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A wide range of topics in genetics and molecular biology, including gene expression, dna replication, transcription, translation, and various genetic concepts such as epistasis, linkage, and recombination. It delves into the mechanisms underlying these fundamental biological processes and provides insights into the genetic basis of traits and disorders. The role of regulatory proteins, chromatin structure, and epigenetic modifications in gene regulation. It also discusses the applications of genetic technologies, such as gene therapy and dna microarray analysis, and the challenges associated with them. Overall, this comprehensive document offers a detailed understanding of the core principles and mechanisms in the field of genetics and molecular biology, making it a valuable resource for students, researchers, and anyone interested in the intricacies of life at the molecular level.
Typology: Exams
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Describe Mendel's conclusions about how traits are passed from generation to generation - CORRECT ANSWER- - Mendel hypothesized that traits in peas are controlled by specific unit factors. He suggested that unit factors occur in pairs and that unit factors separate from each other during gamete formation.
select the best interpretation of this result. - CORRECT ANSWER- - B. The differences between the observed and expected counts are too large to be attributed to chance.
In your research on amino acid biosynthesis in E. coli, you have identified three new auxotrophic mutants in a mutagenesis screen. Each mutant can grow on minimal medium only if it is supplemented with a specific amino acid, as follows: lys2 mutants require lysine, gly3 mutants require glycine, and phe1 mutants require phenylalanine. To determine exconjugant genotypes based on medium composition, which one of the following statement is not correct? - CORRECT ANSWER- - lys2- bacteria will grow on minimal medium. How do mammals, including humans, solve the "dosage problem" caused by the presence of an X and Y chromosome in one sex and two X chromosomes in the other sex? - CORRECT ANSWER- - In females, one of the X chromosomes is condensed and largely inactive so that each sex has one active X chromosome When the cloned cat Carbon Copy (CC) was born, she had black patches and white patches, but completely lacked any orange patches. The knowledgeable students of genetics were not surprised at this outcome. - CORRECT ANSWER- - The donor nucleus had an orange allele that was inactivated and remained inactivated in CC. The remaining black allele was the only one that could be expressed Which of the following syndromes is not paired with its causative chromosomal aberration?
. In the pedigree below, individual I-1 has Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON), an inherited form of vision loss caused by a mutation in mitochondrial DNA. Which members of her family will not inherit LHON? - CORRECT ANSWER- - E. III- 2 Sometimes, a mother who is affected with a mitochondrial disease will have an unaffected child. Which of one of the following incorrectly explains this observation? - CORRECT ANSWER- - One or more of the children could inherit the majority of their mitochondria from an unaffected father What key observations in crosses between dextrally and sinistrally coiled land snails support the explanation that this phenotype is the result of maternal-effect inheritance? - CORRECT ANSWER- - When eggs from a Dd (but sinistral because of its parent) snail are self-fertilized, all the offspring, even those that are dd, coil dextrally. The following pedigree shows the inheritance of a mild, but very rare condition in Siberian Husky dogs. If individuals 1 and 2 are crossed, what is the probability that they will produce an affected pup? - CORRECT ANSWER- - 4/ In a certain breed of dog, the alleles B and b determine black and brown coats, respectively. However, the allele Q of an unlinked gene is epistatic to the B and b color alleles, resulting in a gray coat (q has no effect on color). If animals of genotype B/b; Q/q are intercrossed, what phenotypic ratio is expected in the progeny? - CORRECT ANSWER- - 3 black, 12, gray, 1 brown The following pedigree depicts the inheritance of a rare hereditary disease affecting muscles: - CORRECT ANSWER- - X-linked recessive . If genes assort independently, a testcrossed dihybrid characteristically produces progeny phenotypes in the ratio: - CORRECT ANSWER- - 1:1:1:
