DNA, RNA And Genes Flashcards

1
Q

What cellular processes involve DNA?

A
  • Replication
  • Transcription/Translation
  • Viruses
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2
Q

What cellular processes involve RNA?

A
  • Translation
  • Replication
  • Transcription
  • Viruses
  • Regulation for gene expression
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3
Q

What cellular processes involve nucleotides?

A
  • DNA synthesis (replication)
  • RNA synthesis (replication)
  • Repair mechanisms
  • Recombination
  • Transcription
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4
Q

Can you recognise whether a nucleotide is a dNTP or an NTP from the structure?

A

NTP -> nucleoside triphosphate -> contains a nucleoside bound to three phosphates

  • Nucleoside (base + sugar)
  • Nucleotide (base + sugar + phosphate)

dNTP -> nucleoside triphosphates containing deoxyribose (dATP - deoxyadenosine triphosphate)
ATP -> adenosine triphosphate

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5
Q

What is a pyrimidine and what is a purine?

A

Pyrimidine -> three rings -> C and T

Purines -> two rings -> A and G

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6
Q

What are the base pairings found in DNA and RNA?

A

A pairs with T

C pairs with G

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7
Q

Why is the DNA always the same width?

A

Adenine is a purine and has two rings -> pairs with thymine which is a pyrimidine and has three rings

Guanine is a purine and has two rings -> pairs with cytosine which is a pyrimidine and has three rings

Therefore they have the same width

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8
Q

What is the general structure of DNA?

A

Contains a base, sugar (pentose or ribose), and a phosphate group

5’ phosphate group
3’ hydroxyl group
Synthesised 5’ to 3’

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9
Q

Which of the base pairings is stronger and why?

A

There are two hydrogen bonds between A and T
There are three hydrogen bonds between G and C

The bond between G and C is therefore stronger

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10
Q

What is the type of chemical bond that exists between the phosphate and the pentose of the neighbouring nucleotide?

A

Strong covalent bonds form between the phosphate group and two 5-carbon ring carbohydrates (pentoses) over two ester bonds. A phosphodiester bond ->a covalent bond is formed between the 5’ phosphate group of one nucleotide and the 3’ OH group of another

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11
Q

What is the type of chemical bond that exists between the base pairing nucleotides?

A

Hydrogen bonding

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12
Q

What does it mean that DNA is anti parallel?

A

Runs in the opposite direction -> the strands

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13
Q

Why was the discovery of the structure of DNA central to our understanding of inheritance?

A

It was known that chromosomes are the unit of inheritance but they couldn’t determine the structure of DNA - why is DNA a better candidate for the genetic material than proteins?

  • More stable
  • Only found in chromosomes
  • Used as a scaffold
  • 4 nucleotide bases

Proteins

  • Unstable
  • Found in other parts of the cell
  • Directly responsible for the phenotype
  • Enzymatic activity
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14
Q

What is different about the tertiary structures of DNA and RNA?

A

RNA can form complex 3D structures
RNA can bend back on itself

There are three possible structures of DNA - A, B and Z
Naturally DNA is in the right handed form
Possible for DNA to form hairpin structures

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15
Q

What are the major and minor grooves in DNA?

A

Are important in the attachment of DNA Binding Proteins involved in replication and transcription

Major groove - occurs when the backbones are far apart - DNA binding proteins interact with the bases on the major groove side
Minor groove - close together

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16
Q

In what phase of the cell cycle does DNA replication occur?

A

The S phase

17
Q

Which of the DNA polymerases are involved in DNA replication and which is the main one?

A

There are five DNA polymerases but only two of them are involved in DNA replication - DNA Polymerase III and DNA Polymerase I
DNA Polymerase III - main polymerase in DNA replication
DNA Polymerase I - functions in repair and recombination too