3.4.1 DNA Genes and Protein Synthesis Flashcards

1
Q

What happens during mRNA splicing?

A

Introns removed and exons joined, and possibly rearranged, to form mRNA

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2
Q

What is an intron?

A

Non coding sections of DNA

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3
Q

What is pre-mRNA?

A

mRNA strands containing both introns and exons

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4
Q

What is an exon?

A

Coding sections of DNA

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5
Q

Describe the process of translation

A

Ribosome attaches to mRNA. tRNA carries amino acid to ribosome. Complementary base pairing between anticodon on tRNA and codon on mRNA. Hydrogen bonds form between the tRNA and mRNA. A peptide bond forms between amino acids by condensation reaction. The tRNA is released from the ribosome. The ribosome detaches from the polypeptide chain on mRNA when it reaches a stop codon

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6
Q

Describe the structure of tRNA

A

tRNA is folded, has hydrogen bonds holding the structure together, is a fixed size, has an anticodon, has an amino acid binding site

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7
Q

How are amino acids joined together to form the 3D structure of a protein?

A

Peptide bonds between amine group and carboxyl group of another. Primary structure is sequence of amino acids in a protein. The primary structure is folded and held together by bonds to form the secondary and tertiary structures. These bonds are disulphide bonds, ionic bonds, hydrogen bonds and are between the R groups

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8
Q

What is mRNA?

A

Made in the nucleus during transcription, has a codon, carries the genetic code from the DNA in the nucleus to the cytoplasm. Single stranded. Shorter than DNA. Has the sugar ribose (instead of deoxyribose) and the base uracil (instead of thymine) “

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9
Q

What is a codon?

A

Three adjacent bases on mRNA. Each codon contains the information for the addition of a specific amino acid by a ribosome

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10
Q

What is tRNA?

A

Found in cytoplasm, has an amino binding site at one end and an anticodon on the other end, carries amino acids that are used to make proteins to the ribosomes

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11
Q

Define the genetic code

A

The sequence of base triplets in DNA or mRNA which codes for specific amino acids

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12
Q

What does it mean by ‘non-overlapping’?

A

Each base triplet is read in sequence, separate from the triplet before and after it. base triplets do not share their bases

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13
Q

Explain the term ‘degenerate’?

A

There are more possible combinations of triplets than there are amino acids. Some amino acids are coded for by more than one base triplet

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14
Q

What are the stop and start codons?

A

Triplets that tell the cell when to start and stop production of the protein. Found at the beginning and end of the gene

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15
Q

What happens when the RNA polymerase attaches to the DNA at the start codon?

A

The hydrogen bonds between the 2 DNA strands in the gene break, separating the strands and the DNA molecule unwinds

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16
Q

What happens when the RNA polymerase lines up free RNA nucleotides alongside the template strand?

A

Complementary base pairing occurs so that the mRNA strand ends up being a complementary copy of the DNA template strand. RNA polymerase joins the mononucleotides together by phosphodiester bonds in condensation reactions

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17
Q

What happens when RNA polymerase reaches a stop codon?

A

It stops making mRNA and detaches from the DNA. mRNA leaves the nucleus through a nuclear pore and attaches to a ribosome in the cytoplasm

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18
Q

What is a gene?

A

A section of DNA that codes for a polypeptide

19
Q

Define ‘locus’

A

The particular position that a gene occupues on a chromosome

20
Q

State the 4 features of the genetic code

A

Triplet, Universal, Non-overlapping and degenerate

21
Q

In eukaryotic cells, what proteins is DNA found wound around?

A

Histone proteins

22
Q

What’s the difference between chromosomes, chromatids and centromeres?

A

At the beginning of cell division, each chromosome is visible as two chromatids, joined at the centre by a centromere

23
Q

What’s the difference between a diploid cell and a haploid cell?

A

A diploid cell contains a full set of chromosomes, a haploid cell contains just half of the homologous pairs (e.g. gamete)

24
Q

Define allele

A

An allele is a form of a gene

25
Q

What’s the difference between the genome and the proteome?

A

The genome is the complete set of genes in a cell, the proteome is the complete set of proteins produced by the genome

26
Q

State 2 differences between mRNA and tRNA

A

tRNA is smaller, clover shaped and more stable than mRNA,

27
Q

Define ‘splicing’

A

When introns are removed during transcription

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