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Human Genetics

Description: This test is based on human genetics which is highly helpful for medical aspirants.
Number of Questions: 25
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Tags: Genes heredity Mendel haemophlilia etc Mutation Chromosomal Theory of Inheritance Sex Determination in Human Beings Sex Determination Heredity and Variation Principles of Inheritance and Variation
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Which of the following diseases is characterised by the loss of memory and capability of judgement?

  1. Albinism

  2. Phenyl ketonuria

  3. Sickle-cell anemia

  4. Alzheimer's disease


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

It is a case of loss of memory and capability of judgement as well as general physical impairment. It is caused by the augmentation of amyloid protein plaques in the brain resulting in the degeneration of neurons.

Which syndrome is caused by the presence of an extra chromosome?

  1. Stickler syndrome

  2. Klinefelter's syndrome

  3. Turner's syndrome

  4. Down's syndrome


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

It results due to the presence of an extra chromosome, No.21. Both the chromosomes of the pair 21 pass into a single egg due to non-disjunction during oogenesis in the mother's ovary. Therefore, the egg contains 24 chromosomes in place of of 23 & the progeny has 47 chromosomes.

Which of the following mutations does not cause any change in the final protein products?

  1. Missense mutation

  2. Nonsense mutation

  3. Silent mutation

  4. Splice site mutation


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

This mutation causes no change in the final protein product and can only be identified by sequencing the gene. Most amino acids that make up a protein are encoded by several different codons.

The expression of which of the following genes is reactive to environmental change?

  1. A constitutive gene

  2. A housekeeping gene

  3. A facultative gene

  4. An inducible gene


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

It is an inducible gene whose expression is either reactive to environmental change or dependent on the position in the cell cycle.

Which of the following is an incorrect statement regarding the human genome?

  1. Human DNA is not identical to chimpanzees.

  2. On unwinding, the strands of DNA in one cell would stretch 6 feet.

  3. Human genome is composed of more than 3 billion nucleotide bases.

  4. Order of the nucleotide bases contains the instructions for making an organism.


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

Human DNA is 98% identical to chimpanzees. The average amount of genetic difference between any 2 chimpanzees is 4 or 5 times more than the average difference between any 2 humans.

Which among the following is a DNA-binding protein that regulates the expression of one or more genes ?

  1. Enhancer

  2. Insulator

  3. Repressor

  4. Silencer


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

A repressor is a DNA-binding protein that regulates the expression of one or more genes by binding to the operator & blocking the attachment of RNA polymerase to the promoter, thus inhibiting transcription of the genes.

Which operon was first noticed in bacteria E.coli ?

  1. Lac operon

  2. Trp operon

  3. Lac repressor

  4. Gal operon


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

This operon is found in many bacteria, but was first noticed in Escherichia coli. It is regulated so that when tryptophan is present in the environment, it is not used.

Pericentric and the paracentric are the types of

  1. deletion

  2. duplication

  3. inversion

  4. translocation


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

This occurs when a segment of chromosome breaches but later rejoins after rotating by 180o results in inversion. If the centromere is included in the inverted segment, it is known as pericentric but if inversion occurs only in one arm and the centromere is not involved, it is referred as paracentric inversion.

In which of the following centromeric positions, does the chromosome acquire 'J' shape during anaphase?

  1. Metacentric

  2. Sub-metacentric

  3. Acrocentric

  4. Telocentric


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

In this position, the centromere is located far away from the centre so that the two arms are highly unequal. The chromosome acquires 'J' shape during anaphase.

Which among the following sequences makes around 24% of human genes?

  1. Pribnow box

  2. TATA box

  3. CCAAT box

  4. E-box


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

It is a DNA sequence present in the promoter area of genes in archaea and eukaryotes. Around 24% of human genes contain a TATA box within the core promoter.

In which of the following processes the offspring is not involved?

  1. Gene conversion

  2. Horizontal gene transfer

  3. Sister chromatid exchange

  4. Transfection


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

It is a process in which an organism assimilates genetic material from another organism without being the offspring of that organism.

Dolly was the first cloned sheep. It was cloned by

  1. Ian Wilmut

  2. Joshua Lederberg

  3. Norton Zinder

  4. Esther Lederberg


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

Dolly was the first mammal & a female domestic sheep, which was cloned from an adult somatic cell, through the process of nuclear transfer. Its clonning was done by Ian Wilmut.

