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Cell Cycle

Description: This test will help the students to revise the animal and plant tissues as well as the cell organelles thoroughly.
Number of Questions: 15
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Tags: mitosis and meiosis Mitosis Meiosis
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In a dividing cell the meiosis I is a reductional division and the meiosis II is equational division due to the

  1. pairing of homologous chromosomes

  2. crossing over

  3. separation of chromatids

  4. disjunction of homologous chromosomes

  5. nondisjunction of homologous chromosomes


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

August Weismann in 1887 predicted that the number of chromosomes must be reduced by one half during gamete formation. The two divisions of meiosis are called the first and the second mieiotic divisions. In meiosis I, the number of chromosomes are reduced from diploid to haploid condition whereas in meiosis II, the two chromatids of each chromosome separate from each other and go to separate daughter cells, as a result the number of chromosomes remains the same as produced by meiosis – I.

At which stage of the cell cycle do histone proteins synthesise in a eukaryotic cell?

  1. During the S-phase

  2. During the prophase II

  3. During the telophase

  4. During the G-2 stage of prophase

  5. During the metaphase II


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

During the S phase or synthetic phase the replication of DNA takes place. For replication of DNA histone proteins are required, so they are also synthesised during this phase. It takes about 30%-50% of the total cell cycle.

In a practical exam of botany the students were asked to count the chromosomes in the root tips of onion. In which of the following stages can the chromosomes be most conveniently counted?

  1. Diakinesis

  2. Metaphase

  3. Prophase

  4. Anaphase

  5. Telophase


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

Metaphase is the best time to count and study the number and morphology of chromosomes. The distinctly visible chromosomes arrange themselves at the equatorial or metaphasic plate. The centromeres lie at the equational plate while the limit are placed variously according to their size and spiral arrangement.

In which of the following stages of mitosis do the fibres cross the cell to form the mitotic spindle?

  1. Interphase

  2. Prophase

  3. Prometaphase

  4. Metaphase

  5. Anaphase


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

Chromatin in the nucleus begins to condense and becomes visible in the light microscope as chromosomes. The nucleolus disappears. Centrioles begin moving to opposite ends of the cell and fibres extend from the centromeres. Some fibres cross the cell to form the mitotic spindle.

The mitotic spindle segregates the chromosomes to two daughter cells during mitosis. It is made up of which of the following proteins?

  1. Myoglobin

  2. Actin

  3. Annexins

  4. Tubulin

  5. Gloverin


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

A spindle of fine fibres begins to develop during prophase. It consists of microtubules, which are made of protein called tubulin and certain other associated proteins. These delicate fibres radiate from the centriole and constitute aster.

Which of the following stages of meiosis is commonly known as the bouquet stage?

  1. Leptotene

  2. Zygotene

  3. Pachytene

  4. Diplotene

  5. Diakinesis


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

The zygotene stage is called the bouquet stage because of the way the telomeres cluster at one end of the nucleus. At this stage, the synapsis (pairing/coming together) of homologous chromosomes takes place, facilitated by assembly of central element of the synaptonemal complex.

In which phase of the cell cycle does DNA become inactive?

  1. G0 phase

  2. S phase

  3. G1 phase

  4. M phase

  5. G2 phase


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

In the relatively short M (mitosis) phase the two copies of the replicated chromosomes are separated and the cell divides. In this phase the chromosomes are highly condensed, with the DNA tightly wrapped around histones. In this state they are inactive and neither DNA replication or transcription takes place.

The best specimen for the study of mitosis in a laboratory is

  1. leaf tip

  2. root tip

  3. anther

  4. ovary

  5. pollen


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

Mitosis occurs both in somatic cells as well as in germ cells of the gonads. In plants mitosis occurs in the meristematic cells of root tip or shoot tip. These cells divide at a faster rate. So, the root tip shows active cell division and is used in the laboratory to study mitosis.

In a somatic cell cycle, DNA synthesis takes place in which of the following phases?

  1. G1 phase

  2. G2 phase

  3. S phase

  4. Prometaphase

  5. Preprophase


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

The major event in S phase is DNA replication. The goal of this process is to create exactly two identical semi-conserved chromosomes. The cell prevents more than one replication from occurring by loading pre-replication complexes onto the DNA at replication origins during G1 phase, which are dismantled in S phase as replication begins.

Which of the following is the microtubule organising centre in yeast cells, functionally equivalent to the centrosome of the animal cell?

  1. Myofibril

  2. Spindle pole body

  3. Intermediate filament

  4. Microtubule

  5. Microfilament


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

The spindle pole body (SPB) is the microtubule organising centre in yeast cells, functionally equivalent to the centrosome. Unlike the centrosome the SPB does not contain centrioles. The SPB organises the microtubule cytoskeleton, which plays many roles in the cell. It is important for organising the spindle and thus in cell division.

Which of the following statements regarding mitosis is INCORRECT?

  1. Mitosis occurs in all eukaryotic and prokayotic cells.

  2. The process of mitosis is fast and highly complex.

  3. Mitosis produces two daughter cells.

  4. Mitosis begins when the chromosomes condense and become visible.

  5. As mitosis completes, the cell begins cytokinesis.


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

Mitosis occurs only in eukaryotic cells and the process varies in different groups. For example, animals undergo an "open" mitosis, where the nuclear envelope breaks down before the chromosomes separate while fungi, such as Aspergillus nidulans and Saccharomyces cerevisiae (yeast) undergo a "closed" mitosis, where chromosomes divide within an intact cell nucleus.

Who discovered the process of mitosis?

  1. Hugo von Mohl

  2. Edouard Van Beneden

  3. Lamarck

  4. August Weismann

  5. Hermann Pagenstecher


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

In 1835, German botanist Hugo von Mohl discovered the process of mitosis.

Which of the following can be excluded from the category of the functions of mitosis?

  1. Development and growth

  2. Cell replacement

  3. Regeneration

  4. Asexual reproduction

  5. An adaptation to deal with stress.


Correct Option: E
Explanation:

Abundant evidence indicates that facultative sexual protists tend to undergo sexual reproduction under stressful conditions. For instance, the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae switches to meiosis (sexual reproduction) under starvation conditions.This proves that in protists and simple multicellular eukaryotes, meiosis is an adaptation to deal with stress.

The nucleoli and the nuclear envelope gets dissappeared in

  1. anaphase II

  2. metaphase II

  3. prophase II

  4. telophase II

  5. interphase II


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

In prophase II  one can observe the disappearance of the nucleoli and the nuclear envelope again as well as the shortening and thickening of the chromatids. Centrioles move to the polar regions and arrange spindle fibres for the second meiotic division.

Cytokinesis is the physical process of cell division, which divides the cytoplasm of a parental cell into two daughter cells. Which of the following statements regarding the cytokinesis is FALSE?

  1. It begins shortly after the onset of sister chromatid separation.

  2. A contractile ring, made of muscle myosin II and actin filaments assembles parallelly at the cell cortex.

  3. The process of abscission physically cleaves this midbody into two.

  4. Abscission depends on septin filaments.

  5. The position at which the contractile ring assembles is dictated by the mitotic spindle.


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

A contractile ring, made of non-muscle myosin II and actin filaments, assembles equatorially (in the middle of the cell) at the cell cortex (adjacent to the cell membrane). Myosin II uses the free energy released when ATP is hydrolysed to move along these actin filaments, constricting the cell membrane to form a cleavage furrow.

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