1. | Chelation | 2. | Centrifugation |
3. | Elution | 4. | Hybridisation |
1. | endonuclease | 2. | exonuclease |
3. | ligase | 4. | polymerase |
1. | Transduction | 2. | Conjugation |
3. | Transformation | 4. | Translation |
1. | Cleaving of phosphodiester bond in DNA by the enzyme |
2. | Cutting of DNA at specific position only |
3. | Prevention of the multiplication of bacteriophage by the host bacteria |
4. | All of the above |
1. | allows selection of transformants |
2. | promotes uptake of DNA through membrane transport proteins |
3. | creates pores in the bacterial plasma membrane and allows plasmid DNA to enter the bacterial DNA. |
4. | coagulates DNA in the bacterial cell. |
Consider the given two statements
Assertion (A): | In agar gel electrophoresis, smaller DNA fragments move farther than the larger DNA fragments. |
Reason (R): | In agar gel electrophoresis, DNA fragments separate according to their size due to the sieving effect of the agarose gel. |
1. | Both (A) and (R) are True and (R) correctly explains (A). |
2. | Both (A) and (R) are True but (R) does not correctly explain (A). |
3. | (A) is True, (R) is False. |
4. | (A) is False, (R) is False. |
I: | are inherited from one generation to the next. |
II: | may carry genes that give their host a selective advantage. |
III: | can render bacteria drug-resistant. |
Assertion (A): | Restriction enzymes produced by bacterial cells do not harm their own DNA |
Reason (R): | Bacterial DNA are single-stranded molecules. |
1. | Both (A) and (R) are True and (R) correctly explains (A) |
2. | Both (A) and (R) are True but (R) does not correctly explain (A) |
3. | (A) is True, (R) is False |
4. | (A) is False, (R) is True |
1. | pUC101 | 2. | EcoR I |
3. | BamH I | 4. | Sma I |
1. | after the scientists who discover them. |
2. | based on the bacteria from which they are derived. |
3. | after the bacteriophage whose DNA is cut by them. |
4. | There is no convention or principles for naming restriction enzymes. |