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Chapter 12

front 1

1) The centromere is a region in which 
A) chromatids remain attached to one another until anaphase. 
B) metaphase chromosomes become aligned at the metaphase plate. 
C) chromosomes are grouped during telophase. 
D) the nucleus is located prior to mitosis. 
E) new spindle microtubules form at either end.

back 1

A

front 2

2) Starting with a fertilized egg (zygote), a series of five cell divisions would produce an early embryo with how many cells? 
A) 4 
B) 8 
C) 16 
D) 32 
E) 64

back 2

D

front 3

3) If there are 20 chromatids in a cell, how many centromeres are there? 
A) 10 
B) 20 
C) 30 
D) 40 
E) 80

back 3

A

front 4

3) If there are 20 chromatids in a cell, how many centromeres are there? 
A) 10 
B) 20 
C) 30 
D) 40 
E) 80

back 4

B

front 5

5) Suppose a biologist can separate one of a dozen pieces of chromatin from a eukaryotic (animal) nucleus. It might consist of which of the following? 
A) one-twelfth of the genes of the organism 
B) two chromosomes, each with six chromatids 
C) a single circular piece of DNA 
D) two long strands of DNA plus proteins 
E) two chromatids attached together at a centromere

back 5

D

front 6

6) At which phase are centrioles beginning to move apart in animal cells? 
A) telophase 
B) anaphase 
C) prometaphase 
D) metaphase 
E) prophase

back 6

E

front 7

7) If cells in the process of dividing are subjected to colchicine, a drug that interferes with the formation of the spindle apparatus, at which stage will mitosis be arrested? 
A) anaphase 
B) prophase 
C) telophase 
D) metaphase 
E) interphase

back 7

D

front 8

8) If there are 20 centromeres in a cell at anaphase, how many chromosomes are there in each daughter cell following cytokinesis? 
A) 10 
B) 20 
C) 30 
D) 40 
E) 80

back 8

A

front 9

9) Where do the microtubules of the spindle originate during mitosis in both plant and animal cells? 
A) centromere 
B) centrosome 
C) centriole 
D) chromatid 
E) kinetochore

back 9

B

front 10

10) Taxol is an anticancer drug extracted from the Pacific yew tree. In animal cells, Taxol disrupts microtubule formation by binding to microtubules and accelerating their assembly from the protein precursor, tubulin. Surprisingly, this stops mitosis. Specifically, Taxol must affect 
A) the formation of the mitotic spindle. 
B) anaphase. 
C) formation of the centrioles. 
D) chromatid assembly. 
E) the S phase of the cell cycle.

back 10

A

front 11

11) Which of the following are primarily responsible for cytokinesis in plant cells but not in animal cells? 
A) kinetochores 
B) Golgi-derived vesicles 
C) actin and myosin 
D) centrioles and centromeres 
E) cyclin-dependent kinases

back 11

B

front 12

12) In which group of eukaryotic organisms does the nuclear envelope remain intact during mitosis? 
A) seedless plants 
B) dinoflagellates 
C) diatoms 
D) dinoflagellates and diatoms only 
E) seedless plants, dinoflagellates, and diatoms

back 12

D

front 13

13) Movement of the chromosomes during anaphase would be most affected by a drug that 
A) reduces cyclin concentrations. 
B) increases cyclin concentrations. 
C) prevents elongation of microtubules. 
D) prevents shortening of microtubules. 
E) prevents attachment of the microtubules to the kinetochore.

back 13

D

front 14

14) Measurements of the amount of DNA per nucleus were taken on a large number of cells from a growing fungus. The measured DNA levels ranged from 3 to 6 picograms per nucleus. In which stage of the cell cycle did the nucleus contain 6 picograms of DNA? 
A) G₀ 
B) G₁ 
C) S 
D) G₂ 
E) M

back 14

D

front 15

15) A group of cells is assayed for DNA content immediately following mitosis and is found to have an average of 8 picograms of DNA per nucleus. How many picograms would be found at the end of S and the end of G₂? 
A) 8; 8 
B) 8; 16 
C) 16; 8 
D) 16; 16 
E) 12; 16

back 15

D

front 16

16) For anaphase to begin, which of the following must occur? 
A) Chromatids must lose their kinetochores. 
B) Cohesin must attach the sister chromatids to each other. 
C) Cohesin must be cleaved enzymatically. 
D) Kinetochores must attach to the metaphase plate. 
E) Spindle microtubules must begin to depolymerize.

