All GRE Subject Test: Biochemistry, Cell, and Molecular Biology Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Help With Genetic Cloning, Splicing, And Sequencing
When performing heat shock transformation of a DNA plasmid into Escherichia coli, what purpose does the heat shock serve?
Stimulate Escherichia coli proliferation
Linearize the plasmid
Introduce pores in the membrane
Mask the negative charge of phosphate groups on DNA
Denature the plasmid DNA
Introduce pores in the membrane
The correct answer is introduce membrane pores. Escherichia coli grows optimally at 37 degrees Celcius. However, an increase in temperature causes the plasma membrane to become more fluid, introducing small pores through which plasmid DNA can enter into the cell.
Example Question #2 : Help With Genetic Cloning, Splicing, And Sequencing
Two students receive 1 microliter of plasmid DNA that expressed beta-lactamase under a constitutive promoter, and green fluorescent protein (eGFP) under an arabinose inducible promoter.
The students decide to heat shock transform the entire volume of plasmid DNA into chemically competent bacterial cells to ensure that they have enough replicated plasmid for future experiments. The students also transform the same volume of sterile water as a control. They plate their transformations on the following plates:
1. Nutrient agar
2. Nutrient agar plus ampicillin
3. Nutrient agar plus ampicillin and arabinose
The next day, the students observe a lawn of bacteria on each plate for bacterica transformed with the plasmid, with only 1/10 of the bacteria glowing green on plate 3. Additionally, they observe a lawn of bacteria on each plate for the control condition.
Which is most likely the cause of their results?
The heat shock transformation did not successfully introduce plasmid DNA into the bacteria
The plasmid mutated and now expresses eGFP constitutively
There is not enough information given to interpret the results
The plasmid does not confer ampicillin resistance to the bacteria
The ampicillin in the nutrient agar plates expired
The ampicillin in the nutrient agar plates expired
The correct answer is the ampicillin the nutrient agar plates expired. The plasmid expresses beta-lactamase, an enzyme that degrades ampicillin. Successfully transformed bacteria will be able to grow in the presence of ampicillin, but untransformed bacteria should not grow. Since the bacteria in our control transformation do not have ampicillin resistance conferred by beta-lactamase, we would expect that no growth would be observed on any nutrient agar plates with ampicillin. However, we observe uncontrolled growth on these plates, indicating that the ampicillin has expired and is no longer a viable selectable marker for transformed bacteria.
Example Question #2 : Help With Genetic Cloning, Splicing, And Sequencing
When performing a polymerase chain reaction, what is the purpose of the annealing temperature?
The optimal temperature at which primers bind specifically to their complementary sequences
The temperature at which nucleotides are incorporated into the newly synthesizing DNA strand
The optimal temperature at which DNA polymerase is active
The temperature at which the template DNA denatures
Annealing temperatures do not apply to polymerase chain reactions
The optimal temperature at which primers bind specifically to their complementary sequences
The annealing temperature is the optimal temperature at which the primers bind the template DNA sequence. This temperature takes into account several factors: the number of basepairs in the primers, the relative guanine-cytosine content, and their melting point.
Example Question #4 : Help With Genetic Cloning, Splicing, And Sequencing
A researcher wants to clone a bacterial gene into a mammalian expression vector for his project. Which of the following most accurately represents the chronological steps the researcher should take in order to successfully obtain the construct?
None of these
Ligate the bacterial gene and vector backbone, PCR amplify the bacterial gene from cDNA, restriction digest the vector backbone
Restriction digest the bacterial gene from genomic DNA, PCR amplify the vector backbone from genomic DNA, ligate the gene and vector backbone
Restriction digest the vector backbone from genomic DNA, restriction digest the bacterial gene, ligate the bacterial gene and vector backbone
Restriction digest the bacterial gene from cDNA, restriction digest the vector backbone, PCR amplify the bacterial gene and vector backbone together
None of these
None of the answer choices are correct. In order to successfully clone a bacterial gene into a mammalian expression vector, the following must be completed: First, the bacterial gene should be PCR amplified from bacterial cDNA, which contains only exons. Second, the vector backbone should be digested with restriction enzymes to linearize the vector so that the bacterial gene can be inserted at a specifc locus (multiple cloning site). Third, the amplified bacterial gene and the digested vector backbone are ligated together to create the desired expression construct.
