Module 1 - DNA Structure Flashcards

1
Q

Why is DNA important>

A

Vital for all living things
Hold instructions for an organisms development, survival and reproduction
Long term storage = very stable

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2
Q

Role of genes in cell

A
  • Units of biological info
  • Units of inheritence
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3
Q

Nucelotide Structure

A
  • DNA Polymer made up of nuleotides
  • sugar = 2’ deoxyribose
  • 3 phospahte groups: furthest from sugar is gamma, middle is beta, closest to sugar is alpha
  • base = Adenine, Thymine, Guanine, Cytosine
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4
Q

Bases

A

Purine - 2 rings = A & G
Pyrimadine - 1 ring = T & C
Base attached to sugar via B-N-glycosidic bond

Total number of purines is equal to number of pyrimadines (CHARGAFF’s Rule)

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5
Q

Names of 4 nucleotides

A

2’-deoxyadenosine 5’-triphosphate (dATP)
2’-deoxyguanosine 5’-triphosphate (dGTP)
2’-deoxycytidine 5’-triphosphate (dCTP)
2’-deoxythymidine 5’-triphosphate (dTTP)

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6
Q

Names of 4 nucleotides

A

2’-deoxyadenosine 5’-triphosphate (dATP)
2’-deoxyguanosine 5’-triphosphate (dGTP)
2’-deoxycytidine 5’-triphosphate (dCTP)
2’-deoxythymidine 5’-triphosphate (dTTP)

can be made synthetically via enzymes

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7
Q

what type of bond joins nucelotides

A

phosphodiester bond

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8
Q

direction of DNA

A

5’ -> 3’
5’ P terminus to 3’ OH terminus

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9
Q

Who discovered DNA

A

James watson & Francis Crick in 1953
Based on research by Rosalind Franklin

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10
Q

Structure of DNA double helix

A

Has sugar-phosphate backbone

In anti parallel orientation (5’ to 3’, other side upside down)

Major minor grooves

Held together by hydrogen bonds between base pairs (GC = 3 AT = 2)
really easy to take apart and put back together

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11
Q

Complementary Base Pairing

A

AT 2 H bonds (purines)
GC 3 H bonds (pyrimadines)

explains chargaff’s rule

in humans, GC content is 40.3%
different organisms have different proportions of GC and AT
(probably through evolutionary needs)

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12
Q

Three types of DNA helix

A

A-DNA = large (narrow,deep) major groove, small (wide, shallow) minor groove.
11 base pairs per turn

B-DNA = small (wide, deep) major groove, large (narrow, shallow) minor groove (more common)
Both right handed
10 base pairs per turn

Z-DNA = Left handed
No distinct major and minor groove tbh
Flat major groove
Narrow, deep minor groove
12 base pairs per turn

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13
Q

Functions of types of DNA

A

B = common most predominent
A - rare, formed when not enough water around
Z - found naturally with B-DNA but only in certain regions within the strands, biologically active, but function unclear

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14
Q

What is a gene

A

Segment of DNA molecule
seperated by intergenic DNA
Contiains biolofical info

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15
Q

Units to measure length of DNA

A

Base pairs
BP
1000bp = 1kilobase (kb)
1000kb = 1 megabase (Mb)
6400 Mb diploid human genome
3200 Mb haploid human genome

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16
Q

How long is a gene

A

Shortest genes = 100bp (tRNAs)
Longest genes - 2,400,000 bp = codes for human muscle protein dystrophin

DOESN’t contain 24,000 times more biological information
because genes are discontinuous

17
Q

What does it mean when we say genes are discontinuous

A

Split into exons - contain info to make protein
Split into introns

18
Q

What does it mean when we say genes are discontinuous

A

Split into exons - contain info to make protein
Split into intron - info not needed to make protein

Avg human gene contains 8 introns and 9 exons
Mean intron length = 3365 bp
Mean exon length = 145 bp
so intron can make up to 90% of total length

19
Q

Gene expressions

A

gene
(transcription)
RNA -> sometimes the final product and not further translated
(translation)
protein

20
Q

Functions of proteins

A

Structural - collagen, keratin
Motor - Myosin, dynein
Catalytic (enzymes) hexokinase, DNA Polymerase
Transport - hemoglobin, serum albumin
Storage - ovalbumin ferritin
Protective - immunoglobulins, thrombin
Regulatory - insulin, somatostatin

21
Q

what are the functional end products of gene expression

A

proteins & RNAs

22
Q

proportions of RNAtypes

A

4% coding RNA = mRNA
96% non coding RNA = e.g. rRNA etc.
still being discovered

23
Q

Simple multi gene family

A

all the genes are identical
these are when the gene product is needed in large amounts
e.g. ribosomal RNA genes

24
Q

complex multigene family

A

genes not identical but similar
code for similar proteins
provides proteins w/ slightly diff functions = increased organismal complexity
e.g. human globin genes

25
Q

human globin gene as complex multigene families

A

form two families:
alpha-globin gene chromosome 16 (3 types)
beta globin gene chromosome 11(5 types)

they’re expressed at different stages of development (remember Hb of higher O2 affinity needed at fetus stage - so slightly diff protein made)

26
Q

how do genes in multigene families arise

A

Gene duplication
during evolution - genes duplicate - gradually change - therefore slightly diff functions

usually the more time that’s passed, the more differences in gene duplication

27
Q

what is the molecular clock

A

the rate of which a gene changes
can be used to wokr out when a pair of genes were formed by duplication (estimate)

more of a difference in the sequence after gene duplication = more time has passed

28
Q

example of gene evolutionary tree

A

see the one for globins

29
Q

what is a pseudogene

A

genes without a function
- mutated to a point where the nucleotide sequence makes no sense
loses funciton

e.g. in the alpha globin family = 3 pseudogenes
beta globin = 1 pseudogene
so they genes are still present in sequence, but have no more function

30
Q

what is the beta-N- glycosidic bond

A

linkage between base and sugar of nucleotide