Library/PT 121/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

All embryos first have to mark which end will be head or tail and which side is top or bottom — scientists call this 'polarity.' Different animals do this in very different ways: fruit flies put the signals in the egg before fertilization, some worms use where the sperm enters to gather protein clumps that mark one side, and mammals seem to set polarity much later and scientists don’t yet know how. Once polarity is set, though, many animals use very similar genes to build body parts (like eyes and limbs), which is surprising because the very first steps are so different while the later steps are almost the same.

Logic Breakdown

Focus on the passage's contrast between early polarity mechanisms (which vary across species) and later elaboration mechanisms (which are conserved); choose the option that reflects that studies of conserved later mechanisms (e.g., eye development) are more applicable across species than studies of divergent polarity mechanisms.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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22.

The passage provides information to suggest that which one of the following relationships exists between the development of humans and the development of fruit flies?

Correct Answer
D
Choice D is supported by the passage. The passage contrasts divergence in early polarity mechanisms with similarity in mechanisms that elaborate parts: "The mechanisms that establish the earliest spatial configurations in an embryo are far less similar across life forms than those relied on for later development..." and explicitly states, "Once an embryo establishes polarity, it relies on sets of essential genes that are remarkably similar among all life forms for elaboration of its parts." It gives the concrete example: "There is an astonishing conservation of mechanism in this process: the genes that help make eyes in flies are similar to the genes that make eyes in mice or humans." Because genes that build eyes are similar across species, a study of a fruit fly's visual-system development would more likely apply to humans than a study of the fruit fly's polarity-establishing mechanisms, which the passage says differ across species.
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