Unit 2 - 7. DNA Structure & Replication Flashcards

1
Q

Properties of DNA that make it the Ideal Genetic Material

A
  1. Storage of Genetic Information
  2. Replication
  3. Expression of Genetic Information
  4. Mutability
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2
Q

Frederick Griffith (1928)

A
  • injected pneumococci bacteria into mice
  • observed transformation
  • heredity information in the heat-killed pathogenic strain was transferred to live, nonpathogenic strain, transforming the nonpathogenic strain into pathogenic cells which caused the mice to die
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3
Q

Avery, McLead, and McCarty (1944)

A
  • identified the transforming substance as DNA

- used protease and DNase in an experiment with mice

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4
Q

Hershey and Chase (1952)

A
  • provided more conclusive evidence that DNA was the genetic material
  • ran experiments on bacteriophages (a virus that infects bacteria and transfers genetic information to them, they consist of DNA surrounded by a protein coat)
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5
Q

Watson and Crick (1955)

A
  • discovered DNA structure

- based their model on available information from previous studies

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6
Q

Previous Studies Watson and Crick used:

A
  1. X-rays of pure DNA crystals (Maurice Wilkins, Linus Pauling, Rosalind Franklin)
  2. Data from Chargoff on chemical composition of DNA: A=T; C=G
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7
Q

Major features of Watson and Crick model

A
  1. DNA is composed of two anti-parallel nucleotide chains
  2. the 2 chains are coiled around a central axis to form a helix
  3. bases on interior of helix w. sugar-phosphate backbone on exterior
  4. the 2 chains are held together by hydrogen bonds between complementary bases in opposite chains
  5. the sequences of bases along the 2 strands are complementary - i.e. the sequence of bases on the 2nd strand is determined by the 1st strand
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8
Q

Meselson and Stahl (1958)

A
  • found evidence to support semi-conductive method
  • Grew E.Coli in Nitrogen 15 medium, then placed them in Nitrogen 14
  • The DNA was sequenced buy equilibrium centrifugation in a density gradient
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9
Q

Nucleoside vs. Nucleotide

A
Nucleoside = nitrogenous base + sugar
Nucleotide = nitrogenous base + sugar + phosphate
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10
Q

DNA vs. RNA

A

DNA:

  • double stranded
  • A=T, G=C
  • found/synthesized in the Nucleus
  • storage of genetic information in majority of living organisms

RNA:

  • single stranded
  • A =U, G=C
  • found/synthesized in Ribosome/cytoplasm
  • stores genetic information for certain viruses
  • transfers genetic info from nucleus to cytoplasm where proteins are made
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11
Q

Purines

A
  • 2 rings

- Adenine & Guanine

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12
Q

Pyrimidine

A
  • 1 ring

- Cytosine, Thymine, and Uracil

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13
Q

Unique/Single Copy DNA

A
  • DNA whose nucleotide sequences is represented only once in the haploid genome
  • occurs in very long stretches
  • comprises 50-60% of total DNA
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14
Q

Moderately Repetitive DNA

A
  • sequence repeated 100-1000 times in genome
  • constitutes 25-40% of genome
  • contains genes coding for rRNA and histones
  • some can be “junk” DNA (no function)
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15
Q

Highly repetitive DNA

A
  • short sequences (5-10 bp) repeated thousands/millions of times in the genome
  • 10-15% on human DNA
  • highly localized in specific sites of the chromosomes (centromeres, telomers)
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16
Q

Semi-conservative

A
  • DNA replicates by separation of the two strands

- each functioning as template for new strand (complimentary)

17
Q

DNA Synthesis Requires

A
  1. DNA
  2. dATP, dGTP, dTTP, dCTP (deoxynucleotide triphosphates
  3. DNA polymerase enzymes + additional enzymes (helicase, ss binding protein, primase, exonuclease, ligase)
  4. Primer
18
Q

Steps in DNA Replication

A
  1. Initiation
  2. Elongation
  3. Termination
19
Q

Initiation

A
  • starts at replication fork / origin of replication
  • DNA helicase unwinds by breaking hydrogen bonds
  • single-stranded binding protein keeps strands apart
20
Q

Elongation

A
  • RNA primase lays down RNA primer
  • DNA polymerase recognizes primer and adds dNTPs (Reads 3’-5’; Builds 5’-3’)
  • lagging strand, leading strand, okazaki fragments
  • DNA polymerase proof reads
  • Exonuclease removes mismatched bases
21
Q

Termination

A
  • synthesis ends when DNA polymerase reaches end of strand

- DNA ligase connects last Okazaki fragments