Biochem Flashcards
Differences between DNA and RNA
DNA: -Longer (3x10^6 bp)
- H at 2’ carbon
- Thymine
- Few base modifications
- Base has methyl group (thymine)
RNA: - shorter (few thousand bp)
- OH at 2’ carbon
- Uracil
- Lots of base modifications
- Base doesn’t have methyl group (uracil)
2 forces that stabilize alpha helices
Base stacking: Hydrophobic bases stack on top of each other
Base pairing: H-Bonds between bases (3 between G-C)
What factors affect Tm (at least 5)
Increase:
- Increase in length of DNA
- Increase in % GC regions (base stacking)
- Increase in bp complementation
- Increase in [salt] (makes environment more hydrophilic therefore increase hydrophobic base stacking affect in helix)
Decrease:
- [organic solvent], [urea], [formamide]
- Extremes in pH
What do the major and minor groove do + example
directly provide sequencing information to DNA-binding proteins
- Protein alpha helix sits in major groove; Way for protein to get a direct read of the information in DNA w/o having to unwind it; Protein side chains make contact with the DNA bases; DNA-Protein interaction; recognize promoter for example
DNA dimensions and bp
tall: 10 cm/3.4 nm (bp is 0.34 nm)
Width: 2 nm (20 A)
What makes up a nucleosome and how many bp
Nucleosome core particle (150bp)
- 150 bp of DNA wrapped around a histone core octamer; 2 of each histone protein (H2A, H2B, H3, H4)
+Linker DNA (50 bp)
Whats 30nm chromatin fibre
Nucleosome core particles stacked tightly together
Requires H1 histone
What are histones
Proteins that package DNA; Mostly made up of Arg and Lys (both + charge to complement DNA - charge)
- Highly conserved throughout diff organisms
Describe the steps of replication
1) Uncoiling: Done by helicase; strands held apart by ssb proteins
2) Primer synthesis: Primase will make short RNA primer (10-20nt)