Gene Expression Flashcards

1
Q

Does a Prokaryote have more than one cell?

A

NO

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2
Q

The genetic information of DNA is stored as a certain sequence of…

A

Nitrogenous Bases

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3
Q

Cytosine pairs with…

A

Guanine

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4
Q

Because each strand runs in opposite directions, DNA can be considered as…

A

Anti-parallel

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5
Q

In which direction is DNA synthesised?

A

From 5’end to 3’end

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6
Q

A codon of DNA corresponds to…

A

a complementary codon on an strand of mRNA.

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7
Q

A codon on a strand of mRNA corresponds to (next step in process)…

A

An anticodon on a tRNA

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8
Q

A tRNA anticodon corresponds to…

A

A certain amino acid

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9
Q

Why does the sequence of amino acids matter?

A

Hydrogen bonding between amino acids affect the overall shape of the produced polypeptide chain, and therefore the function of the final protein.

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10
Q

A part of DNA that does not code for a protein is called what?

A

An intron.

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11
Q

What is the equivalent of a START codon for DNA?

A

Prometer

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12
Q

Multiple codons code for one amino acid. what is this attribute called, and what is its use?

A

Degeneracy of the Code, and it is there to minimise the effect of point mutations, and provide redundancy against the harmful expression of mutations.

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13
Q

Why does mRNA exist?

A

1: the DNA is too precious to leave the cell (there are enzymes and other hazards in the cytoplasm that could damage the DNA and cause harmful mutations and loss off important genetic information
2: A Gene can be expressed multiple times at once (i.e. multiple strands of mRNA can be sent out to produce multiple proteins, wouldn’t be possible with one copy of the gene)
3: Double-stranded DNA is too big to get out of the narrow nuclear pore, while mRNA is not.

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14
Q

What is a frame shift mutation?

A

An insertion or deletion mutation where the number of bases added or removed is not a multiple of 3

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15
Q

What is the definition of a mutation?

A

A mutation is a PERMANENT change in the base sequence of DNA.

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16
Q

What are mutations that do not result in a frame shift called?

A

Point mutations (inversion, substitution, or addition/deletion where number added/removed is a multiple of 3)

17
Q

Which are more dangerous: Frame shifts or point mutations? Why

A

Frame shifts are more dangerous because they affect a large number or codons, including start and stop codons. They greatly affect the resulting makeup and length of the polypeptide chain, changing the overall protein’s shape and most likely rendering it useless.

18
Q

Why are point mutations less harmful than frame shift mutations?

A

They only affect one codon. Due to degeneracy of the code, there is also a chance that regardless of the mutation, the correct amino acid will be produced, and the protein will have the correct shape. As only one amino acid is affected, it could be that the overall shape of the resulting protein is similar enough to the one intended that the protein could still be useful.

19
Q

What is a metabolic pathway?

A

A series of biochemical reactions where the product of one reaction is the substrate for the next.

20
Q

In a metabolic pathway, if one step is removed (due to a mutation, for example), will the other steps be able to carried out?

A

No, as the required substrate will be not be present. Worse, the precursor substrate will build up.