Transcription/Translation Flashcards

(44 cards)

1
Q

What is the central dogma of molecular biology describing?

A

It describes the path that genetic information takes in the cell

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2
Q

What is a gene?

A

The sequence of DNA nucleotides required to tell the cell how to make one type of protein?

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3
Q

What is a genome?

A

The collection of all the genes found in the DNA of a specie

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4
Q

What’s the intermediate step between DNA and proteins?

A

RNA

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5
Q

What is the process in which DNA converts to RNA?
Where does it take place?
Which enzyme is used?

A

Transcription
Nucleus
RNA polymerase (uses the law of complementary base pairs)

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6
Q

What is the process in which RNA converts into proteins?
Where does it take place?
Which enzyme is used?

A

Translation
Cytosol and rough endoplasmic reticulum
Ribosome (uses the genetic codes -> combinaison of 3 RNA nucleotides called codons)

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7
Q

What are proteins made of?

A

They are made of 20 different amino acids

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8
Q

What are the differences between DNA and RNA?

A

In DNA: In RNA:
sugar groups: deoxyribose, ribose
double stranded, single stranded
A, T, C, G , A, U, C, G

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9
Q

What is the role of a stop codon?

A

It tells the ribosome where to stop

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10
Q

What is the role of the start codon?

A

It tells the ribosome where to start translation

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11
Q

What is the start codon?

A

The 1st AUG is a start codon

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12
Q

What are the stop codons?

A

UAA, UAG, UGA

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13
Q

What is the open reading frame?

A

From the start codon to the stop codon.

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14
Q

When does transcription begins and ends?

A

It starts at a promoter and ends at the terminator.

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15
Q

What is translation?

A

It is the last step in converting the instructions contained in your genes into proteins

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16
Q

What are the three types of RNA involved in translation?

A

1) Messenger RNA (mRNA)
2) Transfer RNA (tRNA)
3) Ribosomal RNA (rRNA)

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17
Q

What is the purposes of the first type of RNA involved in translation?

A

(carries the protein-builing information into the cytoplasm)

mRNA carries the instruction for the ribosome on how to make a single protein from the generic code found in DNA.

mRNA carries these instructions out of the nucleus into cytoplasm, where translation takes place.

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18
Q

What is the structure of tRNA?

A

It is a single strand, folded into a “t-like” shape
They have a three-base anticodon (complementary base-pairs to mRNA) , making sure that only the correct amino acid is added at a given time

19
Q

What is the purpose of transfer RNA?

A

It carries the individual amino acids to the ribosome
every tRNA is specific to one amino acid only

20
Q

What is the purpose of ribosomal RNA?

A

It combines with proteins to form ribosomes
In the ribosome, rRNA will catalyze the attachement of one amino acid to another

21
Q

What is the structure of rRNA?

A

The ribosomes has two subunits, one large subunit and one small subunit
Each subunit is made of both rRNA and proteins
The large subunit contains the catalytic site and the two tRNA binding site (“P-site” and “A-site”)

22
Q

What are the three steps of translation?

A

1) Initiation
2) Elongation
3) Termination

23
Q

What does the initiation complex of translation includes?

A

The small ribosomal subunit
The tRNA carrying the first amino acid of the protein (methionine)

24
Q

What does the initiation of translation form to begin?
AND
What is happening in initiation? (translation)

A

An initiation complex

The initiation complex binds to an mRNA molecule

The large ribosomal subunit arrives an the methionine tRNA binds to the first tRNA binding site on the large subunit (P site)

