genomes and chromosomes Flashcards

1
Q

why are stomach microbes important?

A

the microbes found in the intestinal tract are important because they contain thousands more genes than are possessed in the entire human genome

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2
Q

what is the difference between vertical and horizontal gene transfer

A

vertical gene transfer refers to the passing of genetic information from parents to children whereas horizontal gene transfer refers to the transfer of genetic material between two fully developed microbes

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3
Q

what are structural genes and control sequences?

A

structural genes are genes that actually get transcribed to form fully functional pieces of RNA whereas control sequences are pieces of DNA that regulate the expression of structural genes

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4
Q

what is conjugation and why was it important in determining bacterial chromosome structure

A

conjugation is a form of horizontal gene transfer which requires cell to cell contact. since this process takes place over time by measuring how long it took for certain genes to be exchanged it was possible to map how close genes were relative to one another

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5
Q

what is recombination

A

recombination is when a transferred gene replaces the original gene from a cell showing new expression

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6
Q

what is the shape of bacterial chromosomes?

A

there are linear and circular chromosomes dependent upon the species under study`

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7
Q

what are the big differences between bacterial DNA and eukaryotic DNA

A

in eukaryotes there is a much larger genome consisting of many times more base-pairs than are found in prokaryotic organisms also there is much more viral and non-coding DNA incorporated into the human genome than there s in bacterial genomes

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8
Q

how much of human DNA is non-coding?

A

over 90%

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9
Q

what is the difference between enhancers and promoters

A

enhancers are regions of DNA that drive transcription of promoters and can be far away from the genes they regulate whereas promoters are right next door and activate coding regions

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10
Q

what is the term for RNA that is produced by a gene that stands alone

A

monocystronic

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11
Q

what is the term for when genes work together to produce RNA products?

A

operons- an operon though a group of genes is regulated by a single promoter region

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12
Q

a collection of genes and operons found at separate cites on a chromosome that regulate the same thing is known as a

A

regulon- a regulon also uses only one promoter region for activation

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13
Q

how do we know that dna is not parallel

A

because base pairing cannot occur in models where the two strands run parallel

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14
Q

what are purines?

A

nuleotides with bicyclic bases adenine and guanine

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15
Q

what are pyrimidines?

A

monocyclic base nucleotides thymine or cytosine

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16
Q

what is a nucleoid

A

a nucleoid is the area within bacterial cells that contains their DNA this area is kept free of ribosomes and is distributed throughout the nucleus

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17
Q

bacterial cells use histone like anchoring proteins to…

A

anchor DNA so it can be super coiled

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18
Q

how do we know that DNA coiling is a process independent of each separate coil structure

A

if a nick is created in one piece of coiled DNA only DNA associated with the same anchor protein will unwind

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19
Q

explain positive and negative supercoiling

A

positive super coiling is when DNA tries to coil in the same direction as it is wound this creates stress because the coils try to unwind thus causing over coiling. the DNA negative super coiling on the other hand relieves stress by twisting in the opposite direction the DNA just becomes more tightly wound.

20
Q

is it easier to separate negatively or positively super-coiled DNA

A

it is easier to separate negatively super-coiled DNA which is another reason it is used by most higher organisms (usually only organisms in harsh environments rely on positive super-coiling)

21
Q

what are topoisomerases

A

topoisomerases are enzymes which add or relieve stress in DNA group 1 enzymes are used to relieve stress whereas group 2 enzymes are used to add stress

22
Q

what is the notable difference between group one and group two topoisomerases?

A

group one topoisomerases have only a single sub unit where as group two enzymes are made up of multiple subunits

23
Q

how is DNA super coiling useful when coming up with drugs to combat bacterial pathogens?

