A. The reaction will work, but at a significantly slower rate
B. The reaction will work, but the product will contain many undesired mutations
C. The reaction will be completely unsuccessful
D. The reaction will work, but amplify a region that was not his target
6. Polymerase chain reaction {PCR)employs a heat-stable polymerase, such as Taq
polymerase, to assemble the amplified strand of DNA. Which of the following best
describes why heat-stable polymerases are ideal for PCR?
A. PCRrequires thermal cycling, and heat-stable polymerases can be inactivated
when they are not needed during the low temperature phases.
B. Heat-stable polymerase cannot break the double-stranded DNA unless the
temperature is very high, thus requiring heat-stable polymerases
C. The interaction between bivalent cations and polymerases is most efficient during
high temperature phases, thus requiring heat-stable polymerase
D. PCRrequires thermal cycling, and heat-stable polymerases will neither denature
nor lose efficacy in DNA synthesis during the high-temperature cycle.
E. Heat-stable polymerases are typically much cheaper than normal polymerases
and are therefore more suited to large scale laboratory amplification of DNA
7. Why are yeast cells frequently used as hosts for cloning a gene for production of human
protein?
A. They easily form colonies
B. They can remove exons from mRNA
C. They do not have plasmids
D. They are eukaryotic cells
8. After four cycles of thermocycling, how many copies of the targeted region will be in the
PCR product?
A. 8
B. 16
C. 32
D. 64
9. What would be the effect on the PCRreaction if any of the following circumstances
arose: 1) there are no dNTPs in the reaction, 2) there is no Taq polymerase in the
reaction?
A. PCRwould proceed normally
B. Non-specific PCRof random templates will occur
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