module 10 Flashcards

1
Q

what are the physiological roles of nucleotides?

A

-energy currency (ATP)
-signaling molecules (cAMP)
-enzyme co-factors (NAD, FAD)
-building blocks of nucleic acids

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2
Q

what are the physiological roles of nucleic acids?

A

-genetic information (DNA, RNA)
-all stages of protein synthesis (DNA, mRNA, tRNA, rRNA)

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3
Q

what are the structural features of nucleotides?

A

all share three components:
-ribose sugar (ribose or deoxyribose)
-nitrogenous base (purine or pyrimidine)
-phosphate(s)

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4
Q

what is ribose and deoxyribose?

A

-all nucleotides contain a ribose backbone
-ribose within nucleotides is in a cyclized form (b-D-ribofuranose)
-for DNA, 2’ carbon of the ribose is in the deoxy form
-RNA contain ribose; DNA contains deoxyribose

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5
Q

what are nitrogenous bases?

A

-two families; purines (two ring system) and pyrimidines (single ring)
-nitrogenous bases are planar and relatively non-polar

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6
Q

what are the five standard nitrogenous bases?

A

-adenine, guanine and cytosine are in both RNA and DNA
-the fourth base differs; DNA has thymine and RNA has uracil

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7
Q

how to nitrogenous bases link to ribose?

A

-through N-glycosidic bonds
-all bases link to C1 of the sugar
-in purines, N bond is to N9 of base
-in pyrimidines, N bond is to N1 of base

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8
Q

what is nucleotides vs nucleosides?

A

-nucleotides and nucleosides differ in whether they are phosphorylated at the C5 position
-nucleotides have 1-3 phosphorylates on the 5’ position: one(NMP), two (NDP), three (NTP)
-nucleotides are phosphorylated nucleosides

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9
Q

what is an alternative method for naming nucleotides?

A

-to specify the number and position of the phosphoryl groups
-for ex: adenosine 5’-triphosphate (ATP) rather than adenylate

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10
Q

what is the nomenclature of nucleotides and nucleosides?

A
  1. which nitrogenous base is present (base name)
  2. whether the sugar is ribose or deoxyribose (deoxy prefix)
  3. whether there are phosphoryl group (suffix of osine from nucleosides, ylate for nucleotides)
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11
Q

what are the two physiological roles of nucleotides?

A

-energy transfer
-signal transduction

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12
Q

what is energy transfer of nucleotides?

A

-anhydride linkages in ATP are high energy bonds
-the energy released from hydrolysis of these bonds drives many biochemical reactions

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13
Q

what is signal transduction of nucleotides?

A

-cyclic AMP, formed from ATP in a reaction catalyzed by adenylyl cyclase
-common intracellular messenger produced in response to hormones

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14
Q

what bonds join nucleotides in nucleic acids?

A

-nucleotides form linear nucleic strands through 3’-5’ phosphodiester linkages
-these are identical in DNA and RNA
-identical, independent of the nucleotides being joined
-the strand of sugar linked by phosphodiester bridges is called the backbone of nucleic acid

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15
Q

what is the sequence information within nucleic acids?

A

-it is the sequence of bases that uniquely characterizes a nucleic acid
-nucleic acid strands have a direction and their sequence are presented 5’->3’
-sequence of bases is a form of linear information (blueprint)

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16
Q

what is the structure of ribonucleic acid (RNA)? how does it differ from DNA?

A

differs from DNA in that:
-RNA contains ribose rather than deoxyribose
-RNA contains uracil rather than thymine

-RNA is single-stranded but can adopt complex 3-dimentional structures

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17
Q

what is rRNA?

A

ribosomal RNA
-an integral part of ribosome
-80% of RNA in cells

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18
Q

what is tRNA?

A

transfer RNA
-carry activated amino acids to ribosome for protein synthesis (small molecules 73-95 nucleotides long)

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19
Q

what is mRNA?

A

messenger RNA
-code for proteins
-contains triplet codons that specify the amino acid sequence of a protein

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20
Q

what is miRNA?

A

micro RNA
-are short oligonucleotides (22-24 nts in length)
-function in transcriptional and post-translational regulation of gene expression

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21
Q

what is the difference in stability between RNA and DNA?

