Mitochondria Quiz on mtDNA Structure and Function

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| Questions: 12 | Updated: Nov 25, 2025
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1. What is the correct breakdown of the MT genome?

Explanation

The mitochondrial genome is extremely compact and contains only 37 genes, all essential for oxidative phosphorylation and mitochondrial function. Thirteen of these genes encode polypeptides that form components of the electron transport chain. The remaining 24 genes encode RNA molecules: 22 tRNAs needed for mitochondrial protein translation and 2 rRNAs for mitochondrial ribosomes. These numbers are highly conserved across humans, highlighting the evolutionary stability of mitochondrial DNA.

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About This Quiz
Molecular Biology Quizzes & Trivia

This mitochondria quiz is designed to help students deeply understand mitochondrial DNA structure, replication, gene organization, and genetic polymorphisms. It covers essential concepts such as the number of genes in the mitochondrial genome, proportions of protein-coding versus RNA genes, heavy and light strand differences, and the role of regulatory regions... see morelike the D-loop and 7S DNA.

Learners gain insight into how mitochondrial genetics differ from nuclear genetics and why mtDNA is crucial for inheritance, energy production, and forensic analysis. This mitochondria quiz is suitable for AP Biology students, university learners, and anyone reviewing cell biology. see less

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2. What proportion of the MT genome encodes protein vs RNA?

Explanation

Approximately two-thirds of the mitochondrial genome’s functional genes encode protein products involved in energy production, while about one-third encode RNA components required for mitochondrial protein synthesis. This gene distribution resembles prokaryotic genomes, supporting the endosymbiotic theory that mitochondria evolved from aerobic bacteria engulfed by ancestral eukaryotic cells. The balance ensures efficient synthesis of proteins directly in the mitochondria without relying heavily on nuclear transport.

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3. What is 7S DNA?

Explanation

7S DNA is a short, repetitive mitochondrial DNA fragment located in the D-loop region, where it forms a triple-stranded DNA structure bound to proteins, creating a ribonucleoprotein complex. This segment is important because it participates in replication regulation and exhibits high variability across individuals. Its polymorphic pattern makes it valuable for population genetics and forensic identification. Unlike nuclear DNA, 7S DNA replicates separately and contributes to controlling mitochondrial genome stability and replication timing.

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4. Difference between MT heavy & light strands?

Explanation

The mitochondrial heavy (H) strand contains a higher proportion of guanine, making it physically denser during sedimentation, while the light (L) strand contains more cytosine. This strand asymmetry influences replication, gene organization, and transcription. Most protein-coding genes reside on the heavy strand due to its nucleotide composition. Understanding this difference helps explain replication direction and the regulatory mechanisms of mitochondrial DNA expression.

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5. In which direction does the heavy strand replicate?

Explanation

Heavy-strand synthesis begins at the OH (origin of heavy-strand replication) located within the D-loop. After initiation, replication proceeds anticlockwise around the circular mitochondrial genome. This directional progression exposes the light-strand origin (OL) later in the process, triggering light-strand synthesis. The coordinated timing ensures efficient mitochondrial genome duplication. This organized replication pathway contrasts with nuclear DNA replication, which uses multiple origins simultaneously.

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6. Where is the OH located?

Explanation

The OH site lies within the D-loop, a special noncoding region of mitochondrial DNA characterized by a triple-stranded structure, including the 7S DNA fragment. This region serves as a regulatory hub for replication initiation, transcription control, and mitochondrial genome maintenance. It is one of the few noncoding segments in the otherwise compact mitochondrial genome. Its structural uniqueness helps coordinate mitochondrial replication independently from nuclear control.

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7. What are genetic polymorphisms?

Explanation

Genetic polymorphisms are natural variations in DNA sequences that occur among individuals in a population. These variations include SNPs, insertions, deletions, and differences in repetitive regions, contributing to traits such as blood groups or metabolic differences. They do not necessarily cause disease but create genetic diversity, influencing evolution and population structure. They are essential in fields such as forensic genetics, ancestry testing, and disease susceptibility studies.

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8. Most highly polymorphic region of human genome?

Explanation

The 7S DNA region is highly polymorphic due to its rapid mutation rate and repetitive structure. Its variability makes it extremely useful for forensic identification, lineage tracing, and population genetics. While mitochondrial DNA overall has higher mutation rates than nuclear DNA, the 7S DNA segment stands out because its structure allows more frequent sequence changes. This makes it ideal for distinguishing individuals who may share otherwise similar mitochondrial sequences.

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9. When does light-strand replication begin?

Explanation

Light-strand replication begins only after heavy-strand synthesis exposes the OL (origin of light-strand replication). When the heavy strand is about two-thirds complete, the OL becomes single-stranded and accessible, allowing replication to begin in the opposite (clockwise) direction. This timing ensures coordinated replication of both strands and prevents structural instability. The staggered initiation is essential because mitochondrial DNA replication is asymmetric and tightly regulated.

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10. How many MT polypeptide, tRNA & rRNA genes exist?

Explanation

The mitochondrial genome carries 13 protein-coding genes that encode essential subunits of oxidative phosphorylation complexes. It also includes 22 tRNA genes needed for mitochondrial translation and 2 rRNA genes that form the mitochondrial ribosome. These numbers reflect a streamlined genome optimized for rapid and efficient energy production within mitochondria. The tRNA set is reduced compared to the nuclear system due to relaxed wobble rules in mitochondrial translation.

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11. How many total genes are in the MT genome?

Explanation

Human mitochondrial DNA contains 37 genes—13 coding for proteins, 22 for tRNAs, and 2 for rRNAs. This small, highly efficient genome supports the mitochondrion’s primary function: ATP production. Its compactness arises from evolutionary pressure to reduce redundancy after mitochondria became endosymbiotic partners in eukaryotic cells. Because the genome lacks introns and has minimal noncoding DNA, nearly all sequences have essential roles in mitochondrial biology.

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12. How many MT tRNA recognize purine/pyrimidine last bases?

Explanation

Fourteen of the 22 mitochondrial tRNAs can recognize codons ending in either a purine or pyrimidine due to relaxed wobble pairing. This expanded recognition allows a relatively small tRNA set to decode a large number of codons—28 additional combinations—making mitochondrial translation more efficient. Altogether, mitochondrial tRNAs can decode 60 codons, reflecting an adaptation to the compact nature of the mitochondrial genome and its simplified genetic code.

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  • Answered
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What is the correct breakdown of the MT genome?
What proportion of the MT genome encodes protein vs RNA?
What is 7S DNA?
Difference between MT heavy & light strands?
In which direction does the heavy strand replicate?
Where is the OH located?
What are genetic polymorphisms?
Most highly polymorphic region of human genome?
When does light-strand replication begin?
How many MT polypeptide, tRNA & rRNA genes exist?
How many total genes are in the MT genome?
How many MT tRNA recognize purine/pyrimidine last bases?
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