What are the 2 types of nucleic acids?
DNA
RNA
Definition of double helix
Shape of DNA molecule, due to coiling of sugar-phosphate backbone strands into a right-handed spiral configuration
Definition of monomer
Molecule that repeats to make polymer
Definition of nucleotide
Molecule consisting of 5 carbon sugar, phosphate group and nitrogenous base
Definition of polynucleotide
Large molecule containing many nucleotides
Definition of DNA polymerase
Enzyme that catalyses formation of DNA from activated deoxyribose nucleotides, using single stranded DNA as template
Definition of helicase
Enzyme that catalyses breaking of hydrogen bonds between nitrogenous pairs of bases
Definition of semi-conservative replication
How DNA replicates, resulting in 2 new molecules, each containing one old strand and one new. One old strand is conserved in each new molecule
Definition of gene
Length of DNA that codes for a polypeptide or for a length of RNA that's involved in regulating gene expression
Definition of polypeptide
Polymer made of many amino acids joined together by peptide bonds
Definition of protein
Large polypeptide of 100 or more amino acids
Definition of transcription
Process of making mRNA from a DNA template
Definition of translation
Formation of protein, at ribosomes, by assembling amino acids into a particular sequence according to the coded instructions carried from the DNA to the ribosomes from mRNA
What's insulin?
Polypeptide of 51 amino acids
What sugar molecule is in RNA?
Ribose
Describe the polynucleotide chains of RNA
Single-stranded
Shorter than DNA
What different nitrogenous base is in RNA?
Uracil
What base does uracil replace?
Thymine
What are the 3 forms of RNA?
Messenger (mRNA)
Transfer (tRNA)
Ribosomal (rRNA)
What does each gene contain?
Code that determines the sequence of amino acids in a particular polypeptide or protein
What do proteins account for?
75% of organisms dry mass
What's in each gene?
Sequence of DNA base triplets that determines AA sequence, primary structure, of polypeptide
What must be the shape of an enzymes active site be?
Complementary to shape of substrate
Antibody molecule must have shape…
Complementary to antigen on surface of invading pathogen
Receptor on cell membrane must be …
Complementary to cell-signalling molecule
Where are genes found?
Inside cell nucleus
As long as primary structure of polypeptide is correct …
It'll fold correctly and be held in tertiary structure, enabling it to carry out function
What are genes on?
Chromosomes
What can't genes do?
Pass out of nucleus
What's done since chromosomes can't pass out of nucleus?
Copy of gene is transcribed into length of mRNA sequence of base triplets, codons. Passes out of nucleus to ribsomome, ensuring coded instructions are translated and protein assembled correctly from AA
What's a base triplet?
Triplet of bases on a DNA molecule
What's an anticodon?
Triplet of bases on tRNA molecule, complementary to mRNA molecule
What's a codon?
Triplet of bases on length of mRNA
What's the genetic code described as?
Degenerate
Non-overlapping
Why's the genetic code described as degenerate?
As for all AA's, except methionine and tryptophan, there's more than one base triplet
What might the genetic code being described as degenerate reduce and why?
Effect of point mutations as change in one base triplet could produce another base triplet that still codes for same AA
How's the genetic code read?
From a fixed point in group of 3 bases
What happens in the genetic code if a base is added or deleted?
Causes frame shift as every base triplet after, hence AA coded for, is changed
What base is this?
Does transcription or translation come first?
Transcription
Describe transcription
Gene unwinds and unzips
Hydrogen bonds between complementary nucleotide bases break
Enzyme RNA polymerase catalyses formation of temporary hydrogen bonds between RNA nucleotides and their complementary unpaired DNA bases. A with T, C with G, G with C, U with A, on one strand of unwound DNA - template strand
Length of RNA that's complementary to template strand of gene is produced. It's therefore a copy of other DNA strand - coding strand
mRNA passes out of nucleus, through nuclear envelope and attached to ribosome
Where are ribosomes made?
In nucleolus, in 2 smaller subunits
How are ribsomomes made?
2 smaller subunits pass out separately out of nucleus through pores in nuclear envelope and then come together to form nucleus
What binds the 2 subunits together that make a ribosome?
Mg ions
What are ribosomes made of?
Ribosomal RNA and protein in roughly equal parts
What do ribosomes do?
Catalyse synthesis of polypeptides
Where are rRNA molecules made?
In nucleolus and pass out of nucleus into cytoplasm
Describe a tRNA molecule
Single-stranded polynucleotides that can twist into hairpin shape
What at one end of tRNA molecule?
Trio of nucleotide bases that recognises and attaches to specific AA
What's at the loop of the hairpin in a tRNA molecule?
Triplet of bases, anticodon, that's complementary to specific codon of bases on mRNA
Describe translation
tRNA molecules bring AAs to find place when anticodon binds by temporary hydrogen bonds to complementary codon on mRNA molecule
As ribosome moves along length of mRNA, it reads code and when 2 AAs are adjacent to each other, peptide bond forms between them
Energy, in form of ATP, is needed for polypeptide synthesis
AA sequence for polypeptide is determined by sequence of nucleotide bases on length of DNA - the gene
After polypeptide assembled, mRNA breaks down. It's component molecules recycled into new lengths of mRNA with different codon sequences
Newly synthesized polypeptide is helped by chaperone proteins to fold into correct 3D, tertiary structure, to carry out it's function
What happens when cells divide?