25
What are the five steps of elongation? (translation)
The **tRNA** carrying the **second amino acid** binds in the second tRNA binding site, the **A site** The catalytic site then **catalyzes the chemical equation** that links the first amino acid and the second amino acid The **tRNA in the P site is ejected** and the tRNA from the **A site is moved** into the P site. The A site is now empty, and a tRNA carrying the **next amino acid moves in** (5' to 3' reading of mRNA) **This cycle repeats** for each amino acid of the protein
26
What are the three steps in the termination stage? (translation)
- Termination occurs when the **ribosome** hits a **STOP codon** - A **release factor** binds to the **ribosome** - Ribosomal subunits **separate**, **mRNA** and the new **protein** are **released**
27
What is transcription?
The synthesis of RNA using the sequence of nucleotides contained in the DNA and the law of complementary base pairing
28
For what process is transcription essential? And what is the definition of this process?
Gene expression. The effects of a gene being carried by a cell
29
Why does DNA need to be converted first into RNA? (2)
RNA is single-stranded, allowing it to exit the nucleus through the nuclear pores. (-> reach the ribosome, -> make proteins) The enzymes that use RNA to make proteins (the ribosome) can only read RNA, not DNA
30
Is only one RNA molecule made from a single gene?
No, many RNA molecules will be made from a single gene in DNA
31
What are the three steps of transcription?
Initiation, elongation, termination
32
What is a promoter?
A sequence of DNA nucleotides found before the coding sequence of a gene that allows the RNA polymerase to know where to start the transcription. It always contains the sequence TATAAA
33
What are the two steps of initiation? (transcription)
1. RNA polymerase will first recognize and binds to the promoter 2. The two DNA strands will unwind only where RNA polymerase had bound to the DNA
34
What are the two steps of elongation? (transcription)
1. RNA polymerase synthesizes an RNA strand using the nucleotides sequence in the DNA. Adds RNA nucleotides that are complementary to those found in the DNA 2. The two strands making up the DNA double helix re-attach to each other shortly after RNA polymerase passes RNA polymerase moves along the DNA template strand, adding complementary RNA nucleotides. The RNA strands grows in the 5' to the 3' direction The DNA re-attach after the passage of RNA polymerase
35
What initiates termination? (**transcription**)
RNA polymerase comes to a **terminator** in DNA
36
What happens once the terminator is reached? (3)
The new RNA strand is released RNA polymerase detaches from the DNA The two DNA strands re-attach together
37
Why is gene expression regulated? + Give two reasons why.
Not every cell needs to **make the protein** encoded by a gene **all the time** - Not every type of cell in a multicellular organism **needs the protein** from every gene - Even if a cell needs a protein from a particular gene, it might **not need it all the time**
38
How can the expression of a gene be regulated?
Through regulating if it can be transcribed into RNA | Turning genes **on** or **off** by controlling how much mRNA is made
39
Transcription is _________? What does it means?
Selective All your ~25000 genes are not being transcribed by every type of cell all the time (the cell only copies the genes it needs, not the entire DNA)
40
How does the cell select which genes to transcribe?
Through gene regulation. The transcription factors (proteins) bind to the promoter or other nucleotide sequences around the promoter
41
What does transcription factors help, or block?
RNA polymerase to bind the promoter and transcribe the gene (an activator) or block it from binding and transcribing the gene (an repressor)
42
How do you know if the transcription factors help or block the transcription to occur? (depending on what)
Depends on the factor you are looking at and on which gene it is acting.
43
Regulating expression based on cellular location example. (flies)
In animals, transcription factors control which segments of the animal develop which parts of the body. Ex: Antp is a transcription factor that causes legs to develop If Antp is expressed in the head, it causes the genes responsible for leg development to be transcribed instead of genes for antennae
44
Regulating expression of a gene based on timing example
lacZ is a gene that codes for a protein that allows bacteria to break down lactose into glucose and galactose bacteria can only directly use glucose for energy, not lactose 2 different situations: 1) When glucose is available, the lacZ gene is not needed. -> A **repressor transcription factor** binds to the lacZ operator (near the promoter), **turning off** this gene. 2) When lactose is available, but not glucose, the lacZ gene will be needed to break lactose down to give glucose and galactose for energy. -> Lactose **binds** to the repressor transcription factor, **releasing it** from the operator. -> RNA polymerase can now bind the promoter and transcribe the gene.