genes Flashcards

Lecture 3 - Mari Knight

1
Q

gene

A

a unit of DNA which performs one function. Usually equted with the production of one RNA or protein

in order to provide useful function, a gene needs to be:

  1. expressed
  2. regulated
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2
Q

chromosome

A

a structure in the cell nucleus containg nucelar DNA together with a number of proteins

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3
Q

genome

A

the total DNA contained in an organism, one full copy in each cell

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4
Q

‘central dogma’

A

the process by which the instructions in DNA are converted into a functional product

DNA stores information
RNA reads, decodes and uses that information to make proteins via ribosmes

  • DNA synthesis ( replication )
  • RNA synthesis ( transcription )
  • protein synthesis ( translation )
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5
Q

RNA

A

ribonucleic acid

  • ribose sugar
  • Uricil instead of Thymine
mRNA - messenger
tRNA - transfer
rRNA - ribosomal 
snRNA - small nuclear 
miRNA - micro
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6
Q

codon

A

a group of 3 DNA nucleotide bases that codes for a specific amino acid

postition 1 = most conserved
posistion 3 = least conserved

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7
Q

codon : expression

A

4 different bases - 64 different codons

3 of the possibe 64 codons are stop codons

remaing 61 codons specify 20 different amino acids

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8
Q

genetic code

A

a collection of codons of DNA and RNA that contains the information for synthesis of proteins

degenerate - more than one codon will code for the same amino acid

universal - same proteins being coded for by a particular base sequence in different organisms

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9
Q

gene structure

A

promotor + START codon

exons : coding sequence
introns : non-coding sequence

terminator + STOP codon

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10
Q

transcription

A

double stranded DNA unwinds - enzyme helicase

single starnd copied into a single stranded mRNA molecule - enzyme RNA polymerase

promotor sequences tells the RNA polymerase where to start and the eterminator tells where to finish

resulting primary mRNA transcript finaly ‘edited’ and introns removed (splicing)

promotors and termintors are used during transcription

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11
Q

translation

A

single starnded mRNA to a protein via transfer RNA ( tRNA ) and ribosomes ( = rRNA + ribosomal proteins )

  1. mRNA moves from nucleus ( atttaching to ribosome )
  2. tRNA decodes codons into amino acids

during translation protein synthesis always starts with a ‘start’ codon ( often methionine, AUG ) and stops with a ‘stop’ codon ( TAA, TGA or TAG )

start and stop codons are used during translation

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12
Q

eubacteria/archaea ( differencesto eukarya )

A
  • rigid outer cell wall
  • single cellular compartment
  • single circular chromosome attached to the cell wall
  • transcribed mRNA is translated directly into proteins
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13
Q

eukaryotes ( different to bacteria/archaea )

A
  • internal cytoskeleton
  • complex set of internal membranes, subdivide cell into micro-environments specialised for particular functions
  • set of linear chromosones located within a nuclear membrane
  • transcription in nucleus
  • translation in cytoplasm
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14
Q

alternative splicing

A

the process of selecting different combinations of splice sites within a messenger RNA precursor (pre-mRNA) to produce variably spliced mRNAs.

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