ch14: DNA structure and function Flashcards

1
Q

structure of DNA

A

nucleic acid (polymer of nucleotides)
nucleotide (5-carbon sugar; either deoxyribose or ribose)
phosphate group
nitrogenous base (A,G,C,T/U)

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2
Q

which nitrogenous bases are pyrimidines (one ring)

A

cytosine, thymine and uracil

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3
Q

which nitrogenous bases are purines (two rings)

A

adenine and guanine

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4
Q

what is a primer

A

a short nucleic acid sequence that provides a starting point for DNA synthesis

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5
Q

DNA strand structure is a

A

polymer of nucelotides

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6
Q

what is a phosphodiester backbone

A

a repeating sugar-phosphate unit that is joined by a phosphodiester bond

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7
Q

where is the base connected on the 5-carbon sugar

A

1’ sugar

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8
Q

chain of nucleotides has an orientation of

A

5’-to-3’ (fifth carbon connected to the third carbon by phosphodiester bond)

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9
Q

double helix

A
  • 2 anti-parallel strands (run in opposite directions)
  • bases protrude into center held together by base pairing (hydrogen bonds)
  • major and minor grooves (DNA-interacting proteins can fit in these grooves to “read” specific DNA sequences)
  • bases stuck on top of each other
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10
Q

G forms — bonds withs C

A

3 hydrogen

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11
Q

A forms —- bonds with T

A

2 hydrogen

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12
Q

equal bond distances gives

A

consistent diameter of helix

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13
Q

Why do you think it’s
important that the
phosphodiester bonds in
the DNA backbone are
covalent (strong) bonds,
and the bonds between the
bases are hydrogen (weak)
bonds?

A

if you break a phosphodiester bond, it damages the DNA, which causes mutations and all other kinds of problems. but you need those weak hydrogen bonds so that DNA mechanisms can break those bonds in order to copy the DNA into RNA for replication

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14
Q

what does “complementarity of bases” mean

A

each strand is a template for the opposite base

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15
Q

requirements of DNA replication

A
  • something to copy (parental DNA strand)
  • something to do the copying (enzymes; DNA polymerase and other enzymes)
  • building blocks to make the copy (nucleotide triphosphates)
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16
Q

process of DNA replication

A

1) initiation: beginning of replication
2) elongation: new strands of DNA are synthesized by DNA polymerase
3) termination: replication is terminated

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17
Q

DNA is copied by

A

DNA polymerase

18
Q

how is DNA copied by DNA polymerase (4)

A

-it matches existing DNA bases with complementary nucleotides and links them
-adds new bases to the 3’ end of the existing strand
-synthesizes in 5’-to-3’ direction
-requires a primer (usually RNA)

19
Q

prokaryotic replication (4)

A

-single circular molecule of DNA
-replication begins at one origin of replication
-helicase unwinds DNA
-DNA replication proceeds in both directions around the chromosome

20
Q

helicase

A

clamp onto and unwind DNA

21
Q

DNA shape in prokaryotes and eukaryotes

A

prokaryotes: in circular form
eukaryotes: wrapped around histones

22
Q

supercoiling

A

unwinding DNA in one area will increase tension in the rest of the strand (one complete helical turn=one supercoil)

23
Q

unwinding DNA causes

A

torsional strain

24
Q

topoisomerase

A

unwinds DNA to prevent supercoiling (one called DNA gyrase is used in replication)

25
Q

replication is

A

semidiscontinous (unwinds a little then lets go to prevent too much tension)

26
Q

partial opening of helix forms

A

replication forks

27
Q

DNA primase

A

RNA polymerase that makes RNA primer (RNA will later be removed and replaced with DNA)

28
Q

DNA polymerase III

A

main replication enzyme

29
Q

DNA polymerase I

A

has 5’-to3’ exonuclase activity (acts on lagging strand to remove primers and replace them with DNA)

30
Q

DNA polymerase II

A

involved in DNA repair processes

31
Q

leading strand

A

-synthesized continuously from a single initial primer
-strand extended by DNA polymerase III

32
Q

processivity

A

subunit of DNA polymerase III forms “sliding clamp” to keep it attached to the DNA template

33
Q

clamp loader

A

loads clamp onto DNA

34
Q

DNA primase

A

produces an RNA primer for each okazaki fragment

35
Q

DNA polymerase III

A

synthesizes DNA from each RNA primer

36
Q

DNA polymerase I

A

removes all RNA primers and replaces them with DNA

37
Q

DNA ligase

A

seals the DNA backbone

38
Q

okazaki fragments

A

short sections of DNA formed at the time of discontinuous synthesis of the lagging strand during replication of DNA; allows for the synthesis of both the daughter strands required for cell division

39
Q

primose

A

all the proteins involved in DNA synthesis (primase, helicase, clamp loader)

40
Q

where does termination of replication happen

A

occurs at a specific site roughtly opposite of the origin of replication

41
Q

what does termination of replication do

A

cuts two daughter molecules that are intertwined like a ring; the chromosomes are unlinked by DNA gyrase