DNA The Carrier of Genetic Information Flashcards

1
Q

Nucleotides

A

Adenine, thymine, cytosine and guanine. Each nucleotide subunit contains a nitrogenous base. Each base covalently links to a pentose sugar, deoxyribose, which covalently bonds to phosphate group.

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2
Q

Purines

A

Adenine and guanine

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3
Q

Pyrimidines

A

Thymine and Cytosine

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4
Q

Backbone of each single DNA chain is formed…

A

By alternating sugar and phosphate groups, joined by covalent phosphodiester linkages. Each phosphate group attaches to the 5’ carbon of one deoxyribose and to the 3’ carbon of the neightboring deoxyribose.

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5
Q

How are DNA strands oriented with respect to each other?

A

They are antiparallel (running in opposite directions); at each end of the DNA molecule, one chain has a phosphate attached to a 5’ deoxyribose carbon, the 5’ end, and the other has a hydroxyl group attached to a 3’ deoxyribose carbon, the 3’ end.

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6
Q

Pairing between bases

A

Hydrogen bonding between forms links between A and T (2 hydrogen bonds) and G with C (3 hydrogen bonds)

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7
Q

Chargaff’s rules

A

A equals T and G equals C. In numbers.

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8
Q

Semiconservative replication

A

Each daughter double helix consists of an original strand from the parent molecule and a newly synthesized complementary strand.

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9
Q

DNA replication

A

The two strands unwind. Each one serves as a template for forming new complementary strands. Replications beggins as DNA primase synthesizes a short RNA primer. DNA polymerase then adds new nucleotide subunits to the growing DNA strand.

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10
Q

DNA helicases

A

They are enzymes that open the double helix.

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11
Q

Topoisomerases

A

Enzymes that prevent tangling and knotting.

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12
Q

Origin of replication

A

DNA replication is bidirectional, starting at the origin of replication and proceeding in both directions. Multiple origins of replication exists along the DNA.

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13
Q

Direction of replication

A

DNA synthesis always proceeds in a 5’->3’ direction, which requires that one DNA strand, the lagging strand, be synthesized discontinuously, as short Okazaki fragments. Leading strand is synthesized continuously.

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14
Q

Repairs in DNA made by

A

DNA polymerases prooread each newly added nucleotide against its template and correct mistakes.

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15
Q

Mismatch repair

A

Enzymes recognize incorrectly paired nucleotides and remove them; DNA polymerases then fill in the missing nucleotides.

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16
Q

Telomeres

A

Eukaryotic chromosome ends are short, non-coding, repetitive DNA sequences. They shorten with each cell cycle but can be extended by the enzyme telomerase, its ausence may cause aging.