3.9 DNA replication Flashcards
What is DNA replication?
The semi-conservation process of the production of identical copies of DNA molecules.
What is semi-conservation replication?
DNA replication results in one old strand and one new strand present in each daughter DNA molecule.
What enzymes are present in this process?
1) DNA helicase- carries out the unwinding and separating of the two strands of the DNA double helix.
2) DNA polymerase- catalyses the formation of phosphodiester bonds between these nucleotides.
What is the process of semi-conservative replication?
1) DNA helicase breaks the hydrogen bonds between the two polynucleotide DNA strands. The helix unzips to form two single strands.
2) Each original single strand acts as a template for a new strand. Free-floating DNA nucleotides join to the exposed bases on each original template strand by complementary base pairing- A with T and C with G.
3) The nucleotides of the new strand are joined together by the enzyme DNA polymerase. This forms the sugar-phosphate backbone. Hydrogen bonds form between the bases on the original and new strand. The strands twist to form a double helix.
4) Each new DNA molecule contains one strand from the original DNA molecule and one new strand.
What is a mutation?
- A mutation is a change in the sequence of bases
- This can be caused by a random error where the sequence of bases are not matched exactly.
What is the genetic code?
The sequence of bases in DNA are instructions for the sequences of amino acids in the production of proteins.
What is the triplet code?
The code in the base sequences.
What is a codon?
A three base sequence of DNA or RNA that codes for an amino acid.
What is a gene?
A section of DNA that contains the complete sequence of bases to code for an entire protein.
How is DNA copied into RNA?
1) DNA molecules are found in the nucleus of the cell, but the organelles that make proteins (ribosomes) are found in the cytoplasm.
2) DNA is too large to move out of the nucleus, so a section is copied into mRNA. This process is called transcription.
3) The mRNA leaves the nucleus and joins with a ribosome in the cytoplasm, where it can be used to synthesise a protein. This process is called translation.
What is messenger RNA (mRNA)?
- Made in the nucleus.
- Three adjacent bases are called a codon.
- It carries the genetic code from the DNA in the nucleus to the cytoplasm, where it’s going to make a protein during translation.
What is transfer RNA (tRNA)?
- Found in the cytoplasm.
- It has an amino acid binding site at one end and a sequence of three bases at the other end called an anticodon.
- It carries the amino acids that are used to make proteins to the ribosomes during translation.
What is ribosomal RNA?
- It forms the two subunits in a ribosome.
- The ribosome moves along with the mRNA strand during protein synthesis. The rRNA in the ribosome helps to catalyse the formation of peptide bonds between the amino acids.
What does non-overlapping mean?
The genetic code is non-overlapping- the adjacent codons do not overlap. A nonoverlapping code means that the same letter is not used for two different codons
What does degenerate mean?
There are more possible combinations of triplets than there are amino acids. So, the same amino acid is coded by more than one base triplet.