Inheritance (DNA Structure and Protein Synthesis) Flashcards
1
Q
What is the genome of an organism?
A
The entire set of genetic material in an organism (the entire DNA)
2
Q
What is a gene?
A
- A small section of DNA within an organism
- Each gene codes for one protein
- These proteins could be structural, like collagen, enzymes, or hormones
- Which proteins are produced affects the characteristics of the organism - we are all slightly different because we all have different genes and therefore produce slightly different proteins
3
Q
Where are genes located?
A
- On chromosones, which are structures made of DNA (so many genes)
- These chromosones are found within the nucleus of a cell
- In each human cell, there will be 46 (23 pairs) chromosomes, and in gametes there will be just 23 individual chromosones
- In other organisms, the number of chromosomes differ
4
Q
What is the structure of a DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) molecule?
A
- Two strands coiled around to form a double helix
- The strands are made of a sugar-phosphate backbone
- The strands are joined together by complimentary nitrogenous bases bonding together through hydrogen bonds
- The base adenine will pair with the base thymine
- The base guanine will pair with the base cytosine
- The process of pairing complimentary bases is essential for processes of cell divison and protein synthesis as each half of the double helix acts as a template to be copied to form a new double helix
- Nucleotide is another name for a base
5
Q
What are triplets of DNA and what do they code for?
A
- A triplet is 3 contiguous base pairs in a gene (so 6 bases in total)
- Each triplet codes for one amino acid during protein synthesis
- The triplets are non-overlapping, meaning each triplet only codes for one amino acid, and the bases are not shared between triplets (they are independent of eachother)
6
Q
What is the structure of an RNA (ribonucleic acid) molecule?
A
- Single stranded, so the bases will stick out sideways from the strand
- It contains the base uracil instead of thymine
- Otherwise it is the same as DNA
7
Q
What are the two stages of protein synthesis?
A
- Transcription
- Translation
8
Q
What is the process of transcription?
A
- The hydrogen bonds between complimentary base pairs break and the DNA strands will unwind
- The gene necessary to produce the wanted protein which is to be transcribed is therefore exposed
- An mRNA molecule is built by transcribing one of the DNA strands which comprise the gene
- The mRNA molecule will have complimentary bases to that strand (though it will have uracil instead of thymine)
- The mRNA molecule escapes through a pore in the nuclear envelope
A codon is the 3 bases on the mRNA which is complimentary to the triplet on the transcribed DNA strand
9
Q
What is the process of translation?
A
- After leaving the nucleus, the mRNA molecule will attach to a ribosome in the cytoplasm of the cell
- There will be free tRNA molecules in the cytoplasm, each with an anti-codon complimentary to the codon of an mRNA molecule on one end, and on the other a site where an amino-acid has binded
- The tRNA molecule with a complimentary anti-codon to the codon of an mRNA molecule will bind to the mRNA molecule
- More mRNA molecules will attach to the ribosome in the correct order to form the correct protein, with complimentary RNA molecules attaching to them
- Two mRNA and tRNA molecules can be attached to the ribosome at one time, and a peptide bond will form between the two amino acids attached to the ends of the tRNA molecule
- In this way, a sequence of amino acids will be formed to make a protein until an mRNA molecule has a stop codon - at this time the process will stop
The amino-acid binded to the tRNA molecule will be specific to it’s anti-codon