DNA as Genetic Material Flashcards

1
Q

1) Give 2 pieces of evidence (experiments) that DNA is responsible for the transmission of genetic information

A
  • Griffith pneumoccocus experiment

- Hershey-chase experiment

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2
Q

2) Describe the Griffith pneumoccocus experiment involving the mice

A
  • Two strains of S.pneumoniae: S and R strains
  • Mice injected with S strain die, R strain mice live
  • When S strain was heat treated (to kill lethal component), the mice survived
  • When heat treated S strain was mixed with non-lethal R strain, the mouse died
  • so, there is a living lethal component of S strain, surviving the heat which the R strain has reactivated
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3
Q

3) After the mice experiments, which further experiments were conducted to make conclusions concerning DNA?

A
  • Cytosol of heat killed S strain pneumoniae isolated
  • Mixed with DNAase (inhibit DNA) -> mouse lives
  • Mixed with trypsin (removes protein) -> mouse dies
  • therefore, DNA must be the transforming principle (containing the lethal potential, even when heat treated)
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4
Q

4) Describe the Hershey-chase experiment and what was analysed to determine the conclusion?

A
  • 2 bacteriophages (virsuses that infect bacteria) are used : 1 with a sulphur labelled protein capsule and 1 with a phosphorus labelled DNA core
  • Each virus infects a bacteria, blend DNA and centrifuged to analyse cell contents, supernatant produced which was analysed
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5
Q

5) What was present in the supernatant of each bacteria?

A
  • Sulphur labelled protein bacteria: no sulphur in cells, but present in supernatant
  • Phosphorus labelled DNA bacteria: phosphorus in cells but not in supernatant
  • As viruses transfer their genetic information to bacteria, this must be contained in the DNA (the carrier)
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6
Q

6) Which DNA bases have roughly the same amounts?

A

A and T

C and G

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7
Q

7) What does X-ray diffraction show about DNA?

A

DNA has a regular, repeating structure (equal spacing)

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8
Q

8) Describe the Watson and Crick model of DNA

A
  • Right handed double helix
  • 2 strands twisted together
  • Antiparallel: 5’ end has a free 5’ phosphate on 5th carbon and 3’ end has a free hydroxyl group on 3rd carbon
  • A-T bond has 2H bonds
  • C-G bond has 3H bonds [H bonds can be disrupted by heat or chemicals, non-covalent]
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9
Q

9) How many nucleotides are there per turn of the DNA strand, what is the length of one turn and the diameter of the helix?

A
  • 10 nucleotides per turn
  • one turn is 3.4nm
  • diameter of helix is 2nm
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10
Q

10) Define the major and minor grooves on a DNA double helix

A
  • Major and minor grooves are on opposite sides of a turn
  • Major groove is larger - greater distance between the same point on two adjacent turns
  • Minor groove is smaller - less distance between the same point on two adjacent turns
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11
Q

11) Define replication, transcription and translation

A
  • Replication : producing more DNA double helices, this is semi-conservative as each daughter helix has 1 parent strand and one synthesised strand
  • Transcription: producing a molecule of mRNA (complementary to the template DNA strand)
  • Translation : producing a polypeptide chain at a ribosome, which reads the mRNA strand and a tRNA molecule brings correct amino acids
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12
Q

12) Which two enzymes are involved in the breakdown and reformation of DNA?

A
  • Nucleases: (e.g. restriction endonucleases) cleave sugar-phosphate backbone at defined points
  • Ligases : (e.g. ligase) can form phosphodiester bonds between adjacent DNA nucleotides to form a strand
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13
Q

13) What type of strand does DNA form a double strand with?

A
  • Reverse complement strand

- 5’ and 3’ ends switch (reverse) and complementary base pairs to the other DNA strand are made

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14
Q

14) Describe the structure of RNA

A
  • Bases A,C,G,U
  • Ribose sugar
  • Single stranded
  • G and C, A and U not equally matched
  • More flexible structure
  • G-C and A-U base pairing within molecules forms complex hairpin structures within RNA molecules
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15
Q

15) Describe the structures of mRNA, tRNA and rRNA

A

mRNA: collection of RNA chains of various lengths, relatively unstable
tRNA: collection of small RNA chains
rRNA: found in ribosomes, complexed with proteins (small/medium/large in size)

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16
Q

16) How does an unpaired loop form in mRNA molecules?

A
  • When mRNA folds and forms base pairs with another section of the same strand (possible but less common in DNA)
17
Q

17) Describe how the DNA genome is packaged in eukaryotic cells

A
  • DNA is supercoiled (extra coiling for packing into nucleus)
  • Chromosomes are made of chromatin and nucleosomes are made of chromosomes
  • Chromosomal DNA stores genetic info for life and all cells need a full set (except non-dividing, RBCs)
  • Genetic info used for replication, mitosis
18
Q

18) Describe the organisation of DNA in the human genome

A
  • 23 chromosomes
  • ~ 21,000 genes
  • 2% of genome encodes protein, rest is code for utilisation of gene products/ producing different products and outcomes (instructions)