back 16

C

front 17

17) Why do chromosomes coil during mitosis? 
A) to increase their potential energy 
B) to allow the chromosomes to move without becoming entangled and breaking 
C) to allow the chromosomes to fit within the nuclear envelope 
D) to allow the sister chromatids to remain attached 
E) to provide for the structure of the centromere

back 17

B

front 18

18) Which of the following best describes how chromosomes move toward the poles of the spindle during mitosis? 
A) The chromosomes are "reeled in" by the contraction of spindle microtubules. 
B) Motor proteins of the kinetochores move the chromosomes along the spindle microtubules. 
C) Nonkinetochore spindle fibers serve to push chromosomes in the direction of the poles. 
D) The chromosomes are "reeled in" by the contraction of spindle microtubules, and motor proteins of the kinetochores move the chromosomes along the spindle microtubules. 
E) The chromosomes are "reeled in" by the contraction of spindle microtubules, motor proteins of the kinetochores move the chromosomes along the spindle microtubules, and nonkinetochore spindle fibers serve to push chromosomes in the direction of the poles.

back 18

D

front 19

19) Which of the following is a function of those spindle microtubules that do not attach to kinetochores? 
A) maintaining an appropriate spacing among the moving chromosomes 
B) producing a cleavage furrow when telophase is complete 
C) providing the ATP needed by the fibers attached to kinetochores 
D) maintaining the region of overlap of microtubules in the cell's cent

back 19

D

front 20

20) During which phase of mitosis do the chromatids become chromosomes? 
A) telophase 
B) anaphase 
C) prophase 
D) metaphase 
E) cytokinesis

back 20

A

front 21

21) Which of the following was a discovery that had to be made before human chromosomes could be correctly counted? 
A) how to use a hypotonic solution to swell nuclei 
B) how to visualize sperm nuclei 
C) how to visualize chromosomes 
D) when to see chromosomes separate from one another 
E) when to see chromosomes in pairs

back 21

A

front 22

22) Which of the following is (are) required for motor proteins to function in the movement of chromosomes toward the poles of the mitotic spindle? 
A) intact centromeres 
B) an MTOC (microtubule organizing center) 
C) a kinetochore attached to the metaphase plate 
D) ATP as an energy source 
E) synthesis of cohesin

back 22

D

front 23

23) What is a cleavage furrow? 
A) a ring of vesicles forming a cell plate 
B) the separation of divided prokaryotes 
C) a groove in the plasma membrane between daughter nuclei 
D) the metaphase plate where chromosomes attach to the spindle 
E) the space that is created between two chromatids during anaphase

back 23

C

front 24

24) Which of the following proteins are involved in binary fission as well as eukaryotic mitotic division? 
A) cyclins 
B) Cdks 
C) MPF 
D) actin and tubulin 
E) cohesins

back 24

D

front 25

25) Using which of the following techniques would enable your lab group to distinguish between a cell in G₂ and a cell from the same organism in G₁? 
A) fluorescence microscopy 
B) electron microscopy 
C) spectrophotometry 
D) radioactive-labeled nucleotides 
E) labeled kinetochore proteins

back 25

D

front 26

26) You have the technology necessary to measure each of the following in a sample of animal cells: chlorophylls, organelle density, picograms of DNA, cell wall components, and enzymatic activity. Which would you expect to increase significantly from M to G₁? 
A) organelle density and enzymatic activity 
B) cell wall components and DNA 
C) chlorophyll and cell walls 
D) organelle density and cell walls 
E) chlorophyll and DNA

back 26

A

front 27

27) A plant-derived protein known as colchicine can be used to poison cells by blocking the formation of the spindle. Which of the following would result if colchicine is added to a sample of cells in G₂? 
A) The cells would immediately die. 
B) The cells would be unable to begin M and stay in G₂. 
C) The chromosomes would coil and shorten but have no spindle to which to attach. 
D) The chromosomes would segregate but in a disorderly pattern. 
E) Each resultant daughter cell would also be unable to form a spindle.

