[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷130及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 130 及答案与解析Part B (10 points) 0 Researchers have found that drugs used to treat human seizures can delay aging in worms by as much as 50 percent. The roundworms used for the study are similar to humans in their molecular makeup, raising the possibility that the drugs could also extend th
2、e life span of humans.【R1】 _“By finding a class of drugs that delays aging we have found a relationship between the function of the nervous system and aging that was not well understood,“ said Kerry Kornfeld, a geneticist at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri. The fi
3、ndings are detailed this week in the journal Science.The discovery came out of the thesis work by one of Kornfelds graduate students, Kimberley Evason. About four years ago, Evason began exposing groups of the roundworm Caenorhabditis elegans to commercially available drugs to see if the drugs would
4、 delay aging or promote longevity.【R2】 _Over eight months the scientists tested 20 drugs, all with negative results. Finally they tested the anticonvulsant drug ethosuzimide. Researchers found that the drug extended the life span of roundworms from 16.7 days to 19.6 days, a 17 percent increase. 【R3】
5、 _The discovery that the drugs extend the life span of roundworms could have important implications for human aging as well. There are strong similarities on the molecular level between the proteins and genes that constitute the worm and those that make up other animals, including humans.“Many basic
6、 processes are highly related, including neural function, insulin signaling, and probably important aspects of the aging process,“ Kornfeld said. “Theres every reason to think that these animals are a good model for higher animals, such as people.“【R4】 _Ethosuzimide, which was developed in the 1950s
7、, is commonly used to treat epilepsy, though it is not known precisely how the drug controls convulsions. There is no anecdotal evidence that it has had an anti-aging effect in people. The next step, Kornfeld says, is to test if the drugs have an anti-aging effect on animals like flies and mice.Very
8、 little is known about the aging process. From genetic analysis, researchers have found that an insulin-like signaling system regulates aging and longevity. A good diet can delay aging and extend a persons life span. But scientists know virtually nothing about the effect of drugs on aging. “Its a bi
9、g void,“ Kornfeld said.In addition to delaying age-related degenerative changes, the drugs also increased neuromuscular activity, suggesting a link between the neuromuscular system and the aging process.【R5】 _There may also be other targets not yet explored that affect aging and neuromuscular functi
10、on. Said Kornfeld: “The process of aging remains mysterious.“Word count: 438A. But Kornfeld said scientists will not know about the applicability of the drugs in humans until a similar study is done on humans. “Whats very encouraging is that these drugs were developed to treat humans, and they are w
11、ell understood, because theyve been used for a long time,“ he said.B. Later the scientists discovered that two related anticonvulsant drugs also lengthened the lives of the wormsin the case of one drug, by almost 50 percent. “This was a big surprise to us, Kornfeld said. “We didnt think anticonvulsa
12、nt drugs had any particular relationship to aging. That connection was completely unexpected.“C. Roundworms are a poor subject for experiments, because they are not like humans, even though their molecules are similar. For example, they have no bones, nor do they show emotions, making it difficult t
13、o know how exactly human subjects would react to these drugs in large quantities. However, using the worms allows experiments to be conducted quickly, because they do not live for long.D. “Somehow the neural activity seems to regulate the aging of all of the bodythe skin, musculature, and reproducti
14、ve tract,“ Kornfeld said. “Somehow the nervous system coordinates the progress of all these tissues, evidently, though the life stages. But we dont know how it does that.“E. The discovery may also shed light on the little-understood aging process. Since the drugs act on the neuromuscular systems of
15、both humans and worms, the findings hint at a link between neural activity and aging.F. Unlike vertebrates, the worms are ideal subjects for the study of aging because of their short life spans, which last only a couple of weeks in a laboratory. The worm is well known in genetics, and the worms geno
16、me has been sequenced.G. Use of this drug has been permitted by law since 1998 and wider use is now expected as a result of the studies. “We can clearly link this drug with human aging, but we still need to find proof,“ says Kornfeld optimistically.1 【R1 】2 【R2 】3 【R3 】4 【R4 】5 【R5 】5 Climate change
17、 is with us. A decade ago, it was conjecture. Now the future is unfolding before our eyes. Canadas Inuit see it in disappearing Arctic ice and permafrost. The shantytown dwellers of Latin America and Southern Asia see it in lethal storms and floods. Europeans see it in disappearing glaciers, forest
18、fires and fatal heat waves. Scientists see it in tree rings, ancient coral and bubbles trapped in ice cores. These reveal that the world has not been as warm as it is now for a millennium or more. The three warmest years on record have all occurred since 1998; 19 of the warmest 20 since 1980. And Ea
19、rth has probably never warmed as fast as in the past 30 yearsa period when natural influences on global temperatures, such as solar cycles and volcanoes should have cooled us down. 【R1】_ People are causing the change by burning natures vast stores of coal, oil and natural gas. This releases billions
20、 of tonnes of carbon dioxide(CO2)every year, although the changes may actually have started with the dawn of agriculture, say some scientists. The physics of the “greenhouse effect has been a matter of scientific fact for a century. CO2 is a greenhouse gas that traps the Suns radiation within the tr
21、oposphere, the lower atmosphere. It has accumulated along with other man-made greenhouse gases, such as methane and chlorofluorocarbons(CFCs). Some studies suggest that cosmic rays may also be involved in warming. If current trends continue, we will raise atmospheric CO2 concentrations to double pre
22、-industrial levels during this century. That will probably be enough to raise global temperatures by around 2C to 5C. Some warming is certain, but the degree will be determined by cycles involving melting ice, the oceans, water vapor, clouds and changes to vegetation. 【R2】_ As natural ecosystems-suc
23、h as coral reefs-are disrupted, biodiversity is reduced. Most species cannot migrate fast enough to keep up, though others are already evolving in response to warming. 【R3 】_ The global warming would be more pronounced if it were not for sulphur particles and other pollutants that shade us, and beca
24、use forests and oceans absorb around half of the CO2 we produce. But the accumulation rate of atmospheric CO2 has doubled since 2001, suggesting that natures ability to absorb the gas could now be stretched to the limit. Recent research suggests that natural CO2 “sinks“, like peat bogs and forests,
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