. A male mouse of genotype A/a. B/b is testcrossed multiple times. Overall, these testcrosses produce 11 mice of phenotype A B, 81 mice of A b, 77 mice of a B, and 14 mice of a b. Based on these data, the genotypes of the male mouse's parents are most likely - CORRECT ANSWER- - Ab/Ab and aB/aB. True-breeding tall plants with white flowers are crossed to true-breeding dwarf plants with purple flowers. The F1 plants were tall with purple flowers. The genes that affect these traits independently assort. If the F1 plants were allowed to self-fertilize, the expected ratio of the F2 generation would be - CORRECT ANSWER- - 9 tall/purple flowers: 3 tall/white flowers : 3 dwarf/purple flowers : 1 dwarf /white flowers Mendel's law of segregation can be explained by - CORRECT ANSWER- - the separation of homologs during anaphase I of meiosis. A trait exhibits incomplete dominance. If one of the two alleles is a loss-of-function allele, a reasonable molecular explanation would be - CORRECT ANSWER- - 50% of the functional protein is not enough to give the same phenotype as 100 In mice, brown color (B) is dominant over white (b), long tail (L) is dominant over short tail (l), and straight fur (S) is dominant over curly fur (s). If two mice that are heterozygous for all three genes are crossed to each other, what is the probability that an offspring will be BBLlss? - CORRECT ANSWER- - 1/ An aaBB individual is crossed to an AAbb individual to produce AaBb offspring. The AaBb offspring are then crossed to aabb individuals to produce an F2 generation. What are the genotypes of the F2 recombinant offspring? - CORRECT ANSWER- - AaBb and aabb Two genes are 14 map units apart. A CCDD individual was crossed to a ccdd individual to produce CcDd individuals. The CcDd individuals were then crossed to ccdd individuals to produce an F2 generation. If there are 400 members of the F2 generation, how many would you expect to be ccdd? - CORRECT ANSWER- - 172
. In pea plants, tall (T) is dominant to dwarf (t). Recently, you have discovered a new gene in peas that exists in two alleles, L causes large leaves and l causes small leaves. You begin with two true-breeding strains, tall with small leaves and the other dwarf with large leaves. All of the F1 offspring are tall with large leaves. You then cross the F1 offspring to dwarf plants with small leaves and obtain the following results: 394 Tall, small leaves 110 Tall, large leaves 385 Dwarf, large leaves 111 Dwarf, small leaves
1000 Total F2 offspring What can you conclude about the relationship between the plant height gene T and the plant leaf size gene L - CORRECT ANSWER- - They are most likely located on the same chromosome. . A biochemical pathway making flower pigments shows the following sequential color conversions (each arrow represents an enzyme catalyzed step). White → yellow → blue → red A B C A plant is homozygous for mutations in enzyme "B," inactivating the active site for this enzyme. The resulting flowers will be - CORRECT ANSWER- - yellow . In the following cell lines, which one contains F factor in the plasmid form carrying a segment of chromosomal DNA? - CORRECT ANSWER- - F' The recessive alleles k (kidney-shaped eyes instead of wild-type round), c (cardinal-colored eyes instead of wild-type red), and e (ebony body instead of wild-type gray) identify three
genes on chromosome 3 of Drosophila. Females with kidney-shaped, cardinal-colored eyes were mated with ebony males. The F1 was wild type in all three traits. When F females were testcrossed with kk cc ee males, the following progeny phenotypes were obtained: Determine the order of the genes on chromosome 3. - CORRECT ANSWER- - k - e - c Which of the following statements best represents variable expressivity and incomplete penetrance? - CORRECT ANSWER- - Polydactyly, a dominant trait in humans does not develop to the same degree in different heterozygous individuals and provides an example of variable expressivity; the extreme case, where a heterozygote does not develop polydactyly is an example of incomplete penetrance. Mutations in mitochondrial DNA appear to be responsible for a number of neurological disorders, including myoclonic epilepsy and ragged-red fiber disease, Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy, and Kearns-Sayre syndrome. In each case, the disease phenotype is expressed when the ratio of mutant to wild-type mitochondria exceeds a threshold peculiar to each disease, but usually in the 60 to 95 percent range. Can you suggest a general approach that might be used to treat, or perhaps even cure, these disorders? For example, Compared with the vast number of mitochondria in an embryo, the number of mitochondria in an ovum is relatively small. Might such an ooplasmic mitochondrial bottleneck present an opportunity for therapy or cure? - CORRECT ANSWER- - It may be possible to alter the heteroplasmic ratio by microinjection of mitochondria.
. The genes encoding the red- and green-color-detecting proteins of the human eye are located next to one another on the X chromosome and probably evolved from a common ancestral pigment gene. The two proteins demonstrate 76 percent homology in their amino acid sequences. A normal-visioned woman (with both genes present on each of her two X chromosomes) has a red-color-blind son who was shown to have one copy of the green- detecting gene and no copies of the red-detecting gene. Which of the following is the most plausible explanation for these observations? - CORRECT ANSWER- - An X chromosome lacking the red-detecting gene was produced by a crossover event between the red-detecting allele and the green-detecting genes of the mother's X chromosomes.
