Nucleic acids Flashcards
What do RNA and DNA stand for?
Ribonucleic acid (RNA)
Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
What is the structure of a nucleotide?
- Pentose sugar
- Phosphate group
- A Nitrogen-containing organic base. Which are (C)ytosine, (T)hymine, (U)racil,(A)denine and (G)uanine.

What joins the components of a nucleotide?
The phosphate group, pentose sugar and organic base are joined by condensation reactions.
Whats a mononucleotide?
Mononucleotide: A single nucleotide.
How do nucleotides bond? And what is formed?
Nucleotides bond via their phosphate and pentose sugar groups.
One nuclotides phosphate joins to one nucleotide’s pentose sugar.
Forms a phosphodiester bond and creates a di-nucleotide.
How are polynucleotides formed?
Linking of mononucleotides.
What is RNA?
A single, short polynucleotide chain.
What are RNA’s organic bases?
(A)denine, (G)uanine, (C)ytosine, (U)racil
What is RNA’s pentose sugar it always has?
Ribose (hence ribo)
Who discovered DNA?
James Watson and Francis Crick.
What are the organic bases of DNA?
(A)denine, (T)hymine, (G)uanine, (C)ytosine
What is the pentose sugar of DNA?
Deoxyribose is the pentose sugar (hence deoxyribo)
What is DNA?
Two long polynucleotide chains, joined by hydrogen bonds on certain bases.
What are always the base pairs in DNA?
Adenine-Thymine
Guanine-Cytosine
What rule do base pairs share regarding quantity?
Adenine and Thymine are always the same quantity
Guanine and Cytosine are always the same quantity.
What supports the DNA molecules?
The double helix.
Why is DNA a stable molecule?
- Phosphodiester bond backbone, protects reactive organic bases between them from external forces.
- Hydrogen bonds between bases form strength and stability between strands. E.g. 3 hydrogen bonds between C and G.
How is DNA adapted for its function?
- Very stable so can easily pass between generations of offspring and rarely mutate.
- Joined by hydrogen bonds which can seperate during DNA replication and protein synthesis.
- Deoxyribose-phosphate molecule backbone protects genetic info from external chemicals and forces.
- Base pairing allows DNA replication and then information transfer as mRNA.
How do carbon atoms in the pentose molecule influence how nucleotides are arranged?
Carbon atoms in the pentose molecules are (3-prime) and (5-prime) carbon atoms.
3’ has a hydroxyl group
5’ has a phosphate group
So as they bond nucleotides they run down the strands 3-5-3-5
The two strands in DNA run in opposite directions in this way so are called antiparallel
Why is DNA replication required?
So daughter cells have identical genetic information.
What is universally accepted as how DNA replication takes place?
Semi-Conservative Replication.
What are the requirements for for semi-conservative replication.
- Four types of nucleotide with either A, G, C or T bases present.
- Both DNA strands so they can act as templates.
- Enzyme, DNA polymerase
- Chemical energy source e.g. ATP
What is the process for Semi-Conservative replication?
- DNA helicase breaks hydrogen bonds between two polynucleotides of DNA.
- The two strands unwind due to this.
- Exposed strands work as a template for external free nucleotides to bind to complimentary bases.
- DNA polymerase makes polymer by condensing the new nucleotides together making two new strands.
- Each DNA molecule has one original strand, so original DNA is incorperated into both DNA molecules.
- Called Semi-conservative replication.
What evidence is there against Semi-conservative replication?
Conservative model
Suggests original DNA molecule stays intact and seperate daughter DNA was built from deoxyribose, phosphate and organic bases.