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Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Properties Of Nucleic Acids
Which of the following nucleic acids is found in RNA but not DNA
Cytosine
Uracil
Guanine
Adensoine
Thymine
Uracil
Uracil is a nucleic acid found in RNA but not DNA. Therefore, if a question has uracil as one of the nucleic acids in the sequence, you know that you are dealing with a piece of RNA. RNA is genetic material that has been transcribed from a piece of DNA.
Example Question #2 : Properties Of Nucleic Acids
Which of the following is not a correct base-pairing, RNA or DNA related?
A-G
A-T
G-C
C-G
A-U
A-G
For DNA base-pairings, A-T must be paired up (2 hydrogen bonds) and G-C must be paired up (3 hydrogen bonds). For RNA base-pairings, A-U pair up instead of A-T.
Example Question #1 : Properties Of Nucleic Acids
Nucleotide and deoxynucleotide residues are linked together by which type of bond?
Phosphoenolpyruvate
Peptide
Phosphoanhydride
Phosphodiester
Phosphodiester
The 5' to 3' linkages of DNA residues are via phosphodiester bonds, which are a type of covalent bond.
Example Question #2 : Properties Of Nucleic Acids
Which of the following is the final product of pre-mRNA processing?
Mature transcript
Unmodified protein
Modified protein
Primary transcript
Mature transcript
The following are the major steps in gene product modification:
1. Transcription of DNA into mRNA (primary transcript)
2. Pre-mRNA processes (mature transcript)
3. Translation of mRNA by tRNA (proteins)
4. Post-translational processing (modified protein)
Example Question #3 : Properties Of Nucleic Acids
In DNA, cytosine always pairs with __________, and adenine always pairs with __________.
thymine . . . thymine
uracil . . . thymine
guanine . . . thymine
thymine . . . guanine
guanine . . . thymine
Austrian chemist Erwin Chargaff discovered that the amount of cytosine was equal to the amount of guanine in the cell, and the amount of adenine was equal to the amount of thymine in the cell. This discovery was important in determining that cytosine always pairs with guanine and that adenine always pairs with thymine.
Example Question #2 : Properties Of Nucleic Acids
__________ is found in RNA but not in DNA.
Thymine
Cytosine
Adenine
Uracil
Uracil
In RNA, uracil pairs with adenine and cytosine pairs with guanine, whereas in DNA, thymine pairs with adenine and cytosine pairs with guanine. Uracil is unique to RNA and thymine is unique to DNA.
Example Question #7 : Properties Of Nucleic Acids
Which set of base pairs would have the higher boiling point?
GCAATTTTT
GGCCATCG
AATTGCAT
CATCAT
GGCCATCG
G-C is held together by three hydrogen bonds, while A-T is held together by two hydrogen bonds. Having more hydrogen bonds means that boiling points would be higher, so the set of base pairs with the most C-G bonds will have the highest boiling point.
Example Question #5 : Properties Of Nucleic Acids
If a double-stranded DNA fragment was analyzed and found to have 270 adenine bases and 430 guanine bases, how many total bases would necessarily be present in the DNA fragment?
1720
700
2800
1400
1080
1400
Since adenine pairs with thymine in DNA, this would mean there are also 270 thymine bases. Similarly, cytosine and guanine pair up as well. This would mean there are also 430 cytosine bases. Adding all those together would give you 1400 bases total.
Example Question #6 : Properties Of Nucleic Acids
Of which of the following is a nucleoside comprised?
Sugar and phosphate group
Base and phosphate group
Base only
Sugar, base, and phosphate group
Base and sugar
Base and sugar
A nucleotide comprises of a purine/pyrimidine base, sugar, and a phosphate group. This is easy remember by focusing on the "t" in the terms "nucleotide" and "phosphate."
A nucleoside comprises only a purine/pyrimidine base and sugar. There is no "t" in "nucleoside" and hence, no phosphate.
Example Question #10 : Properties Of Nucleic Acids
Which nucleic acid brings amino acids to the site of protein synthesis, adding to the growing amino acid chain?
mtDNA
tRNA
mRNA
xDNA
rRNA
tRNA
All of these are actual nucleic acids, except xDNA, which does not exist. Therefore, we can eliminate this answer right away. mtDNA, or mitochondrial DNA, is a small portion of a person's DNA that is housed within the mitochondria. It is significant in that it is inherited solely from the mother and is thought to have evolved separately from "normal" DNA. However, it isn't involved with amino acids at all, so it too can be eliminated as a choice.
RNA (ribonucleic acid) is heavily involved in protein synthesis (the creation of new proteins, which are just long chains of amino acids). The first part of the process is transcription, in which the double-stranded DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) is "unzipped" by the enzyme helicase. Another enzyme, RNA polymerase, "reads" this single strand and produces a chain of nucleotides exactly opposite to the DNA's nucleotides, and this chain, in its mature form, is called mRNA (messenger RNA). Living up to its name, mRNA travels outside the nucleus, where DNA is housed, and out into the rest of the cell, to the ribosome.
At this point, translation begins. Every trio of nucleotides on the mRNA, called a codon, represents a specific amino acid. Another type of RNA, tRNA (transfer RNA) can "translate" the codon into the appropriate amino acid, since it carries a three-nucleotide-long anticodon on one segment, which can form a bond with the corresponding codon on the mRNA, and an amino acid on the other segment. In this way tRNA brings amino acids to the growing protein chain. Another involved nucleic acid is rRNA (ribosomal RNA) which makes up a large part of the ribosome itself and is responsible for helping to properly attach each amino acid that the tRNA brings to the amino acid sequence being built.
Based on the question, which asks about the molecule that retrieves amino acids so that they can be added to the protein being built, the correct answer is tRNA.
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