1. Function and Dysfunction in Genomic Regulation Flashcards
What base does Adenine pair with? How many double bonds does it form?
Thymine bonds with Adenine
Two double bonds
What base does Cytosine pair with? How many bonds does it form?
Guanine bonds with Cytosine
Three double bonds (G and C both rhyme with 3)
How many autosomes do Humans have?
How many sex chromosomes?
Usually 22 autosomes
Usually 2 sex chromosomes
In DNA packaging, 142 hydrogen bonds are formed between DNA and what? What packaging unit is formed from DNA and this protien?
The Histone Octamer
Nucleosomes
What two amino acids make up an unusually high percentage of Histone protiens? What is the reasoning behind the density of these amino acids?
Lysine and Arginine They contain positive charges that attract the DNA’s (phosphates) negative charges for wrapping.
Where might Post Translational Modifications (PTMs) occur, specifically?
Lysine residues in the histone protiens
A Nucleosome is complex of what proteins?
How many make up one Nucleosome?
Histones
8 Histones make up one Nucleosome
What is Chromatin?
Protien + Nuclear DNA is defined as Chromatin
What is the difference between Euchromatin and Heterochromatin?
Euchromatin
- is thought to be genetically active,
- it’s lightly packed so its easy to get to,
- and stains lightly.
- 92% of human DNA is euchromatin
Heterochromatin
- Tightly packed
- hard to get to
- genetically inactive
Where might we expect to find more Heterochromatin?
Centromeres and Telemeres
What happens to an active gene even just being NEAR to heterochromatin?
What is the name of this effect?
It gets silenced!
Position effect
How much of the human genome (in percentage) exists in exons? (Coding regions)
1.5%
What test is used to detect genomic differences / abnormalities?
CGH Arrays
What is RNA Interference (RNAi)?
What kind of RNA does this?
A process for RNA molecules to inhibit gene expression / translation.
Micro RNA (miRNA)
Where do Long Terminal Repeats come from?
Where are they found?
Retroviral DNA
On either side of a retrotransposon. (Proviral DNA)
How might the same 5 exons code for multiple different protiens?
Alternative RNA Splicing
What base sequence do you expect to find at the beginning of an intron? What base sequence do you expect to see at the end?
Begins with (something)GT
aaaaand GeT intron
Ends with AG(something)
- intron All Gone*
- The variables are on the far sides!*
What enzyme is responsible for deacetylation of histones?
Histone Deacetylase (HDAC)
What enzyme is responsible for acetylation of histones?
Histone Acetyl Transferase (HAT)
Acetyl Groups are Histone’s HAT
Does acetylation turn histones on or off?
What changes to turn them on / off?
Acetylation turns histones on.
The Acetyl group makes them less compactly bound so they can interact with their enzymes.
Histones never go anywhere without their HAT. It helps them loosen up.
Why might Histone protein tails be important to genetic regulation?
They are important targets of post-translational modifications.
What does methylation do to a DNA segment?
It represses transcription by binding to the gene promoter.
What two nucleobases are typically directly affected by methylation?
Cytosine and Adenine