15.2 Flashcards

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1
Q

Explain transcription, including a description of important molecules involved in the process.

A

o The template strand provides a template for ordering the sequence of complementary nucleotides in an RNA transcript
o The first stage of gene expression
o RNA synthesis is catalyzed by the RNA polymerase
• Follows the same base-paring rules as DNA except U substitutes T

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2
Q

illustrate initiation of transcription in eukaryotes (transcription factors)

A

 Necessary to get the RNA polymerase II enzyme to the promoter and initiate gene expression
 Recognize and bind to the TATA box sequence in the promoter
 Interact with RNA polymerase to form an initiation complex at the promoter

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3
Q

illustrate initiation of transcription in eukaryotes (promoter)

A

 Forms the recognition and binding site for RNA polymerase
 Found upstream of the start site

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4
Q

illustrate initiation of transcription in eukaryotes (TATA box)

A

specifies to other molecules where transcription begins, indicates where a genetic sequence can be read and decoded

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5
Q

illustrate initiation of transcription in eukaryotes (RNA polymerase)

A

 Pries DNA strands apart and joins together RNA nucleotides
• Produces RNA that’s complementary to the DNA template strand and does not need a primer

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6
Q

RNA polymerase I

A

transcribe rRNA

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7
Q

RNA polymerase II

A

transcribes mRNA and snRNA

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8
Q

RNA polymerase III

A

transcribes tRNA and some other small RNAs

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9
Q

Describe the role of the RNA polymerase and sigma-factor in prokaryotic transcription initiation.

A

o Sigma factor binds to promoter sequence in DNA upstream of start site
o RNA polymerase opens the double helix
o Once transcription begins the sigma factor dissociates

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10
Q

Bacterial elongation of transcript

A
  • Grows in the 5’ to 3’ direction as ribonucleotides are added
  • Transcription bubble: Contains RNA polymerase, DNA template, and growing RNA transcript
  • Passes after transcription allowing the now-transcribed DNA to be rewound as it leaves the bubble
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11
Q

Eukaryotic elongation of transcript

A
  • as RNA polymerase moves along the DNA, it untwists the double helix
  • a gene can be transcribe simultaneously by several RNA polymerases
  • nucleotide are added to the 3’ end of growing RNA molecules
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12
Q

Bacterial termination of transcript

A
  • terminator sequences signal “stop” to polymerase: RNA dissociates from template and DNA rewinds (mRNA can be translated without further modification)
  • simplest terminator sequence: series of C-G base-pairs followed by a series of A-T base- pairs & forms a hairpin which causes RNA polymerase to pause
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13
Q

Eukaryotic termination of transcript

A
  • RNA polymerase II transcribes the polyadenylation signal sequence and the RNA transcript is released 10-35 nucleotides past this sequence
  • after transcription & RNA processing, the mRNA is transported out of the nucleus into the cytoplasm where it is translated
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14
Q

Trace the steps involved in eukaryotic RNA processing: 5’ cap, poly-A-tail, and RNA splicing.

A

o Addition of a 5; cap protects from degradation and is involved in translation initiation
o Addition of a 3’ poly-A tail: created by poly-A polymerase and protects from degradation
Removal of introns (splicing)

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15
Q

contrast introns and exons

A

introns: no coding sequences
exons: sequences that will be translated

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16
Q

Explain the functional importance of alternative splicing.

A

Explains how 20000 genes of the human genome can encode the estimated 93000 protein-coding transcripts

17
Q

Transcribe a template DNA sequence into mRNA.

3’ AUGCCCGUAAGCUAA 5’ –>

A

3’ AUGCCCGUAAGCUAA 5’ –> 5’ UACGGGCAUUCGAUU 3’