Chapter 15 DNA Synthesis and Repair Flashcards

1
Q

semiconservative replication

A

parental strand separate and each serves as a template for a new daughter strand

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2
Q

conservative replication

A

the bases of both strands temporarily turned out from the nucleus, allowing for both strands to be copied, resulting in a completely identical double helix that is identical to the parent

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3
Q

dispersive replicastion

A

parental double helix was cut at regular intervals and synthesize in short sections then the daughter strands would be a mix of old and new DNA segments.

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4
Q

origin of replication

A

where the initial replication bubble forms

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5
Q

replication fork

A

Y shaped region where the parental DNA is separated into single strands and copied

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6
Q

DNA helicase

A

opens the double helix by breaking the hydrogen bonds between the base pairs

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7
Q

DNA primase

A

synthesizes the RNA primer

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8
Q

Single Strand DNA binding proteins

A

stabilize the single strand to prevents them from snapping back into a double helix

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9
Q

topoisomerase

A

cuts and unwinds the double helix to relieve the twisting forces during replication

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10
Q

DNA polymerase

A

synthesizes leading strand in the 5’ to 3’ direction

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11
Q

sliding clamp

A

hold DNA polymerase in place during strand extension

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12
Q

purpose of the RNA primer in DNA replication

A

DNA polymerase only works in the 5’ to 3’ direction but needs a 3’ end to extend from, RNA strand about 12 base pairs long will form to complement a strand with an OH at the end for the polymerase to bind to

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13
Q

primase

A

a type of RNA polymerase that synthesizes the RNA primer

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14
Q

discontinuous replication hypothesis

A

the DNA polyermase can only synthesize bases in the 5’ to 3’ direction, so primase synthesizes primers to which polymerase can connect too

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15
Q

DNA ligase

A

catalyzes the formation of phosphodiester bonds between fragments, essentially forming the phosphate backbone and sealing up the double helices.

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16
Q

replisome

A

a macromolecular machine made up of the proteins involved in replication

17
Q

telomere

A

the region at the end of the eukaryotic chromosome

18
Q

why is it difficult to replicate the end of a chromosome

A

somatic cells are unable to use the final RNA primer to replicate the end of the lagging strand

19
Q

telomersase

A

an enzyme that carries a sequence of the same repeating bases and attached to the overhanging section of unreplicated DNA. and allows polymerase to synthesize to the end of the DNA, keeping the telomeres from shortening.

20
Q

why do basticerial cells not need telomerase?

A

the chromosome in bacteria are a circle, there is to “end” that a primer falls short of and there is onely 1 replication point

21
Q

how does polymerase correct for mistakes

A

polymerase can proof read and remove mismatched pairs because they have a recodnizable shape

22
Q

nucleotide excision repair

A

used to remove damaged DNA, like the thymine dimers the result from UV light exposure