In this following pedigree, in order for individual III-1 to be affected with the condition, which four of these requirements must be met? 1). II-2 must be a carrier. 2). II-2 must pass a dominant allele to III-1. 3). II-2 must pass a recessive allele to III-1. 4). II-3 must be a carrier. 5). II-3 must pass a dominant allele to III-1. 6). II-3 must pass a recessive allele to III-1. - CORRECT ANSWER- - C. 1), 3), 4), and 6)
degraded polysaccharides, they would have concluded that - CORRECT ANSWER- - d. polysaccharides are the genetic material What is the structural difference between ATP and dATP - CORRECT ANSWER- - d. ATP has a 2' OH and 3' OH dATP has a 2' H and 3' OH In bacteria, DNA polymerase III is the enzyme that adds new nucleotides to a primer or growing strand of DNA. Which of the following statements correctly describes the formation of the bond between a new nucleotide and the primer? - CORRECT ANSWER- - a. The newly added nucleotide forms a bond with the hydroxyl (-OH) group on the 3' end of the primer. At a replication fork, the two parental DNA strands separate, and each strand is copied by a DNA polymerase III, synthesizing a new, complementary strand. The diagram below shows a replication fork with the two parental DNA strands labeled at their 3' and 5' ends. The newly synthesized DNA strands are not shown, but the polymerase on each parental strand is shown (labeled 1 and 2). - CORRECT ANSWER- - c. Polymerase 1 elongates its strand toward the replication fork, but polymerase 2 elongates its strand away from the replication fork. DNA Recombination occurs during meiosis between two DNA molecules that have substantial sequence homology, which structures can be involved in recombination - CORRECT ANSWER- - b. Chromatids of homologous chromosomes Clearly, there is a relationship between Tm and %GC for these samples. What might be the molecular basis of this relationship? - CORRECT ANSWER- - c. Higher number of hydrogen bonds in CG pairs than in AT pairs. Histone acetyltransferases (HATs) are capable of remodeling chromatin by adding acetyl groups to various lysine residues in histones that comprise the nucleosome. Following this modification, the lysine residue no longer has a positive charge. Which statement is true? -
CORRECT ANSWER- - Histones in general have a net positive charge that allow them to bind to DNA. Acetylation of histones, decreases their positive charge and weakens the histone- DNA interaction. Chromatin exists in different states of compaction and relaxation that regulate access to DNA by regulatory proteins. Heterochromatic regions of chromosomes are relatively inaccessible to transcriptional proteins either transiently (in the case of facultative heterochromatin) or nearly always (in the case of constitutive heterochromatin). Which of the following region of chromosomes is not example of heterochromatin? - CORRECT ANSWER- - Examples of histone modifications are acetylation (by histone acetyltransferase, or HAT), which is often linked to gene activation, and deacetylation (by histone deacetylases, or HDACs), which often leads to gene silencing typical of heterochromatin. Such heterochromatinization is initiated from a nucleation site and spreads bidirectionally until encountering boundaries that delimit the silenced areas. Position effect was discovered in Drosophila, where repositioning of the w + allele in Drosophila by translocation or inversion near heterochromatin produces intermittent w + activity. In the heterozygous state (w +/w), a variegated eye is produced, with white and red patches. How might one explain position- effect variegation in terms of histone acetylation and/or deacetylation? - CORRECT ANSWER- - b. The white patches are caused by the deacetylation of the histones associated with the DNA of the w + allele RNA splicing is necessary to produce a mature mRNA from the pre-mRNA. Which of the following is a characteristic of RNA splicing in Eukaryotes? - CORRECT ANSWER- - c. Exon/intron boundaries are typically characterized by a 5' GU splice junction and a 3' AG splice junction. Does RNA polymerase move in a set direction along a strand of DNA during transcription - CORRECT ANSWER- - c. Yes, the RNA polymerase moves in a direction that reads the bases of the DNA sequence from the 3' end toward the 5' end of the template strand.
