Structure of Genome Part 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Rate of denaturation

A
  • Not concentration dependent

- rapid

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2
Q

Rate of renaturation

A
  • concentration dependent
  • ssDNA molecules must find each other in solution
  • more of them (more concentrated), easier to find other molecules and reanneal
  • The Law of Mass Action applies.
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3
Q

Why must DNA be reduced to smaller fragments for renaturation?

A

If the fragments are too large, they will get tangled and won’t be able to renature

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4
Q

DNA can be denatured by

A
  • heat
  • alkali
  • acid
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5
Q

if one quickly removes the heat or neutralizes the DNA solution

A
  • DNA will collapse into a compact random coil in which some bases are hydrogen bonded
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6
Q

to prevent renaturation

A
  • boil to denature

- immerse on ice

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7
Q

if DNA slowly cooled

A
  • the two single strands can reform a paired double helical model
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8
Q

the process requires a

A
  • nucleation event

- slow step

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9
Q

nucleation

A
  • regions of complementary bases on opposite strands find each other and some base pairing occurs
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10
Q

after nucleation

A
  • rest of DNA molecule rapidly renatures if strands are complementary
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11
Q

zipping up

A
  • when nucleation is correct

- unstable hybrids zip up to form stable hybrids

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12
Q

productive nucleation

A
  • occurs because base pairs are complementary
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13
Q

nonproductive nucleation

A
  • will go no further and basepairs will fall apart

- rest of DNA will not complement

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14
Q

Renaturation will never be complete

A
  1. ) Random shearing leaves some regions unpaired
  2. ) As renaturation progresses, the concentration of single-stranded molecules decreases and the rate of renaturation drops
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15
Q

why we use parameters for half of the molecules

A
  • we do not use parameters for all of the molecules to renature because it will never run to completion
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16
Q

stringency

A
  • must be correct to prevent tangles of random coils that could form in even relatively short segments of DNA
17
Q

if stringency too low

A
  • nonspecific hybridization can occur.
18
Q

solution hybridization

A
  • kinetics of hybridization are much easier to understand if all molecules are free in solution
19
Q

blot hybridization

A

BUT

- blot is more convenient and makes possible some experiments that could not be done by solution hybridization

20
Q

Nucleic acid blotting hybridization named for

A
  • the blotted molecule

- not the probe

21
Q

Northern blots

A
  • RNA blots
22
Q

Southern blots

A
  • DNA blots