2.1.3 - Nucleotides and nucleic acids (set B - DNA + Protein Synthesis) Flashcards
Explain the process of DNA replication - what happens to the strand, explain briefly?
When cell prepares to divide, the two strands of DNA double helix separate and each strand serves as a template for the creation of a new double-stranded DNA molecule - complementary base pairing rules ensure the two new strands are identical to the original
Explain the process of semi-conservative replication?
DNA unwinds and separates into two strands (hydrogen bonds holding complementary bases are broken) - free DNA nucleotides will pair with their complementary bases (exposed during separation of strands) and form hydrogen bonds (nucleotides form phosphodiester bonds with neighbouring nucleotides)
Explain the product of semi-conservative replication?
Two new molecules of DNA are produced - each one consists of one old strand of DNA and one new strand
Explain the bonds formed and broken during semi-conservative replication?
Hydrogen bonds holding complementary bases are broken - new H bonds formed between DNA nucleotides and their complementary bases
- phosphodiester bonds formed between adjacent nucleotides
Explain the role of the enzyme Helicase in replication?
unwinds the DNA double helix to form 2 single strands - by breaking hydrogen bonds between complementary nucleotide bases - creates a replication fork, allowing access to DNA template strands
Explain the role of the enzyme polymerase in replication?
Catalyses the formation of phosphodiester bonds between nucleotides
Explain why DNA replication is described as semi-conservative?
Strands from original DNA molecule act as templates
- new DNA molecule consists of 1 old strand and 1 new strand (specific base paring enables genetic material to be conserved accurately)
Explain two enzymes involved in DNA replication?
- DNA helicase
- DNA polymerase
Explain how a mutation can occur during DNA replication?
Sequences of bases are not always matched exactly (an incorrect sequence may occur in the newly-copied strand) - lead to a change in the sequence of bases
Explain what a triplet code is, give the number of possible triplet codes?
A sequence of three bases, nucleotides (Called a codon) which codes for a specific amino acid
- 64 possible codons (61 that specificy amino acids and three codons which signal the termination of translation)
What is a gene?
The section of DNA that contains the complete sequence of bases (codons) to code for an entire protein
Explain where the instructions that are carried by DNA are located, explain genetic code?
Instructions are contained in the sequences of bases along the chain of nucleotides that make up the two strands of DNA
- genetic code is universal for all organisms - however sequences of bases coding for each individual protein differs among organisms
Identify three features of the genetic code?
- non-overlapping - each triplet is only read once
- degenerate - more than one triplet codes for the same amino acid (64 possible triplets)
- universal - same bases and sequences used by all species
Explain what is meant by genetic code being degenerate?
refers to the redundancy in the genetic code, where multiple codons can code for the same amino acid - 64 possible codons and 20 amino acids in proteins therefore some amino acids are specified by more than one codon
What is a significance of genetic code being degenerate?
provides a degree of flexibility and robustness to the genetic information - It reduces the impact of mutations, as changes in some codons may not alter the amino acid sequence