's promoter region and thus, the DNA is not read by transcriptional enzymes.
Example Question #4 : Modifications And Epigenetics
How does methylation cause the silencing of a gene?
Methyl groups are added to the coding sequence in the DNA
Methyl groups are removed from the promoter region of the DNA
Methyl groups are transferred from the coding sequence of the DNA to the promoter region
Methyl groups are added to the promoter region of the DNA
Methyl groups are removed from the coding sequence in the DNA
Methyl groups are added to the promoter region of the DNA
In order to silence a gene by methylation, methyl groups are added to the promoter region of DNA. This area is upstream of the coding sequence and is responsible for initiation of transcription. Thus, methylating the promoter region inhibits further transcription of the gene.
Example Question #153 : Biochemistry
Which of the following DNA bases can be methylated in the promoter region to silence a gene?
Thymine
Guanine and thymine
Cytosine and adenine
Cytosine
Guanine and adenine
Cytosine and adenine
The only two bases that can be methylated are cytosine and adenine.
Example Question #5 : Modifications And Epigenetics
Formation of thymine dimers in DNA can lead to conditions such as melanoma when unrepaired. This DNA mutation is primarily caused by __________.
defects in DNA topoisomerase
UV irradiation
alkylating agents such as nitrogen mustard
UV irradiation
Alkylating agents and can also cause cancer, but they lead to methylation and mismatch mutations rather than the formation of pyrimidine dimers.
Example Question #1 : Nucleic Acid Degradation
Which of the following statements about restriction enzymes is true?
Restriction enzymes act at RNA mutation sites, to create a covalent bond which links two adjacent exons after an intron sequence is excised
Restriction enzymes can only cut bacterial DNA
Restriction enzymes are endonucleases which recognize a restriction site and cut DNA within or around this site
None of these answers is true
Reverse transcriptase is a DNA polymerase which creates new strands from 3’ to 5’
Restriction enzymes are endonucleases which recognize a restriction site and cut DNA within or around this site
Reverse transcriptase synthesizes DNA in the 5' to 3' direction, using RNA as a template (hence it is the reverse of transcription). Restriction enzymes act only on DNA, not RNA, and they can cut bacterial as well as viral DNA—indeed, they can provide protection against viruses—and are found in archaea. Restriction enzymes can recognize specific sequences of nucleotides at restriction sites and cut DNA at these sites. Restriction enzymes do not create covalent bonds between adjacent exons after intron excision, rather this is done by tRNA splicing ligase.
Example Question #41 : Nucleic Acid Structures And Functions
What is the role of xanthine oxidase?
I. The enzyme xanthine oxidase converts hypoxanthine to xanthine and, also, xanthine to uric acid.
II. Xanthine oxidase is involved in purine (nucleotides like adenine, guanine) degradation.
III. In diseases where there is a high production of purines, the enzyme's products (uric acid) can cause gout.
IV. Gout medication is designed to target xanthine oxidase.
II, III, and IV
I and IV
I, II, III, and IV
I and II
I, II, and III
I, II, III, and IV
Xanthine oxidase is an enzyme important in purine catabolism. Nucleotides from DNA degradation are metabolized to uric acid by xanthine oxidase.In diseases with high levels of nucleotide production, uric acid levels are also high and produce symptoms of gout (uric acid is deposited abnormally in tissues). Gout is treated with inhibitors of xanthine oxidase such as allopurinol, reducing the levels of uric acid and the symptoms of gout.
Example Question #1 : Lipid Classifications
Which of the following statements about oleic acid is false?
There are 16 carbon atoms in its longest chain
It is a fatty acid with an omega-9 unsaturation
Its IUPAC name is (9Z)-Octadec-9-enoic acid
None of the other answers is false
Its condensed molecular formula is
There are 16 carbon atoms in its longest chain
Oleic acid (which composes much of olive oil) has a double bond between its 9th and 10th atoms. Hence it has an omega-9 unsaturation. It has 18 carbon atoms, not 16, which gives it a condensed molecular formula:. Because it is a cis-isomer, the IUPAC name contains a Z, and becuse it is an unsaturated carboxylic acid, it ends in -enoic acid.
Example Question #1 : Fatty Acids
Which of the following factors contribute to increasing the melting point of a fatty acid?
Increased number of double bonds
Introducing cis-double bonds
Adding methylene groups
Decrease fatty acid chain length
Increased fatty acid chain length
Increased fatty acid chain length
Double bonds cause unsaturation, thus decreases the melting point. Cis-double bonds as well as methylation also introduce kinks within the chain, decreasing the melting point. Increasing the fatty acid chain length creates saturation, thus causes the melting point to increase. Therefore, decreasing fatty acid chain length has the adverse effect.
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