DNA has to repliacate so daughter cells can receive full set of instructions
When does DNA replication take place?
During interphase, before cell division
When does DNA in mitochondria and chloroplasts replicate?
Just before organelles divide
What happens then eukaryotes replicate?
Each chromosome has identical copy of itself
Chromosomes first joined together at centrome forming 2 sister chromatids
Describe semi-conservative replication
DNA unwinds, catalysed by gyrase enzyme. Then unzips, hydrogen bonds between nucleotide bases broken, catalysed by enzyme helicase. Results in 2 single strands of DNA with exposed nucleotide bases
Free phosphorylated nucleotides, present in nucleoplasm, bond to exposed bases, following complementary base rules C and G, A and T
Enzyme DNA polymerase catalyses addition of new nucleotide bases in the 5’ to 3’ direction, to the single strands of DNA; using each single strand of unzipped DNA as template
Leading strand is synthesised continuously and lagging strand is in fragments (discontinuous) are later joined, catalysed by ligase enzymes
Hydrolysis of activated nucleotides, to release extra phosphate groups, supplies the energy to make phosphodiester bonds between sugar residue of one nucleotide and the phosphate group of the next
Product of replication is 2 DNA molecules, identical to each other and parent molecule. Each molecule contains one old strand and one new
Why is it called semi-conservative replication?
Strands of DNA molecules contain one old strand and one new strand
How do loops of DNA in mitochondria and chloroplasts replicate?
Semi-conservative replication
What might happen during semi-conservative replication?
Errors may occur and wrong nucleotide may be inserted
How often do mutation occur?
1 in 10⁸ base pairs
What can mutations do?
Change the genetic code
What is changing the genetic code an example of?
Point mutation
How can mutations be corrected during replication?
Some enzymes can proofread and edit out incorrect nucleotides, reducing rate that mutations are produced
What are alleles?
Different versions of a particular gene
Are all mutations harmful?
No
How is DNA organised in prokaryotic cells?
Loop within cytoplasm (not membrane bound)
Naked DNA - not wrapped around histone protein
What DNA do viruses contain if they have DNA?
Naked DNA
How is DNA organised in eukaryotic cells?
Majority in nucleus
Each molecule tightly wound around histone protein into chromosomes
Loop of DNA without histone protein in mitochondria and chloroplasts
How is DNA extracted and purified?
Macerate tissue, adding stong detergent
Add ethanol to precipitate out of solution
Further purified of unwanted salts and then concentrated
How many types of nucleotides does DNA contain?
4
What are the 2 types of organic base?
Purine
Pyramidines
What are the 2 purine?
adenine and guanine
How many rings does A and G have?
2
What are the 2 pyramidines?
Thymine and cystosine
How many rings does T and C have?
1
DNA is a …
Nucleic acid
What type of molecule is DNA?
Macromolecule
Where's DNA found?
Nuclei of eukaryotic cells
Cytoplasm of prokaryotic cells
What's the use of DNA?
Contains hereditary material and carries encoded instructions used in development and functioning of living organisms
What molecule is this?
Adenosine
AMP
ADP
ATP
Describe the structure of DNA
Polymer, made of repeating monomers - nucleotides
Consists of 2 polynucleotide strands - antiparallel (run in opposite directions)
Each nucleotide constsis of phosphate group, 5 carbon sugar (deoxyribose) and 1 of 4 nitrogenous bases (A,G,C,T)
Phosphodiester bond (covalent) between sugar and phosphate group
When are phosphodiester bonds broken?
When polynucleotides are broken down (hydrolysis reaction)
When are phosphodiester bonds formed?
When polynucleotides are synthesised (condensation reaction)
Why is DNA so long?
Can carry lots of encoded info
What are nucleotides phosphate esters of?
Pentose sugars where nitrogenous base is linked to C1 of sugar and phosphate group is linked to C5 or C3 of sugar, linked by covalent bonds formed in condensation
What do nucleotides form?
Monomers of nucleic acids, DNA and RNA
What sugar is in RNA?
What sugar is in DNA?
Deoxyribose
What happens when a nucleotide contains more than one phosphate group?
Become phosphorylated nucleotides
What are nucleotides sometimes components of?
Coenzymes
What do nucleotides help regulate?
Metabolic pathways
What's ATP?
Energy-rich end product of energy-releasing biochemical pathways used to drive most energy-requiring metabolic processes in cells
What are the 5 different bases?
Guanine
Adenine
Cytosine
What do purines pair with and why?
Pyramidines to give equal sized rungs on DNA ladder
What do the hydrogen bonds between the bases do?
Allow the molecule to unzip for transcription and replication
How many hydrogen bonds between A and T?
How many hydrogen bonds between G and C?
3
What do hydrogen bonds do in DNA?
Form between nitrogenous bases to join antiparallel strands
What is the part of DNA that resembles a ladder formed by?
Sugar-phosphate backbones of antiparallel polynucleotide strands
Rungs of ladder consist of …
Complementary bases joined by hydrogen bonds
What do the opposite directions of the antiparallel strands refer to?
Direction that the 3rd and 5th molecules on the deoxyribose are facing
What's the 5’ end of the molecule?
Where phosphate group is attached to the 5th carbon
What's the 3’ end of the molecule?
Where the phosphate group is attached to the 3rd carbon
What do the antiparallel backbones do?
Protect the base sequences and integrity of the encoded info
Stability
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