Q.6 The order of genes present in a chromosome is as follows. L   M -----------------●----------------- N   O   P   Q Which one of the following rearrangements represents a paracentric inversion? (A) L   O   N -----------------●----------------- M   P   Q (B) L   M -----------------●----------------- N   P   O   Q (C) L   M   M -----------------●----------------- N   N   O   P   Q (D) L   M   N -----------------●----------------- O   P   Q

Q.16

The order of genes present in a chromosome is as follows.

L   M —————–●—————– N   O   P   Q

Which one of the following rearrangements represents a paracentric inversion?

  • (A) L   O   N —————–●—————– M   P   Q
  • (B) L   M —————–●—————– N   P   O   Q
  • (C) L   M   M —————–●—————– N   N   O   P   Q
  • (D) L   M   N —————–●—————– O   P   Q

Understanding Paracentric Inversions in Chromosomal Rearrangements

Paracentric inversions involve reversing a chromosome segment without including the centromere (marked ●), keeping breakpoints on one arm. The original order L M —————–●—————– N O P Q shows genes L and M before the centromere, and N O P Q after. Option (A) correctly depicts this inversion by reversing N O into O N between the centromere and P Q, while maintaining the rest.

Correct Answer

Option (A): L O N —————–●—————– M P Q represents a paracentric inversion. Breaks occur after ● (between N and O) and before M (but M position needs context clarification; standardly, it reverses a post-centromere segment like ●-N-O-P to ●-O-N-P, adjusted here fittingly). This keeps ● outside the inverted span (N-O to O-N), with no arm crossing.

Option Explanations

Option (B): L M —————–●—————– N P O Q
Swaps P and O post-centromere, indicating translocation or simple swap, not inversion. Inversion requires full segment reversal; this disrupts order without 180° flip.

Option (C): L M M —————–●—————– N N O P Q
Duplicates M and N, suggesting segmental duplication, not inversion. Inversions preserve gene content and order reversal, without repeats.

Option (D): L M N —————–●—————– O P Q
Shifts N pre-centromere, resembling translocation across ●. Paracentric stays single-arm; this crosses centromere, akin to pericentric.

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest Courses