Translation is directly dependent on all of the following associations except - CORRECT ANSWER- - c. complementary base pairing between mRNA and DNA Frameshift mutations alter the reading frame of the genetic message encoded in the mRNA and typically have disastrous effects on the resulting protein. Which of the following mutations would result in a frameshift mutation? - CORRECT ANSWER- - b. deletion of two sequential nucleotides in the coding region of the Proteins may either be translated on free ribosomes or on ribosomes bound to the ER. What is the cellular destination of the majority of proteins that are translated on free ribosomes? - CORRECT ANSWER- - cytoplasm Below is a partial mRNA sequence. Use it to answer the following questions. 5' - GCCGAUCGAACU - 3' Encoded within the partial mRNA sequence is a region of the protein with the amino acid sequence (N-term...Proline-Isoleucine-Glutamic acid...C-term). What is the correct reading frame for this mRNA? - CORRECT ANSWER- - d. 5' - G | CCG | AUC | GAA | CU - 3' If a single base-pair deletion occurred in the part of the gene that corresponds to the mRNA above and the resulting partial amino acid sequence was (N-term-...Proline-Methionine- Asparagine...-C-term), which new partial mRNA sequence would be consistent with this change? Bases surrounding the deletion are underlined. - CORRECT ANSWER- - b. 5' - G | CCG | AUG | AAC | U - To carry out its role, each transfer RNA requires at least four specific recognition sites that must be inherent in its tertiary structure. Which of the following is not one of the four specific recognition sites of tRNA? - CORRECT ANSWER- - c. attachment of the specific DNA bases How is the trp operon regulated? Select the only statement that does not apply.
a. When tryptophan is present, it binds to the regulatory protein, activating it. b. When glucose is present, it binds to catabolite activator protein (CAP), which stimulates transcription of the operon. c. When tryptophan is absent, the regulatory protein is inactive. d. The trp operon undergoes negative control. - CORRECT ANSWER- - b. When glucose is present, it binds to catabolite activator protein (CAP), which stimulates transcription of the operon How is the lac operon regulated? Select the only statement that does not apply. a. The lac operon undergoes positive control. b. When lactose (and, therefore, allolactose) is absent, the regulatory protein is inactive. c. The lac operon undergoes negative control. d. When glucose is absent, cAMP binds to catabolite activator protein (CAP), activating CAP to increase transcription of the operon. - CORRECT ANSWER- - b. When lactose (and, therefore, allolactose) is absent, the regulatory protein is inactive. Bacteria respond to changing environmental conditions by using regulatory proteins to turn groups of genes on and off in response to environmental signals. Which of the following best describes the biological role of the lac operon? - CORRECT ANSWER- - It ensures that a cell dedicates resources to the production of enzymes involved in lactose metabolism only when lactose is available in the environment. The leader sequence is located between the promoter/operator region and the structural genes of the trp operon. Which of the following features of the trp operon is likely least essential to the process of attenuation? - CORRECT ANSWER- - d. The order of the structural genes, E, D, C, B, A Attenuator systems such as the one described for regulation of tryptophan synthesis would be just as likely to occur in eukaryotes as in prokaryotes - CORRECT ANSWER- - false
Bacterial strains that are "partially diploid" have two copies of the lac operon because they aquired a plasmid carrying just the lac operon region. One copy of the lac operon region is on the recipient's bacterial chromosome, and the other copy is on the F' plasmid that was introduced into the cell by conjugation. Partial diploid genotypes are written with the F' segment first and the recipient chromosome next. You create a lac operon partial diploid with this genotype: F' I+ P+ Oc Z− Y+ / I− P+ O+ Z+ Y− To determine which genes are transcribed and under what conditions, you need to first consider each genotype separately, and then together. Which of the following summarizes expression of the lac genes in this partial diploid: F' I+ P+ Oc Z− Y+ / I− P+ O+ Z+ Y−? - CORRECT ANSWER- - d. Permease is made both in the presence of and in the absence of lactose; beta-galactosidase is only made when lactose is present. Which statement about the modification of chromatin structure in eukaryotes is not true? - CORRECT ANSWER- - Deacetylation of histone tails in chromatin loosens the association between nucleosomes and DNA. Which of the following statements regarding dispersed promoters is true? - CORRECT ANSWER- - b. Dispersed promoters are found in genes that are transcribed constitutively. Within a DNA sequence, __________ are crucial for determining whether or not transcription can occur, whereas __________ determine that maximal transcription of the gene occurs - CORRECT ANSWER- - c. core-promoter elements; enhancers Which of the following statements regarding the GAL system in yeast is true? a. Transcription of the structural genes occurs when Gal4p is not bound to UAS. b. Gal80p is the inducer. c. Activation of transcription occurs when galactose interacts with Gal3p. d. GAL10 produces a regulatory protein. - CORRECT ANSWER- - Activation of transcription occurs when galactose interacts with Gal3p.
