NEET · Biology — Genetics, Molecular Biology & Evolution · Egypt
Biology — Genetics, Molecular Biology & Evolution for the NEET Exam — Egyptian candidates
8% of the NEET test plan. Mendelian genetics, chromosomal theory, molecular basis of inheritance (DNA replication, transcription, translation), and evolution — approximately 15% of NEET Biology. Calibrated for Egyptian candidates.
Behind every published pass rate is a distribution of which topics caused most of the failures. This is one of those topics. Biology — Genetics, Molecular Biology & Evolution sits at roughly 8% of the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test content distribution — Genetics and Evolution (NCERT Class 12 Units 5 and 7) is one of the highest-weightage Biology topics in NEET. It is also the topic that rewards careful NCERT reading most directly — cross-problems (monohybrid, dihybrid) follow predictable Punnett square logic, and molecular biology questions are NCERT-definition based. Evolution questions (Darwin's theory, Hardy-Weinberg, speciation) are purely conceptual. Pass rates for the NEET are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For Egyptian candidates preparing for NEET, the calibration of study to local context matters: Thanaweya Amma is Egypt's school-leaving exam. IELTS, TOEFL, and ICDL are popular for migration and employment; STEP and EmSAT for Gulf study.
Common failure modes
These are the patterns that cause most candidates to lose marks on this topic. Recognising them in advance is half the work.
- !Punnett square errors in dihybrid crosses — forgetting to apply independent assortment (9:3:3:1 ratio for two independent traits)
- !Confusing co-dominance (both alleles expressed, e.g., AB blood type) with incomplete dominance (blended phenotype, e.g., pink snapdragons)
- !Misidentifying the steps of DNA replication vs transcription (which enzyme makes what)
- !Forgetting Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium conditions — mutation, selection, gene flow, non-random mating, and genetic drift ALL violate the equilibrium
- !Confusing convergent evolution (analogous organs, unrelated species) with divergent evolution (homologous organs, common ancestry)
Study tips
- 1Practise Punnett squares for monohybrid (3:1 ratio), dihybrid (9:3:3:1), and test cross scenarios. NEET tests all three.
- 2For molecular biology, memorise the central dogma: DNA → (transcription) → mRNA → (translation) → Protein. Know the enzyme: DNA polymerase (replication), RNA polymerase (transcription), ribosome (translation).
- 3Learn the genetic code features from NCERT: it is universal, degenerate (multiple codons per amino acid), non-overlapping, and unambiguous. AUG is start (methionine), UAA/UAG/UGA are stop codons.
- 4Memorise Hardy-Weinberg equation: p² + 2pq + q² = 1 (genotype frequencies) and p + q = 1 (allele frequencies). NEET uses these directly in numerical questions.
- 5For evolution, know the evidence types: comparative anatomy (homologous vs analogous structures), embryology, fossil record, molecular biology. Darwin's natural selection vs Lamarck's inheritance of acquired characteristics.
- 6Egyptian candidates preparing for NEET typically combine self-study with British Council or AmidEast in-centre prep — combining online practice with proctored mock exams accelerates familiarity.
Sample NEET Biology — Genetics, Molecular Biology & Evolution questions
These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real NEET questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.
- 1
In a monohybrid cross between two heterozygous parents (Tt × Tt), the expected phenotypic ratio is:
- A1:2:1
- B3:1Correct
- C1:1
- D2:1
Why this answer?
Cross Tt × Tt → TT : 2Tt : tt = 1:2:1 genotypic ratio. If T is dominant over t, then TT and Tt both show the dominant phenotype. Phenotypic ratio = 3 dominant : 1 recessive = 3:1.
- 2
The enzyme responsible for DNA replication is:
- ARNA polymerase
- BDNA ligase only
- CDNA polymerase IIICorrect
- DHelicase only
Why this answer?
DNA polymerase III (in prokaryotes) is the primary enzyme that synthesises new DNA strands by adding nucleotides complementary to the template strand. Helicase unwinds the double helix; DNA ligase joins Okazaki fragments; RNA polymerase makes RNA, not DNA.
- 3
Homologous organs are evidence for:
- AConvergent evolution
- BDivergent evolution (common ancestry)Correct
- CParallel evolution
- DCo-evolution
Why this answer?
Homologous organs have the same basic structural plan and evolutionary origin but may perform different functions (e.g., forelimbs of humans, whales, bats, horses). They indicate divergent evolution — common ancestry with adaptation to different environments. Analogous organs (wings of insects vs birds) indicate convergent evolution from different ancestry.
Frequently asked questions
How many Genetics and Molecular Biology questions appear in NEET?
Is human genetics (blood group inheritance, sex-linked disorders) tested in NEET?
What is the NEET pass rate for Egyptian candidates?
How long should Egyptian candidates study Biology — Genetics, Molecular Biology & Evolution for the NEET?
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Regulatory citation: NTA NEET-UG Information Bulletin — Biology syllabus: Genetics and Evolution (Class 12 Unit 5: Chapters 5–7).