Module 2 Section 3 - Polynucleotides And DNA Flashcards

1
Q

Nucleotides join together to form

A

Polynucleotides

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2
Q

Where do nucleotides join up to make polynucleotide bonds

A

They join up between the phosphate group of one nucleotide and the sugar of another nucleotide

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3
Q

What type of reaction joins nucleotides together to make polynucleotides

A

Condensation reaction

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4
Q

What is the bond called between nucleotides in a polynucleotide

A

A phosphodiester bond

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5
Q

What does the phosphodiester bond consist of

A

The phosphate group and two ester bonds

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6
Q

What is the sugar-phosphate backbone

A

The chain of sugars and phosphates

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7
Q

How are polynucleotides broken down to nucleotides

A

by breaking the phosphodiester bonds using hydrolysis reaction

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8
Q

What do two polynucleotide strands join together to form

A

A double helix

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9
Q

How are DNA polynucleotide strands joined together by

A

Hydrogen bonding between bases

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10
Q

What is complementary base pairing

A

Each base can only join with one particular partner

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11
Q

What does adenine always pair with

A

Thymine

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12
Q

What does cytosine always join with

A

Guanine

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13
Q

A purine always…..

A

Pairs with a pyrimidine

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14
Q

How many hydrogen bonds are formed between A and T

A

2 hydrogen bonds

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15
Q

How many hydrogen bonds form between C and G

A

3 hydrogen bonds

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16
Q

What twists to form the DNA double helix

A

Two antiparallel polynucleotide strands

17
Q

What does DNA do before cell division

A

It copies itself

18
Q

What enzyme breaks the hydrogen bonds between the two polynucleotide DNA strands

A

Helicase

19
Q

What happens to the helix after Helicase breaks hydrogen bonds

A

The helix unzips to form two single strands

20
Q

What acts as a template for a new strand

A

Each original single strand

21
Q

What do the free floating DNA nucleotides join to

A

The exposed bases on each original strand

22
Q

the DNA nucleotides join to the exposed bases on each original template strand by….

A

Complementary base pairing. A with T, C with G

23
Q

How are nucleotides of the new strand joined together by

A

The enzyme polymerase

24
Q

What does the DNA polymerase form

A

Sugar phosphate backbone

25
Q

Why is DNA replication called semi-conservative replication

A

Because half of the strands in each new DNA molecule are from the original piece of DNA

26
Q

Why does DNA replication need to be accurate

A

Because it needs to make sure genetic information is conserved each time DNA is replicated

27
Q

What is a mutation

A

A change to the DNA base sequence

28
Q

How often do mutations occur

A

Randomly and Spontaneous

29
Q

Do mutations always have an effect

A

Not always however they can alter the sequence of amino acids in a protein which causes an abnormal protein to be produced which may or may not function better than the normal.