chapter 8 - Nucleic acids Flashcards
describe the numbering scheme for the carbons of the pentose sugar in a nucleic acid
- 1’ is C attached to nitrogenous base
- goes around to 5’ C attached to phosphate
what are the three components of a nucleotide
- nitrogenous base, pentose sugar, phosphate group
which carbons on the sugar connect to phosphate groups in the sugar-pentose backbone?
5’ and 3’
which carbon on the pentose sugar connects to the nitrogenous base
1’
how many carbon bonds do each type of base pair form
- CG forms 3
- AT forms 2
how would you recognize the 5’ vs 3’ end of a DNA strand
- 5’ has the phosphate group
- 3’ has the hydroxyl group
what causes major and minor grooves in DNA
- offset pairing of strands
which type of groove has unambiguous sequence information and which is not completely unambiguous
- major groove has unambiguous sequence
- minor groove is not completely unambiguous
what are the three major types of RNA
tRNA
rRNA
mRNA
what does mRNA do
- intermediate between gene and protein
- codes for proteins
- not in the genome itself
what does tRNA do
- carries amino acids to the ribosome for protein synthesis
what does rRNA do
- makes up ribosomes
what are the 3 major differences between DNA and RNA
- DNA is double stranded and RNA is single stranded (RNA can fold over to form some base pairing)
- sugar phosphate backbone has ribose instead of 2’deoxyribose
- RNA has uracil instead of thymine
what non-standard base pairings can happen between tRNA and mRNA
- G can pair with C or U
- tRNA has inosine nucleosides that can pair with C, U, and A
- some anticodons of tRNA can bind more than 1 codon - more mRNA codons than tRNA
- between 3’ on mRNA and 5’ of tRNA
what are factors that allow RNA to take on a variety of shapes
- single stranded gives more rotational freedom
- when G bonds with U instead of C, it has less H-bonds
- weak interactions (base stacking and H-bonds) stabilize these structures