chapter 10 Flashcards
what is a nucleotide vs nucleoside?
- nucleotide is composed of a nitrogenous base, a pentose sugar and a phosphate group
- nucleoside is just a nitrogenous base plus a phosphate suagr with no phosphate gorup
deoxyribose vs ribose?
deoxyribose is found in DNA
ribose is found in RNA
what are the 5 nitrogenous bases and their classifications?
- adenine
- guanine
- cytosine
- thymine
- uracil
- adenine and guanine are purines
- cytosine, thymine and uracil are pyrimidines
uracil is a demethylated version of?
- thymine
phosphate groups interact with the 3’ and 5’ C’s of the pentose sugar to form?
- phosphodiester bonds
- the 3’ C is the one that has a downward pointing hydroxyl group on the left side of the nucleotide as usually portrayed, and the 5’ C is the one sticking up on the left
what other role do nucleotides play in the body?
- cAMP and cGMP
- ATP and GTP
- FAD, FMN, NAD, NADP+ and CoA
what is base pairing?
- caused by the formation of H bonds between complementary nucleotides
- C and G- 3 H bonds
- A and T or U- 2 H bonds
- purines pair with pyrimidines
what is Chargaffs rule?
- purines and pyrimidines will be present in a cell at a 1-1 ratio
- C equals amount of G
- T equals amount of A
double-stranded DNA has what kind of orientation?
- antiparallel
what are the 3 forms of DNA
- A DNA- “tighter helix” because most dehydrated, right handed. 11 b.p./turn, 23 A/10 b.p.
- B-DNA- most common 10.5 b.p./tuen, 34 A/10 b.p., right handed
- Z-DNA- “looser” DNA 12 b.p./turn. 38A/10 b.p., left-handed
A DNA segment that is overwound or underwound is referred to as being?
- positively or negatively supercoiled
- such supercoiling is a function of torsional strain in the molecule
- under physiological conditions, DNA is usually negatively supercoiled
what is hybridization?
- the process in which complementary base pairs combine
- the driving force is the formation of the H bonds between the complementary bases
- a single inconsistency between the nucleotides positioned along either of the 2 strands will decrease the energetic favourability of the strands annealing
the temperatue at which half of the DNA strands of a sample are preesent in their single-stranded (ssDNA) state is defined as?
- the melting temperature (Tm) of the nucleic acid
- the Tm depends on the length and the nucleotide sequence of a molecule
- denaturation can also cause the dissociation of complementary strands by chemical means, using denaturants as urea
melting curves of A and T and G and C