16. Structure and Replication of DNA Flashcards

1
Q

What are the components of a nucleotide

A
  1. deoxyribose sugar
  2. a phosphate group
  3. a nitrogenous base
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2
Q

Purines and pyrimides

A

Purines - Adenine, Guanine

Pyrimidines - Cytosine, Thymine

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3
Q

What type of bonds hold bases together?

A

Hydrogen bonds

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4
Q

How many bonds between C and G

A

3 hydrogen bonds

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5
Q

How many bonds between A and T

A

2 hydrogen bonds

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6
Q

locus

A

The position of a gene on a chromosome

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7
Q

When are chromosomes visible

A

during cell division

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8
Q

Chromatin

A

DNA + protein = chromatin

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9
Q

What is a nucleosome made up of?

A
  • histone molecule (protein) - dna double helix coils around this
  • linker histone clamps DNA to the core

The whole thing makes up a nucleosome

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10
Q

Euchromatin

A
  • “switched on”
  • is a lightly packed form of chromatin (DNA, RNA, and protein) that is enriched in genes, and is often (but not always) under active transcription.
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11
Q

Heterochromatin

A
  • “Switched off”
  • chromosome material of different density from normal (usually greater), in which the activity of the genes is modified or suppressed.
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12
Q

What is meant by ‘DNA is semi-conservative’

A

New molecule of DNA has one strand which comes from the parent molecule and one strand which is newly
synthesised.

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13
Q

Why do eukaryotes have multiple replication origins?

A

•having one replication origin means it would take years to replicate DNA
- so humans have thousands

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14
Q

Replication origin in mammals

A

• chromatin structure rather than a DNA sequence

- a complex of proteins forms ORC (origin recognition complex)

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15
Q

Replication origin in yeast

A

• specific sequence of DNA at the replication origin with 120 bases

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16
Q

What is the sliding clamp?

A

Complex of proteins in the shape of a donut which keeps the DNA polymerase in place and increases the efficiency of replication

17
Q

Describe the steps of DNA replication in E.coli

A
  • Helicases separate strands of DNA
  • DNA topoismerase (gyrase) relieves supercoiling
  • single stranded binding proteins keeps the strands apart
  • DNA polymerase III adds bases 3’ -> 5’
18
Q

What does DNA polymerase III need to start replication

A
  • needs a short double-stranded region to start DNA replication
  • short primer RNA
19
Q

In what direction can bases be added

A

From 3’ prime to 5’ end

20
Q

What are okazaki fragments?

A

One of the RNA-primed short segments of DNA synthesised during replication
of the lagging strand of the double helix.

21
Q

Laggin strand replication

A
  • primers are added to start replication
  • primers are removed and the gaps are filled with complementary bases
  • okazaki fragments are joined

(Bases added from 5’ to 3’ end)

22
Q

Speed of replication bw eukaryotes and prokaryotes

A

Prokaryotic DNA replication is a lot faster

23
Q

Leading strand vs the lagging strand

A

•The leading strand is that which is synthesised continuously
•The lagging strand is synthesised in a discontinuous fashion during DNA
replication.

24
Q

What 3 elements are needed for a chromosome to function and why?

A
  • telomeres - structural stability, replication, positioning
  • centromeres - essential for segregation at cell division (acentric fragments get lost on the spindle)
  • origins of replication - DNA replication starting point
25
Q

What type of bond links adjacent nucleotides together?

A

Phosphodiester bond

26
Q

5’ (PO4) end

A

The end of the polynucleotide that terminates with a phosphate attached to the
5’- carbon of the sugar.

27
Q

3’ (OH) end

A

The end of a polynucleotide which terminates with a hydroxyl group attached
to the 3’- carbon of the sugar.

28
Q

DNA heliCase

A

An enzyme that uses energy from ATP to unwind the DNA

29
Q

What is Topoisomerase

gyrase

A

An enzyme which can relax DNA by cutting and reforming the polynucleotide
backbones

30
Q

Single-strand binding protein function

A

One of the proteins that attaches to single stranded regions of DNA and
prevents the reformation of base pairs, particularly in the region of the
replication fork.

31
Q

primase

A

an enzyme which synthesises the RNA primer

32
Q

DNA polymerase I

A

Enzyme which adds nucleotides to gaps when primers removed

33
Q

DNA polymerase III

A

Main polymerase which adds nucleotIdes to template in a complementary way

34
Q

RNA primer

A

Sequence of RNA to make a stretch of double stranded DNA on which the
DNA pol III can work

35
Q

Ligase

A

Enzyme which joins sequences of DNA

36
Q

What are telomeres

A
  • A compound structure at the end of a chromosome.

* protect ends of chromosome by looping or recruiting protective proteins

37
Q

Relation bw telomeres and ageing

A
  • problems with replication of lagging strand
  • unreplicated DNA is degraded so telomeres shorten with age
  • lose bases after each round of replication
  • genes on the ends of chromosomes are lost so cell dies
38
Q

Telomere replication

A

• leading strand replication is continuous from 3’ to 5’ end
• lagging strand a problem since there is not enough DNA template for primer
- there is an overhang which isn’t replicated (not enough sequence for primer)
•enzyme telomerase extends the lagging strand and primer attaches so DNA polymerase can complete the replication

39
Q

What are the effects of having shorter telomeres?

A
  • premature aging

* shorter telomeres