Which statements regarding human pseudogenes are correct?
1) Probably, most pseudogenes have a function that has just not been discovered yet
2) The exon-intron structure of a processed pseudogene and its functional homolog is essentially identical
3) There are currently ~1000 pseudogenes annotated in the human genome
4) Most human pseudogenes contain just one mutation that disrupts the coding sequence
5) Most human pseudogenes are processed pseudogenes
1) Probably, most pseudogenes have a function that has just not been discovered yet -> wrong, they are nonfunctional homologs (but there are also likely some few pseudogenes, that have a unknown function)
2) The exon-intron structure of a processed pseudogene and its functional homolog is essentially identical -> wrong, a processed pseudogene goes via an RNA-intermediate, so the intron-exon structure is not preserved
3) There are currently ~1000 pseudogenes annotated in the human genome -> wrong, there are 15k annotated
4) Most human pseudogenes contain just one mutation that disrupts the coding sequence -> wrong, if a pseudogene “sticks around” for million years -> it will have several mutations; most pseudogenes, if they arose a while ago, are totally “shredded”, only pseudogenes that arose very recently might have just 1 mutation
5) Most human pseudogenes are processed pseudogenes -> correct
Which statements regarding gene duplications are correct?
1) Susumo Ohno proposed in his famous book that gene duplications play a big role during evolution, but genome projects have shown that gene families are rare
2) When an entire gene gets duplicated, it is most likely that the two paralogs acquire different or new functions
3) When genes gets duplicated via a mRNA intermediate, the process is called retrotransposition
4) If two genes of two different species are called 1:1 orthologs, this means they have been generated by gene duplication
5) When a paralog undergoes subfunctionalization after a gene duplication its sequence is expected to evolve neutrally
1) Susumo Ohno proposed in his famous book that gene duplications play a big role during evolution, but genome projects have shown that gene families are rare -> wrong, genome projects have shown that gene families are widespread
2) When an entire gene gets duplicated, it is most likely that the two paralogs acquire different or new functions -> wrong, “we are already good adapted -> if one makes a copy its very unlikely that it will make it better”; if a duplication happens a priori it’s unlikely that it will be good
3) When genes gets duplicated via a mRNA intermediate, the process is called retrotransposition -> correct
4) If two genes of two different species are called 1:1 orthologs, this means they have been generated by gene duplication -> wrong, they have been generated by species duplication; gene duplication is “for” Paralogs
5) When a paralog undergoes subfunctionalization after a gene duplication its sequence is expected to evolve neutrally -> wrong, = copy gets adapted to a new function -> no neutrally ofc, not like a pseudo; either not needed, then it evolves neutrally and becomes a pseudogene eventually or it acquires a new function and evolves adapted, very likely undergoes positive selection, optimizes and becomes eventually a gene
Which statements regarding (DNA-) Microarrays are correct?
1) Microarrays have been the major method in the last decade to quantify gene expression levels genome wide
2) Affymetrix is a major company selling microarrays
3) Biotin-labeled RNA is generated from the sample of interest and is then hybridized to the Affymetrix microarrays -> correct
4) Microarrays are the basic technology for third-generation sequencing
5) Over a million different oligonucleotides can be synthesized on an Affymetrix microarray
1) Microarrays have been the major method in the last decade to quantify gene expression levels genome wide -> correct
2) Affymetrix is a major company selling microarrays -> correct
4) Microarrays are the basic technology for third-generation sequencing -> wrong
5) Over a million different oligonucleotides can be synthesized on an Affymetrix microarray -> correct (newer versions up to 6 million)
Which statements regarding RNA-Seq (Illumina) are correct?
1) For quantitative RNA-seq, read lengths that allow mapping are sufficient
2) Reverse transcriptase is always needed to make RNA-Seq libraries
3) RNA-seq libraries should have as long as possible inserts so that full length cDNA can be sequenced
4) A few thousand sequencing reads are usually sufficient to characterize genome-wide expression patterns
5) To quantify gene expression levels by RNA-seq one usually assembles the short reads into contigs before mapping
1) For quantitative RNA-seq, read lengths that allow mapping are sufficient -> correct
2) Reverse transcriptase is always needed to make RNA-Seq libraries -> correct
3) RNA-seq libraries should have as long as possible inserts so that full length cDNA can be sequenced -> wrong
4) A few thousand sequencing reads are usually sufficient to characterize genome-wide expression patterns -> wrong
5) To quantify gene expression levels by RNA-seq one usually assembles the short reads into contigs before mapping -> wrong
What is the correct order of these steps when generating an RNA-Seq library?
1) first-strand synthesis
2) RNA fragmentation
3) adding library barcodes by PCR
4) total RNA isolation
5) ligating adapters
6) second strand synthesis
7) polyA enrichment
1) first-strand synthesis -> 4.
2) RNA fragmentation -> 3.
3) adding library barcodes by PCR -> 7.
4) total RNA isolation -> 1.
5) ligating adapters -> 6
6) second strand synthesis 5.
7) polyA enrichment -> 2.
Last changed8 days ago