Week 00 Asssumed knowledge / revision (excluding material covered later) Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three parts of a nucleotide?

A
  1. A sugar: pentose has a hydrogen atom at the 2’ carbon (deoxyribose)
  2. A phosphate: phosphorus atom bonded to 4 oxygen atoms
  3. A nitrogen-containing base: purine or pyrimidine
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2
Q

What are the four bases in DNA? Which does each pair with?

A

Adenine - Thymine

Guanine - Cytosine

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3
Q

What is a pyrimidine? Two examples?

A

Pyrimidine nitrogenous base: six member ring only; cytosine (C) and thymine (T)

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4
Q

What is a purine? Two examples?

A

Purine nitrogenous base: six member ring attached to a five-member ring; adenine (A) and guanine (G)

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5
Q

What kind of bonds form between complementary bases on a DNA strand?

A

Hydrogen bonds

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6
Q

What does it mean to say that the two complimentary strands of DNA are antiparallel?

A

The two polynucleotide strands run parallel to each other but with opposite directionality (alignments) regarding their 3’ and 5’ ends

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7
Q

DIRECTIONALITY

  • In what direction is a DNA (or RNA) strand read during transcription?
  • What gives DNA strands the 5’ and 3’ ends?
  • To which end of a DNA/RNA strand can more nucleotides be easily added?
A
  • 3’-5’ direction refers to the orientation of nucleotides of a single strand of DNA or RNA and it is read in this direction (read 3’-5’, written 5’-3’)
  • The 5’ and 3’ specifically refer to the 5th and 3rd carbon atoms in the deoxyribose/ribose sugar ring. The phosphate group attached to the 5’ end of one nucleotide and the hydroxyl group at the 3’ end of another nucleotide have the potential to form phospodiester bonds, and hence link adjacent nucleotides. This linkage provides the sugar-phosphate backbone that gives DNA its structural rigidity. Any single strand of DNA/RNA will always have an unbound 5’ phosphate at one end and an unbound 3’ hydroxyl group at the opposite end.
  • Nucleotides are added at the 3’ end
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8
Q

The [sugar/phosphate] is the 3’ end, and the [sugar/phosphate] is the 5’ end of each nucleiotide

A

The sugar is the 3’ end, and the phosphate is the 5’ end of each nucleiotide

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9
Q

The phosphate group attached to the 5’ carbon of the sugar on one nucleotide forms an ester bond with the free hydroxyl on the 3’ carbon of the next nucleotide. What is this bond called?

A

phosphodiester bond

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10
Q

The sugar-phosphate backbone is [positively/negatively**] charged and [**hydrophilic/hydrophobic], which [prevents/allows] the DNA backbone [to form/from forming] bonds with water.

A

The sugar-phosphate backbone is negatively charged and hydrophilic, which allows the DNA backbone to form bonds with water.

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11
Q

What is the name of the enzyme that joins nucleotides to synthesise the new complementary strand duirng DNA replication and also proofreads each new DNA strand to make sure that there are no errors?

A

DNA polymerase

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12
Q

During DNA replication, the leading strand, runs [3’/5’ to 3’/5’] [towards/away from] the fork and is made [continuously/in small pieces called *Okazaki fragments*].

A

During DNA replication, the leading strand, runs 5’ to 3’ towards the fork and is made continuously.

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13
Q

During DNA replication, the lagging strand, runs [3’/5’ to 3’/5’] [towards/away from] the fork and is made [continuously/in small pieces called Okazaki fragments].

A

During DNA replication, the lagging strand runs 5’ to 3’ away from the fork and is made in small pieces called Okazaki fragments

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14
Q

What is the central dogma of genetics about (broadly speaking)?

A

The central dogma of molecular biology explains the flow of genetic information, from DNA to RNA, to make a functional product, a protein

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15
Q

What are the three major pathways of genetic information flow within the cell?

A
  1. Replication: information from one DNA molecule passes to another
  2. Transcription: information passes from DNA to RNA
  3. Translation: information passes from RNA to protein
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16
Q

________ __________ is the enzyme-mediated synthesis of a DNA molecule from an RNA template. The enzyme involved is called a ________ ___________.

A

Reverse transcription is the enzyme-mediated synthesis of a DNA molecule from an RNA template. The enzyme involved is called a reverse transcriptase.

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17
Q

What is the difference (from DNA) in the sugar structure that gives RNA its name?

A

RNA’s sugar, called ribose, has a hydroxyl group (-OH) attached to the 2’-carbon atom. DNA, on the other hand, is missing the O and has only a H attached (hence Deoxyribose).

18
Q

The additional oxygen atom in the RNA nucleotide makes it [more/less] reactive and [more/less] chemically stable than DNA.

A

The additional oxygen atom in the RNA nucleotide makes it more reactive and less chemically stable than DNA.

19
Q

Both DNA and RNA contain 2 purines; adenine and guanine (A and G). Cytosine is found in both DNA and RNA, however the pyrimidine ________ is found only in RNA. The sugar in RNA does not contain a phosphorus atom.

A

Both DNA and RNA contain 2 purines; adenine and guanine (A and G). Cytosine is found in both DNA and RNA, however the pyrimidine uracil is found only in RNA. The sugar in RNA does not contain a phosphorus atom.