back 27

C

front 28

28) What causes the decrease in the amount of cyclin at a specific point in the cell cycle? 
A) an increase in production once the restriction point is passed 
B) the cascade of increased production once its protein is phosphorylated by Cdk 
C) the changing ratio of cytoplasm to genome 
D) its destruction by a process initiated by the activity of its complex with a cyclin 
E) the binding of PDGF to receptors on the cell surface

back 28

D

front 29

29) Which of the following is released by platelets in the vicinity of an injury? 
A) PDGF 
B) MPF 
C) protein kinase 
D) cyclin 
E) Cdk

back 29

A

front 30

30) Which of the following is a protein synthesized at specific times during the cell cycle that associates with a kinase to form a catalytically active complex? 
A) PDGF 
B) MPF 
C) protein kinase 
D) cyclin 
E) Cdk

back 30

D

front 31

31) Which of the following is a protein maintained at constant levels throughout the cell cycle that requires cyclin to become catalytically active? 
A) PDGF 
B) MPF 
C) protein kinase 
D) cyclin 
E) Cdk

back 31

E

front 32

32) Which of the following triggers the cell's passage past the G₂ checkpoint into mitosis? 
A) PDGF 
B) MPF 
C) protein kinase 
D) cyclin 
E) Cdk

back 32

B

front 33

33) The cyclin component of MPF is destroyed toward the end of which phase? 
A) G₀ 
B) G₁ 
C) S 
D) G₂ 
E) M

back 33

E

front 34

34) Proteins that are involved in the regulation of the cell cycle, and that show fluctuations in concentration during the cell cycle, are called 
A) ATPases. 
B) kinetochores. 
C) kinases. 
D) proton pumps. 
E) cyclins.

back 34

E

front 35

35) The MPF protein complex turns itself off by 
A) activating a process that destroys cyclin components. 
B) activating an enzyme that stimulates cyclin. 
C) binding to chromatin. 
D) exiting the cell. 
E) activating the anaphase-promoting complex.

back 35

A

front 36

36) A mutation results in a cell that no longer produces a normal protein kinase for the M phase checkpoint. Which of the following would likely be the immediate result of this mutation? 
A) The cell would prematurely enter anaphase. 
B) The cell would never leave metaphase. 
C) The cell would never enter metaphase. 
D) The cell would never enter prophase. 
E) The cell would undergo normal mitosis, but fail to enter the next G₁ phase.

back 36

E

front 37

37) Density-dependent inhibition is explained by which of the following? 
A) As cells become more numerous, they begin to squeeze against each other, restricting their size and ability to produce control factors. 
B) As cells become more numerous, the cell surface proteins of one cell contact the adjoining cells and they stop dividing. 
C) As cells become more numerous, the protein kinases they produce begin to compete with each other, such that the proteins produced by one cell essentially cancel those produced by its neighbor. 
D) As cells become more numerous, more and more of them enter the S phase of the cell cycle. 
E) As cells become more numerous, the level of waste products increases, eventually slowing down metabolism.

back 37

B

front 38

38) Which of the following is true concerning cancer cells? 
A) They do not exhibit density-dependent inhibition when growing in culture. 
B) When they stop dividing, they do so at random points in the cell cycle. 
C) They are not subject to cell cycle controls. 
D) When they stop dividing, they do so at random points in the cell cycle, and they are not subject to cell cycle controls. 
E) When they stop dividing, they do so at random points in the cell cycle; they are not subject to cell cycle controls; and they do not exhibit density-dependent inhibition when growing in culture.

back 38

E

front 39

39) Which of the following describe(s) cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk)? 
A) Cdk is inactive, or "turned off," in the presence of cyclin. 
B) Cdk is present throughout the cell cycle. 
C) Cdk is an enzyme that attaches phosphate groups to other proteins. 
D) Cdk is inactive, or "turned off," in the presence of cyclin and it is present throughout the cell cycle. 
E) Cdk is present throughout the cell cycle and is an enzyme that attaches phosphate groups to other proteins.

back 39

E

front 40

40) A particular cyclin called cyclin E forms a complex with Cdk 2 (cyclin-dependent kinase 2). This complex is important for the progression of the cell from G₁ into the S phase of the cell cycle. Which of the following statements is correct? 
A) The amount of free cyclin E is greatest during the S phase. 
B) The amount of free Cdk 2 is greater during G₁ compared to the S phase. 
C) The amount of free cyclin E is highest during G₁. 
D) The amount of free Cdk 2 is greatest during G₁. 
E) The activity of the cyclin E/Cdk 2 complex is highest during G₂.

back 40

C

front 41

41) Cells from an advanced malignant tumor most often have very abnormal chromosomes, and often an abnormal total number of chromosomes. Why might this occur? 
A) Cancer cells are no longer density dependent. 
B) Cancer cells are no longer anchorage dependent. 
C) Chromosomally abnormal cells can still go through cell cycle checkpoints. 
D) Chromosomally abnormal cells still have normal metabolism. 
E) Transformation introduces new chromosomes into cells.