A

many classes of drugs directly target the enzymes responsible for DNA coiling. for example quinolone antibiotics target group two topoisomerases to prevent cells from being able to coil DNA

24
Q

in which direction does DNA replication occur

A

always in the 5’ to 3’ direction

25
Q

what are the three steps of DNA replication

A

initiation- unwinding the DNA and inserting polymerases
elongation- addition of nucleotides to the new strand followed by strand proofreading
termination- DNA is replicated and supercoiling is reinstated

26
Q

how is bacterial DNA replication different from DNA replication in other organisms

A

since bacterial DNA is circular bacteria have a single origin and a single termination point for replication versus other organisms which may have many per chromosome

27
Q

it takes ecoli 40 minutes to copy its genome about how long does replication take

A

about 20 minutes many bacterium can divide even before it’s entire genome is done being copied

28
Q

how does replication initiation occur in bacterial cells

A

in bacterial cells there is a specific cite on each chromosome which acts as the origin of replication and is initiated by DNA polymerases. to prevent the cell from dividing to early there are two regulatory proteins DNAa which encourages replication and SEQa which discourages replication by bonding to the origin cite of DNA. SEQ bind to the origin cite right after DNA replication starts because during that period of time the DNA is unmethylated which causes SEQa to bond more readily. once methylation is fully achieved SEQa disassociates

29
Q

how does DNAa help to control replication of DNA?

A

DNAa bons to the origin point of replication to initiate the copying of the DNA as the cell grows the level of DNAa increases eventually leading to initiation of cell division

30
Q

explain how initiation begins

A

DNAa leads to strand separation allowing DNA helicase to bind and start unwinding the double helix. dna primer bonds to the unwound dna and lays down a short rna sequence where dna synthesis can begin. a sliding clamp protein then binds to the dna to keep dna polymerase from falling off the dna as new strands are synthesized then finally dna polymerase 3 binds and begins synthesis of a leading strand

31
Q

what is a replisome

A

a replisome is the combination of the primase helicases and DNA polymerases responsible for replication

32
Q

how is the lagging strand protected

A

single stranded binding protiens

33
Q

true or false replisomes move along the length of dna during replication

A

false replisomes remain stationary

34
Q

there are two functions of DNA polymerase three what are they

A

synthesis of a new strand of DNA and proofreading for incorrectly placed pairs via excess motility of nucleotides

35
Q

what is the function of DNA polymerase 1

A

DNA polymerase one comes back through after RNA segments are cleaves by RNase and synthesises DNA to replace the RNA strands that were removed. it also removes and resynthesises the first 5’ nucleotide it encounters

36
Q

what is the function of DNA ligase

A

DNA ligase goes through and creates phosphodiester bonds in the DNA backbone where unbonded RNA primers once existed

37
Q

DNA forms positive supercoils during replication how is stress on the DNA prevented?

A

DNA gyrase sits at the head of each strand and uncoils the positive super coils as they form

38
Q

what is tus (terminus utilization substance)

A

tus is a protein which bonds to DNA and acts as an antihelicase causing helicase to disassociate and the DNA to remain together this is how replication terminates

39
Q

what is a catenane

A

two interlocking molecular rings after replication this is the appearance plasmids take on. topoisomerase 4 a group two topoisomerase then comes in and resolves this structure

40
Q

plasmids are not chromosomes but small circular pieces of DNA found in prokaryotes and archea which generally code for only one gene how do they replicate?

A

generally plasmids replicate using the bacterial cell’s protiens and enzymes but can replicateeith bidirectionally or unidirectionaly via rolling cycle replication

41
Q

what are addiction modules

A

addiction modules are genes found on some plasmids which force cells to either keep the plasmid or die

42
Q

there are two ways that plasmids ensure that daughter cells retain copies of plasmids what are they

A

the first is that high copy number plasmids make many copies of themselves in order to ensure that by random chance all daughter cells will receive at least one copy low copy number plasmids make fairly few copies of the plasmid but have partitioning genes to ensure each daughter cell recieves a plasmid

43
Q

what is another way plasmids ensure their proliferation

A

some plasmids contain genes which are essential for a cell to survive in the environment thus loss of the plasmid leads to cell death

44
Q

why are plasmids essential to bacterial evolution

A

plasmids can be easily transferred from one cell to another making it easy for bacteria to transfer genes essential for survival. plasmids can also be absorbed from dead bacteria (transformation) or transferred via accidental uptake by bacteriaphages (transduction)

45
Q

introns are?

A

non-coding segments of eukaryotic genes

46
Q

what are restriction endonucleases?

A

they are proteins found in bacteria used to clip the DNA of foreign bodies