chromosomal structure- eukaryotes vs prokaryotes Flashcards
How does DNA become supercoiled
- cut is made in circular DNA
strand rotates 360 degrees - DNA ligase seals nicks
how is bacterial chromosome formed
- DNA is folded and supercoiled with the help of RNA and proteins
- circular unfolded protein turns to 40-50 loops turns to supercoiled and folded
bacterial chromosomes
contain circular molecules of DNA segregated into about 50 domains
Chromosome structure in prokaryotes
- monoploid
- DNA is condensed more than 1000x
chromosome structure in eukaryotes
- diploid
- haploid DNA and genome
- ## total length of diploid genome = 2 meters
components of eukaryotic chromosomes
- ONE large linear molecule of DNA
- 5 histones
- a divergent group of non-histone proteins
chromatin
DNA + histones + protein
- DNA is one of the most negative molecules in the cell and attracts the positive proteins (and histones)
First level of DNA packaging: nucleosomes
- referred to as beads on a string
- nucleosome core- (consistant)
- linker DNA varying in length from 8 to 114 nucleotide pairs (not consistent)
nucleosome core and complete nucleosome
consists of 2 molecules each of 4 histones - 8 histones total (octomer)
- complete nucleosome contains histone H1 (fifth histone - like a glue that keeps everything together)
Second level of DNA packaging: 30 nm chromatin fiber
- fits all 4 11nm cores into 30nm wide space
third level of DNA packaging: inter-phase chromosomes (300nm fibre)
- looped and threaded instead of linear
- in this phase cell doesn’t need to divide (mitosis)
- chromosome scaffold forms when non-histone proteins are anchored
- DNA cannot be too compact because transcription factors have to access it to express your genes
simplest vs most complex level of chromosomes
simplest: chromatin is double-stranded helical structure of DNA
most complex: tight coiling of the 250nm fibre produces the chromatid of a chromosome
Why are histones significant in proteins
without them DNA would unravel
metaphase chromosome
during mitosis the chromosomes undergo another stage of packaging
- DNA is slightly unwound