A

-the 2’ hydroxyl group of RNA increases its susceptibility to base hydrolysis at the phosphodiester linkage (breaks down easier)
-the greater stability of DNA is consistent with its role as a long term information storage molecule

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22
Q

who discovered the double helix?

A

-james watson and francis crick postulated the double helix structure of DNA in 1953
-this model explained all the known experimental data and predicted the mechanism for storing and replication the genetic information

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23
Q

who actually discovered the double helix?

A

-rosalind franklin and maurice wilkins obtained the X-ray diffraction data that showed that DNA is a helix
-their efforts set the stage for watson and crick

24
Q

what is the basic of double helix?

A

-two helical DNA strands coiled around a common axis forming a right-handed double helix
-strands run in opposite directions and complimentary to eachother
-sugar-phosphate backbones are on the outside of the helix, nitrogenous bases are on the inside
-base pairs are perpendicular to helix axis
-Watson-crick base pairing matches a purine with a pyrimidine to give a constant helix diameter

25
Q

what is the base pairing in the double helix?

A

-adenine (A) base pairs with thymine (T)
-guanine (G) base pairs with cytosine (C)
-the specificity of Watson-Crick base pairing is largely determined by the hydrogen bonding groups of the nitrogenous bases
-the A-T and G-C hydrogen bonded pairs are planar and have the same dimensions

26
Q

what is chargaff’s rule?

A

A+G=T+C
-number of purines equals the number of pyrimidines in duplex DNA

27
Q

what are the weak forces that stabilize the double helix?

A

-hydrophobic effects
-stacking interactions
-hydrogen bonds
-charge-charge interactions

28
Q

what are the hydrophobic effects and stacking interactions in the double helix?

A

-hydrophobic effects; burying the purine and pyrimidine rings in the interior of the helix
-stacking interactions: stacked base pairs form van der waals contacts

29
Q

what are the hydrogen bonds and charge-charge interactions in the double helix?

A

-hydrogen bonds; hydrogen bonding between base pairs
-charge-charge interactions; electrostatic repulsion of negatively charge phosphate groups is decrease by cations (ex; Mg2+) and cationic proteins

30
Q

are G-C stronger or A-T?

A

-G-C; more stable because it has 3-H bonds
-A-T only has 2

31
Q

many proteins bind DNA in a ____________

A

sequence-specific fashion (restriction enzymes, transcription factors)

32
Q

what are the major and minor groups in double helix?

A

-two grooves of unequal width (and depth): major and minor
-within each groove, base pairs are exposed and are accessible to interactions with other molecules
-DNA-binding proteins can use these interactions to “read” a specific sequence

33
Q

what is DNA fingerprinting?

A

-treating DNA from different individuals with restriction enzymes will break DNA into pieces
-due to differences in genome sequences, DNA from different people will break down into a different number of fragments and fragments of different sizes
-highly variable regions give restriction fragments that are as unique as fingerprints and can be used to identify individuals in a large population
-restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLP)

34
Q

how are restriction endonucleases used as a defense?

A

-bacterial defense mechanism against viral invasion
-host cells protect their own DNA by covalent modification of bases at the restriction site (ex: methylation)

35
Q

what are restriction endonucleases? and restriction enzymes?

A

-recognize and cleave specific DNA sequences

-restriction enzymes cut at palindrome sequences
-names of restriction enzymes reflects origins
-restriction enzymes can be used as “molecular scissors” for manipulation of DNA

36
Q

what are complimentary strands in duplex DNA?

A

-duplex DNA contains two complimentary, anti-parallel strands
-because the strands are complimentary, the sequence of one strand determines the sequence of the other strand

37
Q

how is DNA a carrier of genetic information?

A

-the complimentary nature of the strands is important for replication and repair
-as the nucleotide sequence of one strand determines the sequence of the other, each strand can be used as a template to produce the other
-the resulting two DNA duplexes will be identical

38
Q

what is denaturation and annealing of DNA?

A

-denaturation: complete separation of double-stranded DNA by heat or chemical agents (cooperative process, once starts whole thing)
-annealing: reforming the double-stranded helix from single strands

-melting point (Tm), temperature at which half the DNA has become single stranded
-melting temps reflect the sequence compositions: the higher the GC content, the higher the Tm

39
Q

what is the synthesis of nucleic acid?

