TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 10849


Plasmodium is transmitted from human to human by the bite of a mosquito carrier. In this scenario plasmodium is the ________, the mosquito is the ________, and _______ is the role played by the human.

#Unit 10. Ecological Principles
  1. Vector . . . Microparasite . . . Host
  2. Microparasite . . . Vector . . . Microparasite
  3. Host . . . Vector . . .  Microparasite
  4. Microparasite . . . Host . . . Vector 
More Questions
TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 4489

#Unit 3. Fundamental Processes

HSP70 gene from Drosophila. This gene, activated by heat shock, is controlled by two activators GAGA binding factor and HSF,In response to heat shock, HSF binds to specific sites at the promoter and recruits a kinase, P-TEFb (positive transcription elongation factor). What is the proper mechanism of pausing and release of Pol II ?

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 10330

#Unit 9. Diversity of Life Forms

If the eukaryotic condition arose, independently, several different times during evolutionary history, and if ancestors of these different lineages are extant and are classified in the domain Eukarya, then the domain Eukarya would be

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 13058

#Unit 13. Methods in Biology

Precision will be reduced, but yield will be increased
Optimisation of a PCR reaction is often a compromise between the competing demands for precision, efficiency and yield. Although the specific effects may vary, generally, increasing the annealing temperature will increase non-specific primer binding and reduce precision. Increasing the length of the elongation phase will reduce the proportion of incomplete newly-synthesised strands and therefore increase yield. In this case, the potential effect on efficiency is unclear. Increasing the elongation phase would increase the reaction time, but the time taken to ramp down to a lower annealing temperature would be reduced.
Which of the following true about real time PCR?

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 14904

#Unit 6. System Physiology – Plant

Cell walls commonly are classified into two major types. This classification is based not on structural or biochemical differences;
A) primary walls and
B) secondary walls
i) walls formed during cell growth
ii) walls that are formed after cell enlargement stops
iii) multilayered walls that are strengthened and waterproofed by lignin
iv) Usually they are thin and simple, but sometimes may be thick and multilayered, such as those found in collenchyma or in the epidermis
v) highly specialized in structure and composition, reflecting the differentiated state of the cell
Which of the following correctly represents features of primary and secondary walls?

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 752

#Unit 1. Molecules and their Interaction Relevant to Biology

The A260/A280 ratio of a double-stranded DNA sample can be used to assess its purity. The value for the pure DNA is ----------------