Brooks Johnson
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(Unit 1) Advanced Cell Biology I Test sobre 9.2, creado por Brooks Johnson el 01/06/2020.

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9.2

Pregunta 1 de 13

1

In most cases, once a developmental step has been
taken by a cell, it is not reversed.

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  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 2 de 13

1

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Direct measurements of the transcription rates of multiple
genes in different cell types have shown that regulation
of transcription, either at the step or during
in the region, is the most
widespread form of gene control in eukaryotes, as it is in
bacteria.

Explicación

Pregunta 3 de 13

1

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Transcription
from a particular promoter is controlled by DNA-binding
proteins that are functionally equivalent to bacterial repressors
and activators. However, eukaryotic transcriptional
regulatory proteins can often function either to
activate or to repress transcription, depending on their
associations with other proteins. Consequently, they are
more generally called .

Explicación

Pregunta 4 de 13

1

The DNA control elements in eukaryotic genomes to
which transcription factors bind are often located much
closer from the promoter they regulate than is the case
in bacterial genomes.

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  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 5 de 13

1

Transcription-control regions for a conserved gene are also
often conserved and can be recognized in the background of
nonfunctional sequences that diverge during evolution.

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  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 6 de 13

1

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different RNA Polymerases catalyze the formation of different RNAs.

Explicación

Pregunta 7 de 13

1

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All three eukaryotic RNA polymerases
contain (use numbers not text) large subunits and smaller subunits,
some of which are common between two or all three of the
polymerases.

Explicación

Pregunta 8 de 13

1

Not all the subunits are necessary for eukaryotic RNA polymerases to
function normally.

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  • VERDADERO
  • FALSO

Explicación

Pregunta 9 de 13

1

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The carboxyl end of , the largest subunit of RNA
polymerase II, contains a stretch of amino acids that
is nearly precisely repeated multiple times. Neither RNA
polymerase I nor III contains these repeating units. This
heptapeptide repeat, with a consensus sequence of Tyr-
Ser-Pro-Thr-Ser-Pro-Ser, is known as the

Explicación

Pregunta 10 de 13

1

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The primary purpose of gene control in multicellular organisms
is the execution of precise programs
so that the proper genes are expressed in the proper cells at
the proper times during development and cellular
.

Explicación

Pregunta 11 de 13

1

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Eukaryotes contain three types of nuclear RNA polymerases.
All three contain large and smaller core subunits with homology to the β′, β, α, and ω subunits of
E. coli RNA polymerase, as well as several additional small
subunits

Explicación

Pregunta 12 de 13

1

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RNA polymerase I synthesizes only . RNA
polymerase II synthesizes s, some of the small nuclear
RNAs that participate in mRNA splicing, and micro- and
small interfering RNAs (miRNAs and siRNAs) that regulate
the translation and stability of mRNAs. RNA polymerase III
synthesizes RNAs, rRNA, and several other small stable
RNAs

Explicación

Pregunta 13 de 13

1

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The (CTD) in the largest subunit
of RNA polymerase II becomes during
and remains phosphorylated as the
enzyme transcribes the DNA template.

Explicación