A

-DNA and RNA polymerases are the primary enzymes for synthesizing nucleic acid
-nucleotide triphosphate are the substrates for synthesis
-all polymerase synthesize nucleic acids in the 5’ to 3’ direction
-incoming residues are added to the 3’ end of the growing strand
-incoming residues are selected to be complimentary to the template strand

40
Q

what is polymerase chain reaction (PCR)?

A

-takes advantage of the ability for each DNA strand to serve as a template for production of a complimentary strand
-uses heat-stable enzymes to make new DNA
-allows for exponential amplification of short regions of DNA very quickly
-PCR revolutionized molecular biology, diagnostics and forensics
-discovered by Kary Mullis and resulted in a nobel prize

41
Q

why are is packaging of eukaryotic DNA more ordered?

A

-the amount of eukaryotic DNA necessitates its packaging into higher order structures
-at first level of DNA packing involves formation of nucleosomes
-nucleosome “beads” are DNA-histone complexes on a “string” of double-stranded DNA

42
Q

what are histones?

A

-DNA packaging proteins
-highly conserved and positively charged
-are reversibly modified to regulate their interaction with DNA

43
Q

what are the five histone proteins?

A

H1 (not in core), H2A, H2B, H3, H4
-nucleosome composed of two molecules of each H2A, H2B, H3, H4 and 146 base pairs of DNA
-H1 binds the region of linker DNA

44
Q

what is a gene? what has many chromosomes?

A

-genes are contained within the chromosomes
-viruses and bacteria have single chromosome
-eukaryotes have multiple chromosomes

45
Q

what is the basic of genetic information?

A

-a gene is a segment of DNA containing the information for production of a functional biological product (like a protein)
-size of a gene may be estimated from the size of corresponding protein

3 nucleotides=1 codon=1 amino acid

46
Q

what is bacterial genome?

A

-millions of base pairs
-closed, circular genome
-no internal interruptions (introns)
-plasmids

47
Q

bacteria may have additional genetic info in the form of ___________

A

PLASMIDS
-non-chromosomal DNA
-many plasmids encode information for resistance to antibiotics
-plasmids may be isolated and manipulated (produce insulin)

48
Q

how does eukaryotic genome differ in organisms?

A

-billions of nucleotides divided among numerous chromosomes
-different organisms have different number of chromosomes
-each chromosome has a characteristic set of genes

chromosomes are linear, which presents a problem for replicating the ends of chromosomes
-ends of chromosomes containing repeating sequences called telomeres (dont code for anything)

49
Q

what is special about eukaryotic genome?

A

-genes interrupted by non-coding regions: introns
-some organelles may contain additional DNA distinct from that of the nucleus: mitochondria and chloroplasts (used to be independent organisms)

50
Q

what are introns and exons?

A

-most eukaryotic genes interrupted by non-coding intervening sequences (introns)
-exons contain protein-coding information
-introns vary in size, number and position
-introns removed from mRNA prior to translation

51
Q

what is a functional advantage of introns?

A

-multiple mRNAs of different sequences can be generated from a single gene

52
Q

what is epigenetics?

A

-refers to functionally relevant changes to the genome that do not involve c change in the nucleotide sequence
-epigenetic changes can alter patterns of gene expression (and associated phenotypes) without altering the underlying DNA sequence (ex: mice and smell)

53
Q

what does conventional genetics suggest?

A

-suggests individuals inherit genetic material which they pass to their offspring; that we are carriers rather than editors of genetic info
-in response to environmental influences, our genetic material can be covalently modified
-such modifications include methylation of cytosine residues
-these modifications of DNA can be heritable (passed to offspring)

54
Q

what is molecular biology and the modern world?

A

-comparing genomes from different species, as well as individuals from within a species, can provide insight into phenotypic differences
-for example, genome sequencing of wolves and dog revealed sequence differences resembling william’s syndrome
-genomic approaches enable better prediction, understanding and treatment of disease (personalized medicine)

55
Q

genetic manipulation also allows for creation of __________________

A

novel organisms with desirable traits
-GMO crops
-Low fat pigs
-glow-in-the dark pets