Genetics Flashcards

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0
Q

DNA Structure

A
  • double helix - formed from 2 separate strands which are coiled together forming a spiral
  • polynucleotides
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1
Q

DNA Function

A

Contains genetic information that has all the information needed to grow and develop from a fertilised egg

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2
Q

Nucleotide Structure

A
  • phosphate group, a nitrogen base and a pentode sugar which is deoxyribose
  • 4 possible bases (A,T,C,G)
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3
Q

Polynucleotide strands

A
  • join between phosphate group and a sugar

* forms a sugar-phosphate backbone

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4
Q

Specific base pairing

A
  • join together by hydrogen bonds
  • adenine with thymine
  • guanine with cytosine
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5
Q

Structure vs function

A
  • double helix structure makes it stable in cell and isn’t easily damaged/broken down
  • coiled up tightly allows a lot of information to fit in a small space
  • paired structure makes is easier to copy itself (semi-conservative replication)
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6
Q

DNA storage - eukaryotic cells

A
  • linear
  • really long
  • wound around proteins (histones)
  • coiled up tightly
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7
Q

DNA storage - prokaryotic cells

A
  • shorter and circular
  • isn’t wound around proteins
  • supercoiling
  • free floating
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8
Q

What are genes?

A

*sections of DNA found on chromosomes that code for polypeptides

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9
Q

Making proteins using genes

A
  • the order of nucleotide bases in a gene determines the order of amino acids, coded by a sequence of 3 bases
  • degenerate - more than 1 base triplet can code for the same amino acid
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10
Q

Non-coding DNA

A
  • genes in eukaryotic DNA contain sections that don’t code for amino acids (intons) which is removed during protein synthesis
  • eukaryotic cells contain regions of multiple repeats which don’t code for amino acids
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11
Q

Genes and development

A

*enzymes speed up our metabolic pathways so contribute to our development and our phenotype

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12
Q

What are alleles?

A
  • a different version of a gene
  • order of bases is slightly different so code for slightly different versions of the same characteristic
  • found at same position (locus)
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13
Q

Homologous chromosomes

A
  • 23 pairs

* same size and have the same genes, but can have different alleles

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14
Q

Gene mutations

A
  • changes in the base sequence
  • can produce new alleles of genes which could be non-functional
  • mutation can cause enzymes to not fold properly producing an active site that’s the wrong size
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15
Q

Gametes and fertilisation

A
  • gametes join to form a zygote which divides and develops into new organism
  • normal body calls have a diploid number of chromosomes
  • gametes have a haploid number of chromosomes
16
Q

Meiosis

A
  • 1- DNA unravels and replicates so there are 2 copies of each chromosome, called chromatids
  • 2- DNA condenses to form double-armed chromosomes, made from 2 sister chromatids
  • 3- chromosomes arrange into homologous pairs
  • 4- first division: pairs separated, halving number of chromosomes
  • 5- second division: sister chromatids are separated
  • 6- 4 haploid cells that are genetically different are produced
17
Q

Creating genetic variation in gametes

A
  • 1- crossing over of chromatids

* 2- independent segregation of chromosomes

18
Q

What is genetic diversity?

A
  • variety in DNA
  • different species have different genes
  • alleles create it
19
Q

Factors that increase genetic diversity

A
  • mutation in DNA - forming new alleles

* gene flow - different alleles moving between populations

20
Q

Factors that decrease genetic diversity

A
  • genetic bottlenecks
  • the founder effect
  • selective breeding
21
Q

Genetic bottlenecks

A
  • event causing a big reduction in a population

* reduces number of different alleles in a gene pool

22
Q

The founder effect

A
  • describes just a few organisms from a population starting a new colony
  • smaller number of alleles in the gene pool
  • increased inbreeding which can lead to higher incidence of genetic disease
23
Q

Selective breeding

A

*humans selecting which domesticated animals/strains of plants to reproduce together to produce useful characteristics

24
Q

Arguments for selective breeding

A
  • produces high yielding animals/plants
  • increased resistance to disease so fewer drugs are needed
  • bred to have increased tolerance of bad conditions
25
Q

Arguments against selective breeding

A
  • can cause health problems

* reduces genetic diversity