One of the cellular events that TOR, a kinase, positively regulates is the rate of rRNA synthesis. TOR regulates the association of a transcription factor to a Pol I subunit. When TOR is inhibited by the drug rapamycin, the transcription factor dissociates from Pol I. A east strain is engineered, which expresses a fusion of the transcription factor and the Pol I subunit. The level of rRNA synthesis is monitored in these cells using pulse labelling following rapamycin addition for the times indicated below. The transcript profile of rRNA observed for the wild type cells is given below:
Identify the pattern expected in the engineered strain.
An eukaryotic cell undergoing mRNA synthesis and processing was incubated with 32P labelled ATP, with the label at the β-position. Where do you think the radioactive isotope will appear in the mature mRNA?
32P will not appear in the mature mRNA under any circumstances because β and γ phosphates are released during transcription.
Phosphate groups of the phosphodiester backbone of the mRNA will be uniformly labelled as only α phosphates are released during transcription.
32P will appear at the 5'end of the mRNA if only it has "A" as the first nucleotide.
No 32P will appear in the mature mRNA because the 5'-terminal phosphate of an "A" residue will be further removed during the capping process.
Some errors occur during DNA replication that are not corrected by proof reading activity of DNA polymerase. These are corrected by specialized repair pathways. Defect in the activities of some of the following enzymes impair this process.
A. DNA polymerase III and DNA ligase
B. AP endonuclease and DNA glycosidase
C. Mut S and Mut L
D. RecA and RecF
Defect in which of the above enzymes impair the process?
A, B, and C
D and B
A and D
A and C
Each aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase is precisely able to match an amino acid with the tRNA containing the correct corresponding anticodon. Most organisms have 20 different tRNA synthetase, however some bacteria lack the synthetase for charging the tRNA for glutamine (tRNAGln) with its cognate amino acid. How do these bacteria manage to incorporate glutamine in their proteins?
Choose the correct answer.
Glutamine is not present in the newly synthesized bacterial protein. Post-translational modification converts glutamate to glutamine at the required sites.
In these bacteria, the aminoacyl tRNA synthetase specific for tRNA glutamate (tRNAglu) also charges tRNAgln with glutamine.
In these bacteria, the aminoacyl tRNA synthetase specific for tRNAglu also charges tRNAgln with glutamate. A second enzyme then converts the glutamate of the charged tRNAgln to glutamine.
In these bacteria, the aminoacyl tRNA synthetase charges tRNAglu with either glutamate or glutamine according to their requirement during protein synthesis.
RNA interference is mediated by both siRNA and miRNA. Which one of the following statement about them is NOT true?
Both siRNA and miRNA are processed by DICER.
Both siRNA and miRNA usually guide silencing of the same genetic loci from which they originate.
miRNA is a natural molecule while siRNA is either natural or a synthetic one.
miRNA, but not siRNA is processed by Drosha.
B.
Both siRNA and miRNA usually guide silencing of the same genetic loci from which they originate.
The incorrect statement is-
Both siRNA and miRNA usually guide silencing of the same genetic loci from which they originate.
Error-free repair of double-strand breaks in DNA is accomplished by
non-homologous end-joining
base excision repair
homologous recombination
mismatch repair
Which of the following are NOT transcribed by RNA Polymerase II?
miRNA and some snRNA
miRNA and snoRNA
mRNA and snoRNA
tRNA and 5S rRNA
RNA editing, a post-transcriptional process, is achieved with the help of guide RNA (g-RNA). Which one of the following statements about the process is NOT true?
g-RNA dependent RNA editing happens in the kinetoplast DNA.
g-RNA is involved in chemical modification of t-RNA.
This process involves insertion or deletion of uridines.
Sequences edited once may be re-edited using a second g-RNA
Telomerase, an RNA-protein complex that completed the replication of telomeres during DNA synthesis, is specialized
RNA dependent DNA polymerase
DNA dependent DNA polymerase
DNA dependent RNA polymerase
RNA dependent RNA polymerase
Consider a short double-stranded linear DNA molecule of 10 complete turns with 10.5 bp/turn. The ends of the DNA molecule are sealed together to make a relaxed circle. This relaxed circle will have a linking number of
105
20.5
10.0
10.5