Q.No. 21 The number of molecules of a nucleotide of molecular weight 300 g/mol present in 10 picomoles is __________ x 1012 (round off to 2 decimal places).

Q.No. 21 The number of molecules of a nucleotide of molecular weight 300 g/mol present in 10 picomoles is __________ x 1012 (round off to 2 decimal places).

Number of Nucleotide Molecules in 10 Picomoles

The number of molecules of a nucleotide (molecular weight 300 g/mol) in 10 picomoles is 6.02 × 1012. This numerical answer requires converting picomoles to moles and multiplying by Avogadro’s number, rounded to two decimal places.

Step-by-Step Solution

  1. Number of moles = amount in picomoles × 10-12, since 1 picomole = 10-12 mol. For 10 picomoles, moles = 10 × 10-12 = 1 × 10-11 mol.
  2. Number of molecules = moles × Avogadro’s number (6.022 × 1023 molecules/mol). Thus, 1 × 10-11 × 6.022 × 1023 = 6.022 × 1012.
  3. Divide by 1012 and round: 6.022 × 1012 / 1012 = 6.022, so x = 6.02 (rounded to 2 decimal places).

Precise Calculation

  • Moles = 10 × 10-12 = 10-11 mol
  • Molecules = 10-11 × 6.02214076 × 1023 = 6.02214076 × 1012
  • Thus, x = 6.02 (rounded to 2 decimal places)

Note on Options

This fill-in-the-blank has no MCQ options; it’s numerical. Common errors include forgetting pico-to-mole conversion (10-12) or using wrong Avogadro value, leading to off-by-1012 or factor errors.

Keywords: nucleotide molecules calculation, picomoles to molecules, Avogadro number biotech GATE, molecular weight 300 g/mol.

In competitive exams like GATE Biotechnology or IIT JAM, such questions test mole concept application to biomolecules. The molecular weight (300 g/mol) is given but unused here, as molecule count depends only on moles, not mass for count (mass would be moles × MW = 10-11 × 300 = 3 × 10-9 g, but irrelevant).

Practice tip: Memorize 1 pmol = 10-12 mol × NA ≈ 6.02 × 1011 molecules per pmol, so 10 pmol = 6.02 × 1012.

For variations, if mass-based, divide mass by MW for moles first.

Exam Relevance

  • GATE BT 2020 Q21: Exact question; answer 6.02
  • IIT JAM Prep: Builds on stoichiometry; similar in CY/BL papers
  • Common Pitfalls: Confusing pico (10-12) with nano (10-9); always convert units explicitly

 

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