DNA replication Flashcards
1
Q
Central Dogma of Molecular Biology
A
“Genetic information carried by DNA is transmitted between generations of ells through DNA replication. Within a cell, the genetic information of genes is used to make proteins through transcription
2
Q
Charge of DNA
A
DNA is negatively charged since it has a negative phosphate group
3
Q
Purines
A
Adenine and Guanine
4
Q
Pyrimidines
A
Thymine/Uracil and Cytosine
5
Q
DNA base pairing
A
Adenine with Thymine/Uracil (2 H-bonds)
Guanine with Cytosine (3 H-bonds)
6
Q
Structure of DNA
A
- Double-stranded
- Double-helical structure held together by h-bonds between complementary bases
- Purine-Pyrimidine pair ensures DNA helix has a constant 2nm width
- Each turn is 3.4nm, 10 base pairs
- 2 strands are anti-parallel
7
Q
Semi-conservative replication
A
- DNA unwinds into 2 strands
- Each strand is a template for the synthesis of a new daughter strand
- Hence each new DNA molecule contains one parent and one daughter strand
8
Q
Conservative replication
A
- DNA unwinds into 2 strands
- 2 daughter strands synthesized
- 2 daughter strands form daughter DNA molecule
- 2 parental strands form back original parental DNA molecules
9
Q
Dispersive replication
A
- DNA unwinds into 2 strands
- Both strands break up into small segments that act as templates
- Each daughter strands contains a mix of old and new fragments
10
Q
Process of DNA replication
A
- Begins at orgin of replication
- Helicase unwinds DNA by breaking h-bonds
- SSB proteins bind to DNA strands to stabilised them and keep them separated
- Replication bubble forms with replication forks on both ends
- Primase catalyses synthesis of an RNA primer complementary to DNA bases at origin
- DNA polymerase III added on free DNA nucleotides to free 3’ OH end of RNA primer
- DNA polymerases III catalyses formation of phosphodiesterase bonds between adjacent DNA molecules
- After adding a nucleotide, DNA polymerase II will proofread it and correct any mistake
- In the lagging strand, DNA polymerase III constantly detaches and reattaches
- RNA primers at Okazaki fragments and leading strand are replaced by corresponding DNA nucleotides by DNA polymerase I
11
Q
Okazaki fragements
A
- DNA is anti-parallel
- DNA polymerase can only bind to free 3’ OH ends of RNA primer
- On the lagging strand, the 3’ end is not immediately available, as helicase must first unwind the double-stranded DNA to expose the template.
- Hence RNA primers constantly have to constantly detach and reattach