20
Q

What are the three main types of RNA?

A
  1. Transfer (tRNA)
  2. Ribosomal (rRNA)
  3. Messenger (mRNA)
21
Q

What does transfer RNA (tRNA) do?

A

reads the code and carries the amino acid to be incorporated into the developing protein

22
Q

Describe the function of ribosomal RNA (rRNA)

A

Combines with protein to form a nucleoprotein called a ribosome

The ribosome serves as the site of and carries the enzymes necessary for protein synthesis.

The ribosome attaches itself to mRNA and provides the stabilising structure to hold all substances in position as the protein is synthesised

23
Q

What does messenger RNA (mRNA) do?

A

synthesised from a gene segment of DNA which contains the information on the primary sequence of amino acids in protein to be synthesised

The mRNA carries the code into the cytoplasm where protein synthesis can occur

24
Q

Define transcription. How does this differ from DNA replication?

A

Transcription is the synthesis of an RNA molecule from a DNA template.

In replication all the nucleotides in the DNA template are copied but in transcription only a single gene or a few genes are transcribed into RNA. Constant transcription of all genes is highly inefficient therefore individual genes are transcribed as their products are needed.

25
Q

What are the three main elements needed for transcription?

A
  1. A DNA template
  2. Ribonucleotide triphosphates to build a new RNA molecule
  3. Proteins needed for catalysing the synthesis of RNA
26
Q

What is the template strand in transcription?

A

The DNA template is a single strand of the DNA double helix (template strand) that is used to synthesise a complimentary and antiparallel RNA molecule.

27
Q

In the context of DNA transcription, what is a promoter?

A

The promoter is a DNA sequence to which proteins and enzymes bind that initiate transcription of a single RNA from the DNA downstream of it.

It indicates which of the two DNA strands is to be read as the template and the direction of transcription.

The promoter determines the transcription start site, the first nucleotide to be transcribed into RNA.

28
Q

What is the RNA coding region?

A

The RNA coding region is a sequence of DNA nucelotides that is copied into an RNA molecule.

29
Q

What is the terminator region of a DNA strand?

A

The terminator is a sequence of nucleotides that signals where transcription is to end.

30
Q

Define translation.

A

Translation is the second major step in gene expression, where the mRNA strand that has been transcribed from the DNA is used to assemble an amino acid sequence into proteins

31
Q

What are ribosomes and what role do they play in translation?

A

mRNA is translated into proteins on ribosomes. Ribosomes consist of proteins and RNA molecules with a large and small subunit. A ribosome attaches near the 5’ end of a mRNA strand and moves towards the 3’ end translating the codons as it goes. Synthesis begins at the amino acid end of the protein where the protein is elongated by the addition of new amino acids to the carboxyl end.

32
Q

What are the four stages of protein synthesis?

A
  1. tRNA charging
  2. Initiation
  3. Elongation
  4. Termination
33
Q

What is (1) tRNA charging? What is it also known as?

A

Amino acid activation (also known as aminoacylation or tRNA charging) refers to the attachment of an amino acid to its Transfer RNA (tRNA).

Amino acids are attached to specific tRNAs by aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases in a 2 step reaction that requires ATP.

34
Q

What is the (2) initiation stage of protein synthesis?

A

Initiation occurs when mRNA binds to the small subunit of the ribosome. The initiator tRNA binds to the mRNA through base pairing between the codon and anticodon, and the large ribosomal subunit joins to form the initiation complex.

The necessary components for protein synthesis are; mRNA, small and large subunits of the ribosome, intiation factors, initiator tRNA and GTP.

35
Q

What is involved in the (3) elongation phase of protein synthesis?

A

Elongation joins amino acids to create a polypeptide chain. Elogation requires the 70s complex, tRNA charged with their amino acids, elongation factors and GTP.

36
Q

What is the termination stage in protein synthesis?

A

Protein synthesis terminates when the ribosome reaches a termination codon. Proteins called release factors bind to the ribosome.

37
Q

What is a codon?

A

A codon is a series of 3 nucelotides ( a triplet) that encodes a specific amino acid residue in a polypeptide chain or for the termination of translation.

A total of 20 different amino acids can be translated.

The abundance in codons allows many amino acids to be encoded by more than one codon.

38
Q

What is the difference between chromosome number and copy number?

A

Chromosome number is a combination of how many chromosomes the organism has, multiplied by how many copies of the chromosome there are. So a human somatic cell will be diploid (2 copies) and there are 23 chromosome pairs, giving a chromosome number of 46.

chromosomes = # functional centromeres

Copy number refers to how many copies of the genome there are. So in a human somatic cell after the DNA has been replicated and before it has divided (mitosis), the copy number will be 4C because there are two copies of the two homologous chromosomes.

39
Q

What is a zygote?

A

A zygote is a eukaryotic cell formed by a fertilisation event between two gametes (g.e. egg and sperm).

40
Q

What is a bivalent?

A

A bivalent is one pair of chromosomes (sister chromatids) in a tetrad. A tetrad is the association of a pair of homologous chromosomes (4 sister chromatids) physically held together by at least one DNA crossover. This physical attachment allows for alignment and segregation of the homologous chromosomes in the first meiotic division.

41
Q
A