Nucleic Acids 1- Nucleic Acids and chromosomes Flashcards

1
Q

What are chromosomes made of

A

DNA and histones- they segregate as cells divide.

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2
Q

What is a nucleotide?

A

A polymer made up of nucleic acid monomers.

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3
Q

Characteristics of RNA

A

Single stranded and it can assume a variety of shapes.

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4
Q

What does a nucleotide consist of?

A

A pentose sugar, a nitrogenous base and one or more phosphate groups.

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5
Q

What is the difference between deoxyribose and ribose?

A

no -OH group on 2’ C atom in deoxyribose- just a H group.

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6
Q

What ‘ Carbons are bonded to what

A

1’ C- base
3’C- OH group
5’C- phosphate group.

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7
Q

What are the differences between adenine and guanine

A

Adenine has an amine group attached to the purine ring- guanine has a carbonyl group and amine group attached to the purine ring.

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8
Q

What is the difference between uracil, cytosine and purine

A

Cytosine has an amine group attached to the pyrimidine ring, thymine has a carbonyl group attached to the pyrimidine ring, uracil has a methyl group attached to the pyrimidine ring.

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9
Q

What do nucleosides consist of

A

Pentose sugar and a base.

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10
Q

What are the names of the nucleosides

A
adenine	  (deoxy)adenosine
guanine	  (deoxy)guanosine
cytosine  (deoxy)cytidine
uracil	  (deoxy)uridine
thymine  (deoxy)thymidine
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11
Q

Describe the structure of a single chain of DNA

A

A long chain of deoxyribonucleotide monomers linked by phosphodiester bonds.

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12
Q

Describe the bonding between adjacent nucleotides.

A

The 3’-OH of sugar of one nucleotide is linked to phosphate group, which in turn is joined to 5’-OH of adjacent sugar.

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13
Q

What is the directionality of DNA

A

5’ end and 3’ end- DNA is asymmetrical.

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14
Q

In what sequence are the nucleotides read

A

The first nucleotide in a sequence has a free 5’ phosphate, and the last one a free 3’ OH.

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15
Q

How did Watson and Crick determine the secondary structure of DNA?

A

Analysing X-Ray diffraction patterns from DNA fibres.

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16
Q

Where are the phosphate groups found in the double helix

A

on the outside-giving DNA a negative charge.

17
Q

Where are the bases found in the double helix.

A

They point inwards and the flat planes are perpendicular to the helix. They stack on top of each other- contributing to the stability of the double helix.

18
Q

How many bases are there per helical turn

A

10

19
Q

What is the width of DNA

A

2nm

20
Q

Why are the hydrogen bonds between C and G more stable

A

Because there are more of them

21
Q

Describe the melting and re-annealing of DNA.

A

Melting- heat to near boiling point or have a low salt conc- denatures DNA
Re-annealing- cool or high salt conc- hydrogen bonds reform- and due to CBP- original DNA strand reformed- hence it is a reversible process.

22
Q

What is the genome

A

The entire DNA coding for the organism

23
Q

Describe the E.coli genome

A

has 4.6 x 106 base pairs in a single circular double-stranded molecule. The length of E.coli DNA is 1.4 mm- longer than itself- has to be supercoiled. Less DNA- no chromosomes- DNA is circular.

24
Q

Describe the human genome

A

~ 3 x 109 base pairs of DNA divided into chromosomes that each contain a single, linear double-helical DNA molecule of ~ 200 x 106 base pairs.

25
Q

When are chromosomes visible

A

Just before cells begin mitosis- hence they are not visible in non-dividing cells.

26
Q

Describe the difference between mitotic and interphase chromosomes

A

Mitotic- highly condensed chromosomes
Interphase- more extended form
Chromosomes are not all the same size.

27
Q

What is the Karyotype

A

A karyotype is an organised profile of someone’s chromosomes.
A diploid human cell has 46 chromosomes
22 pairs of ‘normal’ chromosomes (autosomes) and
2 sex chromosomes (X and Y)

28
Q

What can the Karyotype be used for

A

Can be used to detect abnormalities such as genetic diseases and cancer. Each chromosome is stained with unique fluorescent dye. For example Abnormalities in breast tumour: 48 chromosomes instead of 46, multiple translocations, eg two pieces of chromosome 8 (green) plus piece of chromosome 17 (purple).

29
Q

Why is it important that the DNA is coiled.

A

The DNA in a diploid human cell is nearly 2m long- but nucleus is only 5 - 8 m in diameter.

30
Q

How is DNA packaged in eukaryotic cells

A

Eukaryotic DNA is tightly packaged, forming a complex with proteins. This complex is called chromatin. During interphase, when cells are not dividing, chromatin is more extended. Further condensation during mitosis produces chromosomes.

31
Q

What is the lowest level of packaging

A

A nucleosome- which consists of DNA wrapped around histones.

32
Q

Describe the structure of the nucleosome

A

8 histones; 2 each of 2A, 2B, 3 and 4
About 150 base pairs of DNA wrapped around the histones (core DNA)
Histone 1 between the nucleosomes- on the outside.
Linker DNA between each nucleosome.

33
Q

How do histones and DNA interact.

A

Histones: positively charged; interact with negatively charged sugar-phosphate backbone of DNA

34
Q

What fold condensation do nucleosomes give

A

around 7 fold- 200 bp is 68 nm when not wrapped- but wrapping around each histone octamer is around 10nm.

35
Q

How are the nucleosomes packed further to give chromatin

A

Nucleosomes are folded to give 30nm fibre- 40 fold condensation- 6 nucleosomes then coil together to fold into loops. Net result: each DNA molecule has been packaged into a mitotic chromosome that is 10 000 fold shorter than its fully extended length.
Interphase chromosomes will have a lower degree of folding.