DNA (2/16) Flashcards
Why study DNA?
- ) DNA is the fundamental basis of variation and change
- ) DNA operates the same way in all living things
- ) Many current issues involve an understanding of DNA (genetic engineering (GMOS), stem cells, cloning, etc.)
How many times must your DNA replicate itself during your lifetime?
Replication happens an estimated 10^15 times to build a human from a fertilized egg
Roles of Different Enzymes (Helicase, Primase, DNA Polymerase, Ligase)
Helicase: unzips the paired DNA strands forming a replication fork
Primase: binds leading strand and synthesizes an RNA primer completely to the DNA template; marks the starting point for DNA synthesis
DNA Polymerase: synthesizes DNA in the 5’ to 3’ direction
Ligas: DNA “glue”, links Okazaki fragments together
Okazaki Fragments for Building Lagging Strand
- used on the lagging strand so that the polymerase can add to the nucleotides in the 5’ to 3’ end
- this process ends up with a bunch of little fragments that are not all connected (Okazaki Fragments)
- all eventually put together by DNA Ligase
- DNA Primase will also come in to switch out the RNA with new DNA
What is the traditional definition of a “Gene”?
a segment of DNA molecule that codes for an amino acid chain to build a protein (or tRNA/rRNA
Enzymes
proteins that catalyze reactions and facilitate other chemical reactions
Central Dogma
the idea that DNA replication begins by being transcribed to mRNA and then is translated to proteins (DNA => RNA => Proteins)
Where does transcription occur?
The Nucelus
What is DNA transcription?
the process by which DNA code is turned to messenger RNA
- a template RNA is formed corresponding to DNA
- T is switched for U
RNA Polymerase
similar to dNA polymerase; it is used to make mRNA strand by reading DNA strand
Messenger RNA (mRNA)
the type of RNA that carries the message of DNA to be transcribed and turned in to a specific protein
What are the differences between RNA and DNA?
- RNA has different sugar in the backbone
- U substitutes for T in RNA
- RNA is single stranded
mRNA Codons
RNA units that are “triplet nucleotide base” called codons
How many possible mRNA codons are there
4 possible bases (U G C A); 64 possible combinations
How many amino acids are used by life?
20