back 41

C

front 42

42) Besides the ability of some cancer cells to overproliferate, what else could logically result in a tumor? 
A) metastasis 
B) changes in the order of cell cycle stages 
C) lack of appropriate cell death 
D) inability to form spindles 
E) inability of chromosomes to meet at the metaphase plate

back 42

C

front 43

43) After which checkpoint is the cell first committed to continue the cell cycle through M? 
A) G₀ 
B) G₁ 
C) G₂ 
D) S 
E) previous M

back 43

B

front 44

44) Why do neurons and some other specialized cells divide infrequently? 
A) They no longer have active nuclei. 
B) They no longer carry receptors for signal molecules. 
C) They have been shunted into G₀. 
D) They can no longer bind Cdk to cyclin. 
E) They show a drop in MPF concentration.

back 44

C

front 45

45) Which of the following most accurately describes a cyclin? 
A) It is present in similar concentrations throughout the cell cycle. 
B) It is activated to phosphorylate by complexing with a Cdk. 
C) It decreases in concentration when MPF activity increases. 
D) It activates a Cdk molecule when it is in sufficient concentration. 
E) It activates a Cdk when its concentration is decreased.

back 45

D

front 46

46) All cell cycle checkpoints are similar in which way? 
A) They respond to the same cyclins. 
B) They utilize the same Cdks. 
C) They give the go-ahead signal to progress to the next checkpoint. 
D) They each have only one cyclin/Cdk complex. 
E) They activate or inactivate other proteins.

back 46

E

front 47

47) At the M phase checkpoint, the complex allows for what to occur? 
A) Separase enzyme cleaves cohesins and allows chromatids to separate. 
B) Cohesins alter separase to allow chromatids to separate. 
C) Kinetochores are able to bind to spindle microtubules. 
D) All microtubules are made to bind to kinetochores.
E) Daughter cells are allowed to pass into G₁.

back 47

A

front 48

48) What explains anchorage dependence of animal cells in vitro or in vivo? 
A) attachment of spindle fibers to centrioles 
B) response of the plasma membrane to cell cycle controls 
C) the makeup of the extracellular matrix of the substrate 
D) the binding of cell-surface phospholipids to those of adjoining cells 
E) the binding of cell-surface phospholipids to the substrate

back 48

B

front 49

49) A research team began a study of a cultured cell line. Their preliminary observations showed them that the cell line did not exhibit either density-dependent inhibition or anchorage dependence. What could they conclude right away? 
A) The cells originated in the nervous system. 
B) The cells are unable to form spindle microtubules. 
C) They have altered series of cell cycle phases. 
D) The cells show characteristics of tumors. 
E) They were originally derived from an elderly organism.

back 49

D

front 50

50) For a chemotherapeutic drug to be useful for treating cancer cells, which of the following is most desirable? 
A) It is safe enough to limit all apoptosis. 
B) It does not alter metabolically active cells. 
C) It only attacks cells that are density dependent. 
D) It interferes with cells entering G₀. 
E) It interferes with rapidly dividing cells.

back 50

E

front 51

51) You have a series of cells, all of which were derived from tumors, and you first need to find out which ones are malignant. What could you do? 
A) See which ones are not overproliferating. 
B) Find out which ones have a higher rate of apoptosis. 
C) Karyotype samples to look for unusual size and number of chromosomes. 
D) Measure metastasis. 
E) Time their cell cycles.

back 51

C

front 52

The lettered circle in Figure 12.1 shows a diploid nucleus with four chromosomes. There are two pairs of homologous chromosomes, one long and the other short. One haploid set is symbolized as black and the other haploid set is gray. The chromosomes in the unlettered circle have not yet replicated. Choose the correct chromosomal conditions for the following stages. 

