chapter 19 - genetics of living systems Flashcards
What are transcription factors?
- proteins that control the rate of protein synthesis by switching genes on and other genes off
What is a promoter region?
- a short sequence of DNA at the start of a gene (the bit that dna / rna polymerase attaches to )
How does a transcription factor(TF) help cause the gene to transcribe?
- TF moves from the cytoplasm into the nucleus
-TF binds to the promoter region - If TF is an activator, it will help rna polymerase to bind to the DNA resulting the gene being transcribed
- if TF is a repressor, it will prevent rna polymerase binding to the DNA as a result gene is not transcribed
What are the two types of transcription factors?
- activators
- repressors
What is the difference between regulator genes and structural genes?
- regulator genes make transcription factors that control the expression of other genes
- structural genes make proteins that function in a cell (e.g enzymes)
How does the presence of lactose effect gene expression?
- if lactose is not present, the lac repressor protein binds to the operator
- this prevents the rna polymerase binding to the promoter region resulting in no transcription
- if lactose is present, it binds to the lac repressor protein changing its shape
- this removes the lac repressor protein from the operator
- rna polymerase binds to the promoter region
- structural genes are expressed
- enzymes are made(lactose permease)
What are mutations
- A change to the nucleotide sequence of DNA
- they are mistakes made when replicating DNA(interphase)
what are the 3 types of mutations with a brief explanation ?
- Substitution, one base in the dna sequence is swapped
- insertion, one base is added to the dna sequence
- deletion, one base is removed from the dna sequence
What are the effects of the 3 types of mutations?
- substitution, can have no effect but chance of one amino acid being changed
- insertions and deletion, both lead to a frameshift (all the following triplets in a dna sequence are affected)
What is the advantages and disadvanatages of mutations?
- advantage, causes a change that improves the function of the protein , increases survival or reproduction
- disadvantage, causes a change that makes a non functional protein, decreases survival or reproduction
Explain the effect of a change to a single amino acid with regards to bonding and protein structure
- a change in one dna triplet causes a change in the translation of one amino acid
- this changes the primary structure of the protein
- this changes the hydrogen and ionic bonding
- this changes the tertiary structure of the protein
Explain the effect of a change to the sequence of many amino acids with regards to bonding protein structure
- frame shift, changes all of the DNA triplets in a sequence
- changes the primary structure
- this changes the hydrogen and ionic bonding
- this changes the tertiary structure of the protein
what is the difference between a homeobox gene and a homeodomain protein ?
- homeobox gene codes for homedomain protein
- homeodomain protein is a transcription factor
Why is the homeobox gene highly conserved between species?
- as mutations would lead to changes in the body plan
- this would effect the expression of many other genes which is likely to be fatal
What is apoptosis?
- process of programmed cell death (when cells in a multicellular organism deliberately destroy themselves)