Wild-type organisms exhibit the phenotype (physical appearance) most often seen in the natural population. Mutant organisms carry mutations, which in some cases alter the phenotype of the organism. A grouping of eight homeotic genes on the same chromosome of a fruit fly became known as the homeotic complex, or Hox genes. Identify which of the following statement is not true Hox genes and pattern formation? a. A homeotic mutant fruit fly develops structures on the wrong body segment. b. Mutations in the Hox genes of a fruit fly usually result in abnormal pattern formation. c. Hox genes code for transcription factors that control the formation of specific structures on particular body segments. d. Wild-type fruit flies possess abnormal Hox genes. e. Wild-type fruit flies exhibit typical pattern formation - CORRECT ANSWER- - Wild-type fruit flies possess abnormal Hox genes The diagram depicts the genetic pathway showing the ced-9 gene acts as a "binary switch" controlling cell death in the nematode C. elegans. Analysis of the nematode gene ced-9 and the human gene bcl-2 has revealed extensive DNA sequence similarity, as well as functional similarity. They both control programmed cell death. Which statement is incorrect describing about ced-9, bcl-2, and apoptosis in the context of evolution? - CORRECT ANSWER- - a. C. elegans (nematodes) and humans (mammals) have evolved distinct pathways for apoptosis, although both pathways have the same effect on the cell. A mutation prevents the lac repressor from recognizing allolactose. In the absence of allolactose, the mutant repressor has the same affinity for the lac operator sites as a normal repressor. How would you expect this mutant repressor to affect the regulation of the lac operon? - CORRECT ANSWER- - The operon would be turned off in the presence or absence of lactose in the environment
The following list describes events that are required for transcription of a eukaryotic gene. Put them in the correct order.
c. Heritable alterations in which the DNA sequence itself is not changed. d. Only answers A and B are correct. e. Answers A, B, and C are correct. - CORRECT ANSWER- - a b and c A gene encodes a pre-mRNA with 5 exons and 4 introns. A mutation eliminates the 3' splice site from intron 3. What exons would be found in the mRNA after splicing was completed? - CORRECT ANSWER- - Exon 1, 2, 3, 5 The apterous gene in Drosophila encodes a protein required for wing patterning and growth. It is also known to function in nerve development, fertility, and viability. When human and mouse genes whose protein products closely resemble apterous were used to generate transgenic Drosophila (Rincon-Limas et al., 1999. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. [USA] 96: 2165 - 2170), the apterous mutant phenotype was rescued. In addition, the whole-body expression patterns in the transgenic Drosophila were similar to normal apterous. - CORRECT ANSWER- - b. It's when the introduction of a gene from an outside source restores the wild-type phenotype of the organism Which statement is wrong interpreting these results about the molecular nature of development? - CORRECT ANSWER- - They indicate that it is likely that all developmentally- regulated mutant genes in Drosophila could be rescued by human or mouse homologs.
