Lecture 4- Eukaryotic chromosome structure Flashcards
What is the karyotype of the parent organism?
The organised representation of all the chromosomes in a eukaryotic cell at metaphase
What is a highly coiled fibre of chromatin?
A chromosome
Explain what the term ‘beads on a string’ means when describing interphase chromatin
The beads are nucleosomes and the string is double stranded DNA
What are the protein subunits of the nucleosomes called?
Core histones
Explain the structure of the nucleosomes
The N-terminal tails of the 8 core histone subunits project out from the nucleosomes core and are free to interact with other proteins, facilitating regulation of chromatin structure and function.
What is the role of linker histones?
- Strap DNA onto histone octamers
- Limit movement of DNA relative to the histone octamer
- Facilitates the establishment of transcriptionally silent heterochromatin
How and why is DNA packaged
- DNA is packaged by histone octamers into a compact, flexible chromatin scaffold
- Chromatin scaffold can be remodelled to accommodate protein complexes involved in gene transcription and DNA replication
What is the role of chromatin?
Permits flexible responses to altered transcription factor activity caused by changes in cell differentiation status and changes in signalling pathways
What is interphase chromatin?
A set of dynamic, fractal globules that can reversibly condense and decondense without becoming knotted
What does the nuclear periphery in interphase cells include and exclude?
Includes transcriptionally inactive DNA and excludes RNA transcripts
What follows the transcriptional activation of a gene?
The movement of the gene from the periphery towards the centre of the nucleus
Chromosomes contain specialised DNA sequences that facilitate…
- Reliable and complete DNA replication
2. Segregation of duplicated chromosomes during cell division
Define telomere
DNA sequences at the end of linear chromosomes which maintain chromosomal integrity
Define replication origin
DNA sequence where DNA replication is initiated
Define centromere
A DNA sequence which is (indirectly) attached to the mitotic spindle and mediates chromosomes segregation at mitosis and meiosis
Define kinetochore
Protein complex that binds to centromeric DNA sequences and the microtubules of the mitotic/meiotic spindle
How are telomeres (TTAGGG) replicated?
Telomeres are replicated by a specialised DNA polymerase called telomerase
What do kinetochore inner and outer plate proteins bind to?
Kinetochore inner plate proteins bind to chromatin containing alpha-satellite DNA
Kinetochore outer plate proteins bind to protein components of mitotic spindle
Describe the structure of centromeres
Centromeres contain alpha-satellite DNA repeats that readily form condensed chromatin with histone octamers containing unusual subunits
Describe the kinetochore in yeast
The kinetochore is a basket that links a single nucleosome of centromeric chromatin to a single microtubule
What 2 things accompany increasing biological complexity?
- Increase numbers of protein coding genes
- Increasing amounts of non-protein coding DNA for regulating transcription and organising access to protein coding genes
What does non protein encoding DNA that encodes cis-regulatory information determine?
Determines when and where in the body adjacent protein coding genes are transcribed
What are the 3 types of transposons?
- DNA transposons
- Retroviral retrotransposons
- Non-retroviral polyA retrotransposons
How do DNA transposons move around the genome?
Move by a cut and paste mechanism without self duplication, requiring the transposon encoded enzyme Transposase