Example Question #3 : Help With Genetic Cloning, Splicing, And Sequencing
A student researcher wants to amplify a transcription factor gene from humans and clone it into an expression vector. What template should the student use for PCR?
RNA
Primary amino acid chain
gDNA
mRNA
cDNA
cDNA
The correct answer is cDNA. Given that this gene most likely has several introns, complementary DNA (cDNA) should be used as a template since it only contains exons. When subcloning a gene into an expression vector, only coding sequence should be present because the transcribed RNA will not be processed like it is in host cells.
Example Question #4 : Help With Genetic Cloning, Splicing, And Sequencing
Why are plasmids typically used in bacterial cloning and expression as opposed to linear fragments of DNA?
Plasmids do not replicate or express in bacterial hosts
Plasmid replication is dependent on host replication
Linear fragments of DNA are in a heterochromatin state
Plasmids are not degraded by exonucleases
None of these
Plasmids are not degraded by exonucleases
Plasmids are circular pieces of DNA that are resistant to exonucleic degradation (exonucleases cut from DNA ends). Bacteria harbor native plasmids that replicate independently from their genome and express genes that often confer a survival advantage. Scientists often clone genes into plasmids and express them in a variety of host cells.
Example Question #5 : Help With Genetic Cloning, Splicing, And Sequencing
Which scientist was responsible for the development of, and was the namesake for, the first widely used automated DNA sequencing method?
E. M. Southern
Leroy Hood
Kary Mullis
Frederick Sanger
Craig Venter
Frederick Sanger
Frederick Sanger invented the chain termination method of DNA sequencing in 1977, which has been widely used since its invention for short DNA sequences. The method is know as Sanger Sequencing. Leroy Hood was responsible for automating this method, Kary Mullis was the inventor of the polymerase chain reaction to create copies of DNA, E. M. Southern lent his name to another DNA study method called Southerns, and Craig Venter was responsible for other later DNA sequencing methods.
Example Question #6 : Help With Genetic Cloning, Splicing, And Sequencing
Polymerase chain reaction, or PCR, was developed to create copies of DNA molecules for study. Which of these facts about PCR is false?
There are three temperature steps to a normal PCR cycle.
PCR is generally run in a very precise machine called a thermal cycler.
PCR generally only uses one synthesized primer DNA sequence for the reaction.
5' to 3' RACE and quantitative PCR are two specialized PCR types.
Most PCR reactions use a polymerase engineered from the bacterium Thermus aquaticus to synthesize new DNA.
PCR generally only uses one synthesized primer DNA sequence for the reaction.
Polymerase chain reaction requires two, not one, synthesized primer molecules to correctly amplify a DNA molecule into new copies. One primer attaches to each end of your desired DNA segment, and amplification occurs from these sites by polymerase molecules. The other options are all correct facts about PCR.
Example Question #7 : Help With Genetic Cloning, Splicing, And Sequencing
Although they are not commonly used for modern genome projects, cosmids were important vectors for moderate length DNA cloning and sequencing. Which vectors could handle larger DNA insert sizes?
I. Bacterial artificial chromosomes (BAC's)
II. Plasmids
III. Yeast artificial chromosomes (YAC's)
II only
I and III
III only
None of these
I, II, and III
I and III
Cosmids could handle DNA insert sizes of 25-50kb. BAC's could handle insert sizes of 100-300kb, and YAC's even more. These are still used for tricky genome projects due to this large insert size, like antifreeze protein genes in Arctic fish. Plasmids can generally only handle insert sizes of 5-10kb.
Example Question #8 : Help With Genetic Cloning, Splicing, And Sequencing
What important advance in Sanger chain termination based DNA sequencing technique allowed for vast improvements in sequence data output?
Four different fluorescent DNA tags
Thermostable polymerases
None of these
All of these
Capillary chromatography
All of these
These were all important advances in improvement of the Sanger technique that increased DNA sequence output. Modification of polymerases allowed quicker thermal cycling reactions and incorporation of manufactured bases with fluorescent tags. Four different fluorescent tags for each base allowed for easy identification of different bases. Lastly, capillary chromatography allowed for huge parallelization of DNA sequencing.
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