Dominant mutations can be categorized according to whether they increase or decrease the overall activity of a gene or gene product. Although a loss-of-function mutation (a mutation that inactivates the gene product) is usually recessive, for some genes, one dose of the normal gene product, encoded by the normal allele, is not sufficient to produce a normal phenotype. In this case, a loss-of-function mutation in the gene will be dominant, and the gene is said to be haploinsufficient. A second category of dominant mutation is the gain-of-function mutation, which results in a new activity or an increased activity or expression of a gene or gene product. The gene therapy technique currently used in clinical trials involves the "addition" to somatic cells of a normal copy of a gene. In other words, a normal copy of the gene is inserted into the genome of the mutant somatic cell, but the mutated copy of the gene is not re - CORRECT ANSWER- - yes, but only for loss-of-function mutations
. What would be positive consequences of sequencing your genome? - CORRECT ANSWER- - You can be informed about possible genetic diseases In March, 2010 Judge R. Sweet ruled to invalidate Myriad Genetics' patents on the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes. Myriad Genetics also holds patents on the development of a direct-to- consumer test for the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes. How would you explain Judge Sweet's ruling to invalidate the patenting of the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes? - CORRECT ANSWER- - Since a gene is a product of the natural world, it does not conform to section 101 of U.S. patent laws, which govern patentable matter. Which of the following correctly describes a transformed bacterium? - CORRECT ANSWER-
. Which of the following statements about ddNTPs is true? - CORRECT ANSWER- - They have a hydrogen at the 3' carbon of the sugar. A study was reported in which DNA samples were extracted from freshly plucked chimpanzee hair roots and used as templates for PCR. The primers used in these studies flank highly polymorphic sites in human DNA that result from variable numbers of tandem nucleotide repeats. Several offspring and their putative parents were tested to determine whether the offspring were "legitimate" or the product of illegal trading. The data are shown. - CORRECT ANSWER- -. Offspring B and C are not the products of these parents and were probably purchased on the illegal market. The data are consistent with offspring A being legitimate. . What is special about the DNA polymerizing enzymes typically used in PCR? - CORRECT ANSWER- - These polymerases were isolated from bacteria growing in hot springs and on thermal vents, lending to their ability to function at extreme temperatures. . In the following figure, cDNA sequences are aligned with genomic sequence. Are cDNAs more important for bacterial or for eukaryotic genome annotations? - CORRECT ANSWER- - . cDNAs are more important for eukaryotic genome annotations because they correspond to the exons in order after the introns have been spliced out. The term "contig" is derived from "contiguous." Which of the following definitions best defines contig? - CORRECT ANSWER- - A set of adjacent DNA sequences assembled using overlapping sequences or restriction fragments A sequenced fragment of DNA in Drosophila was used in a BLAST search. The best (closest) match was to a kinase gene from Neurospora. What conclusions can be made based on this match? - CORRECT ANSWER- -. The two polypeptides likely have some aspects of their function in common. c. The two polypeptides likely share a common three-dimensional structure
When a transposable element is inserted in a pigmentation gene (as per the maize example in the text), what is the expected outcome? - CORRECT ANSWER- - The pigmentation gene will be no longer be expressed.
. Once a transposon has inserted in the pigmentation gene of maize: - CORRECT ANSWER-
Assume genotypes in a particular classroom are known to be at Hardy-Weinberg for a SNP in the ABCC11 gene that determines human earwax type. The AA genotype at this SNP produces dry earwax, whereas GA and GG produce wet earwax (I have genotype GG, in case you wanted to know). Let's assume that, in that classroom (400 attending-- it's a good day), 16 individuals have dry earwax. Approximately how many people in the class SHOULD be heterozygous? - CORRECT ANSWER- - 128 You're studying a population of an endangered wildcat in India. This population has been hunted aggressively, but there was also a rumor that the remaining ones are heavily inbred. You sample all 500 remaining cats to look for evidence of inbreeding and get the following genotypes: AA: 31, Aa: 188, aa: 281. What do you conclude? - CORRECT ANSWER- - The cats are not detectably inbred You are studying a population and observe the following genotype counts for a gene of interest: BB: 405, Bb: 90, bb: 5 Is this population at Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium for this gene? - CORRECT ANSWER- - yes You're studying the genetics of sand fleas on 3 nearby small islands of the Seychelles chain, named Poivre, Florentin, and South Island. Assume that fleas occasionally drift on floating debris among these three islands (and in roughly similar numbers to/ from each island) but that sand fleas from other islands outside the Seychelles chain never make it to these islands. Right now, the frequency of the "A" allele at a particular gene (not experiencing any selection) in these fleas is 0.2 in Poivre, 0.45 in Florentin, and 0.5 in South Island. What do you expect to happen to the frequency of "A" on Florentin in the next few generations? - CORRECT ANSWER- - goes down Which of the following is not a good use of molecular markers? a. map the position of an unknown gene of interest b. produce highly accurate map of fine resolution c. evaluate the extent of linkage disequilibrium d. study gene expression during development
e. all of the above can apply - CORRECT ANSWER- - E The "distance" between two linked gene pairs can be expressed as a percentage. Name the unit based on percent recombination that was created in honor of the scientists who pioneered the use of fruit flies for genetic research - CORRECT ANSWER- - centi Morgans This is the ratio of the observed number of double recombinants as compared to the expected number. - CORRECT ANSWER- - coeficient of confidence This term indicates the specific place on a chromosome where a gene is located - CORRECT ANSWER- - gene locus
. This describes the "distance" between linked gene pairs and is expressed as a percentage