Question detail

Which option avoids the common misconception in this objective for Variation and evolution, Genetic engineering: students must describe bacterial cells engineered to produce useful substances such as human insulin.

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At a glance

MCQ

Type

practice

Style

Topic

Variation and evolution

Question

  1. A. Misconception avoided: A DNA base sequence is the storage format; a gene is the named instruction unit. This matches Genetic engineering because students must describe bacterial cells engineered to produce useful substances such as human insulin.
  2. B. Common misconception: Explaining protein coding without naming the gene as the relevant section of DNA. This would blur DNA vs genes instead of testing Genetic engineering.
  3. C. Partial misconception: Treating DNA as if it always means one gene. This misses the objective focus on describe bacterial cells engineered to produce useful substances such as human insulin.
  4. D. Terminology mix-up: It moves into a neighbouring Unit 4.6 idea rather than Variation and evolution / Genetic engineering.

Answer

The correct option is Misconception avoided: A DNA base sequence is the storage format; a gene is the named instruction unit. This matches Genetic engineering because students must describe bacterial cells engineered to produce useful substances such as human insulin.. It is the only option that keeps DNA vs genes separate and answers the approved learning objective in Genetic engineering.

Explanation

The correct option is Misconception avoided: A DNA base sequence is the storage format; a gene is the named instruction unit. This matches Genetic engineering because students must describe bacterial cells engineered to produce useful substances such as human insulin.. Misconception avoided: A DNA base sequence is the storage format; a gene is the named instruction unit. This matches Genetic engineering because students must describe bacterial cells engineered to produce useful substances such as human insulin. is correct because A DNA base sequence is the storage format; a gene is the named instruction unit. The learning objective says students must describe bacterial cells engineered to produce useful substances such as human insulin, so the answer must stay inside Genetic engineering. The alternative options are wrong because they either explaining protein coding without naming the gene as the relevant section of dna., treating dna as if it always means one gene., or drift away from do not use dna, gene, and chromosome as interchangeable answers..

Common mistake

Genetic engineering common mistake 1

Giving a vague answer instead of directly addressing: Describe bacterial cells engineered to produce useful substances such as human insulin..

Answer by clearly explaining how to describe bacterial cells engineered to produce useful substances such as human insulin..

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Describe Bacterial Cells Engineered To Produce Useful Substances Such As Human Insulin Mcq 4 | AQA GCSE Biology Question detail | ExamCompanion