52) What is the correct chromosomal condition at the prometaphase of mitosis? 
A) A 
B) B 
C) C 
D) D 
E) E

back 52

B

front 53

65) Which of the following questions might be answered by such a method? 
A) How many cells are produced by the culture per hour? 
B) What is the length of the S phase of the cell cycle? 
C) When is the S chromosome synthesized? 
D) How many picograms of DNA are made per cell cycle? 
E) When do spindle fibers attach to chromosomes?

back 53

B

front 54

66) The research team used the setup to study the incorporation of labeled nucleotides into a culture of lymphocytes and found that the lymphocytes incorporated the labeled nucleotide at a significantly higher level after a pathogen was introduced into the culture. They concluded that 
A) the presence of the pathogen made the experiment too contaminated to trust the results. 
B) their tissue culture methods needed to be relearned. 
C) infection causes lymphocytes to divide more rapidly. 
D) infection causes cell cultures in general to reproduce more rapidly. 
E) infection causes lymphocyte cultures to skip some parts of the cell cycle.

back 54

C

front 55

67) Once they had determined which cells were dividing, the team wanted to use a non-radioactive method to track whether various physiological factors (such as food or body temperature) affect the action of the pathogen. Which of the following would be effective, simple, and safe? 
A) measuring picograms of DNA 
B) measuring numbers of chromosomes 
C) measuring numbers of chromatids 
D) counting the frequency of cells in mitosis 
E) counting newly formed plasma membranes

back 55

D

front 56

68) What might be among the research team's conclusions? 
A) The young women showed these results because they have poorer nutrition. 
B) The elderly persons' samples demonstrated their lowered immune responses. 
C) The young men had higher responses because they are generally healthier. 
D) The patient samples should have had the lowest response but did not, so the experiment is invalid. 
E) The elderly donor samples represent cells no longer capable of any cell division.

back 56

B

front 57

69) Which of the following investigations might be most productive to show what the data on the teenagers might indicate? 
A) test male teenagers 
B) test teenagers who say they are not sexually active 
C) test female teens at different times in their menstrual cycles 
D) test relatives of the teens previously tested 
E) test teenagers from different school systems

back 57

C

front 58

70) When a cell is in anaphase of mitosis, which of the following will he see? 
A) a clear area in the center of the cell 
B) chromosomes clustered at the poles 
C) individual chromatids separating 
D) chromosomes clustered tightly at the center 
E) formation of vesicles at the midline

back 58

A

front 59

71) When the cell has just completed telophase, which of the following does he see? 
A) a clear area in the center of the cell 
B) chromosomes clustered at the poles 
C) individual chromatids separating 
D) formation of vesicles at the midline 
E) two small cells with chromatin

back 59

E

front 60

72) Through a microscope, you can see a cell plate beginning to develop across the middle of a cell and nuclei forming on either side of the cell plate. This cell is most likely 
A) an animal cell in the process of cytokinesis. 
B) a plant cell in the process of cytokinesis. 
C) an animal cell in the S phase of the cell cycle. 
D) a bacterial cell dividing. 
E) a plant cell in metaphase.

back 60

B

front 61

73) Vinblastine is a standard chemotherapeutic drug used to treat cancer. Because it interferes with the assembly of microtubules, its effectiveness must be related to 
A) disruption of mitotic spindle formation. 
B) inhibition of regulatory protein phosphorylation. 
C) suppression of cyclin production. 
D) myosin denaturation and inhibition of cleavage furrow formation. 
E) inhibition of DNA synthesis.

back 61

A

front 62

75) The decline of MPF activity at the end of mitosis is due to 
A) the destruction of the protein kinase Cdk. 
B) decreased synthesis of Cdk. 
C) the degradation of cyclin. 
D) the accumulation of cyclin. 
E) synthesis of DNA.

back 62

C

front 63

76) In the cells of some organisms, mitosis occurs without cytokinesis. This will result in 
A) cells with more than one nucleus. 
B) cells that are unusually small. 
C) cells lacking nuclei. 
D) destruction of chromosomes. 
E) cell cycles lacking an S phase.

back 63

A

front 64

76) In the cells of some organisms, mitosis occurs without cytokinesis. This will result in 
A) cells with more than one nucleus. 
B) cells that are unusually small. 
C) cells lacking nuclei. 
D) destruction of chromosomes. 
E) cell cycles lacking an S phase.

back 64

B

front 65

76) In the cells of some organisms, mitosis occurs without cytokinesis. This will result in 
A) cells with more than one nucleus. 
B) cells that are unusually small. 
C) cells lacking nuclei. 
D) destruction of chromosomes. 
E) cell cycles lacking an S phase.

back 65

A

front 66

79) The drug cytochalasin B blocks the function of actin. Which of the following aspects of the cell cycle would be most disrupted by cytochalasin B? 
A) spindle formation 
B) spindle attachment to kinetochores 
C) DNA synthesis 
D) cell elongation during anaphase 
E) cleavage furrow formation and cytokinesis

back 66

E