Which of the following genetic processes helps an allele to enhance its frequency?

  1. Genetic drift

  2. Genetic diversity

  3. Genetic variability

  4. Genetic hitchhiking


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

It is the process by which an allele may enhance in frequency by worth of being linked to a gene that is positively selected. Proximity on a chromosome may allow genes to be dragged along with a selective sweep experienced by an advantageous gene nearby.

Which genetic disease affects the lungs and the pancreas?

  1. Canavan disease

  2. Coeliac disease

  3. Cystic fibrosis

  4. Neurofibromatosis


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

It is a recessive genetic disease. It mainly affects the lungs, the pancreas, the liver, and the intestine.

Superiority of hybrid over parents is

  1. heterosis

  2. gigantism

  3. dwarfism

  4. lethality


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

It is the increase in such properties as size, growth rate, fertility, and yield of a hybrid organism over those of its parents. Plant and animal breeders use heterosis by mating two different pure-bred lines that have certain desirable traits.

Which of the following genes works with the help of inducer present in the cytoplasm of the cell?

  1. Structural gene

  2. Operator gene

  3. Promoter gene

  4. Regulator gene


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

This gene regulates the operator gene with the help of a chemical substance known as inducer present in the cytoplasm. It is not certainly present close to the operator gene which it controls.

The term 'Xenia' denotes the effect of pollen on

  1. endosperm

  2. ovule

  3. zygocyte

  4. ovum


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

Endosperm is the tissue formed inside the seeds of flowering plants during the time of fertilization. It surrounds the embryo and provides nutrition in the form of starch. Xenia denotes the effect of pollen on endosperm.

The genes regulating the seven pea characters studied by Mendel were located on how many chromosomes?

  1. 4

  2. 7

  3. 3

  4. 5


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

Mendel choose garden Pea as his experimental substrate and collected 36 different varieties, of which he finally chose seven characters, which were distinct and showed clear cut variation. The genes regulating the seven pea characters studied by mendel were located on 4 chromosomes.

Sex determination pattern in insects is

  1. XX-XY type

  2. XX-XO type

  3. ZW-ZZ type

  4. ZO-ZZ type


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

This type of sex determination takes place in insects and mammals including human beings. Here, the females have two identical homologous sex chromosomes designated as XX and the males have two dissimilar sex chromosomes designated as X and Y. 

The cancer affecting the joints of the arm, neck or leg is

  1. Ewing sarcoma

  2. Synovial sarcoma

  3. Desmoplastic fibroma

  4. Desmoplastic small-round-cell tumor


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

It is a unique form of cancer which generally occurs near to the joints of the arm, neck or leg.

Which among the following genetic syndrome is the known single-gene cause of autism?

  1. XY gonadal dysgenesis

  2. XX male syndrome

  3. Fragile X syndrome

  4. Uniparental disomy


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

It is a genetic syndrome which is the most commonly known single-gene cause of autism & the most frequent inherited cause of intellectual disability.

The fungi used in the experiments to study genetics is

  1. Amanita muscaria

  2. Claviceps purpurea

  3. Rhizopus

  4. Neurospora crassa


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

Neurospora crassa is a red bread mold. It is used as a model organism because it is convenient to grow and has a haploid life cycle that makes genetic analysis easier since recessive traits will come in the progenies.

Who coined the terms 'phenotype' and 'genotype'?

  1. Wilhelm Johannsen

  2. Karl Pearson

  3. Galton

  4. Johan Kjeldahl


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

Wilhelm Johannsen was a Danish botanist, plant physiologist and geneticist. He coined the terms phenotype and genotype.

Which syndrome is associated with chromosome 13?

  1. Edward's syndrome

  2. Patau syndrome

  3. Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome

  4. DiGeorge syndrome


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

Patau syndrome is a chromosomal abnormality in which a patient has an additional chromosome 13 due to a nondisjunction of chromosomes during meiosis.

Who is known as the 'Father of human genetics'?

  1. Carl Correns

  2. Hugo Marie de Vries

  3. William Bateson

  4. Archibald Garrod


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

Archibald Garrod is known as 'Father of human genetics' for describing that the inborn errors of metabolism are governed by genes and are inherited in a Mendelian pattern.

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