TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 880


The classic work of Christian Anfinsen in the 1950s on the enzyme ribonuclease revealed the relation between the amino acid sequence of a protein and its conformation. Ribonuclease is a single polypeptide chain consisting of 124 amino acid residues cross-linked by four disulfide bonds. Anfinsen’s plan was to destroy the three-dimensional structure of the enzyme and to then determine what conditions were required to restore the structure.

The critical observation of Anfinsen that the denatured ribonuclease, freed of urea and b -mercaptoethanol by dialysis;

I. The sulfhydryl groups of the denatured enzyme became reduced by air, and the enzyme spontaneously refolded into a catalytically active form.

II. These experiments showed that the information needed to specify the catalytically active structure of ribonuclease is contained in its amino acid sequence.

III. The 105 wrong pairings have been picturesquely termed “scrambled” ribonuclease.

IV. He found that scrambled ribonuclease spontaneously converted into fully active, native ribonuclease when trace amounts of b -mercaptoethanol were added to an aqueous solution of the protein.

Choose incorrect options;

#Part-A Aptitude & General Biotechnology
  1. I & III

  2. I,II & III

  3. Only III

  4. III & IV

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TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 13065

#Part-A Aptitude & General Biotechnology

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.
Agglutination of antigens by utilising specific antibodies can only occur, if

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 13066

#Part-A Aptitude & General Biotechnology

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 is a codominant marker?

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 13072

#Part-A Aptitude & General Biotechnology

Inheritance pattern of RFLP and RAPD markers for genome mapping in plants;

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 13073

#Part-A Aptitude & General Biotechnology

Restriction enzymes must be use in RFLP and RAPD markers for genome mapping in plants;

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 13074

#Part-A Aptitude & General Biotechnology

Type of probe used in RFLP;

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 13075

#Part-A Aptitude & General Biotechnology

Radioisotopes must be used in RFLP and RAPD markers