Lecture 6 Flashcards
1
Q
What must recombination involve?
A
Breakage and rejoining of DNA
2
Q
What are the steps of Holliday’s recomb model?
A
- Alignment of DNA sequences
- Break in 1 stand of each chromosome
- Holliday junction formed by rejoining of DNA
- Branch migration forms a heteroduplex region
- Resolution regenerates separate chromosomes
3
Q
What is a heteroduplex region?
A
A double stranded DNA molecule but each strand is derived form a different parent molecule
4
Q
In the process of resolution, what are the two possible cut directions and products of these?
A
- Horizontal cut -> heteroduplexes with NO recombinants
2. Vertical cut -> heteroduplexes WITH recombinants
5
Q
What are the steps of the modern recomb model?
A
- Double stranded break, both strands on the SAME chromosome (different to Holliday’s model)
- Erosion degrades DNA , leaving part of the DNA single stranded (Key difference to Holliday’s model)
- Invasion and displacement (strand invasion). One strand displaces part of the other and becomes base paired forming a heteroduplex structure
- Polymerisation occurs and DNA synthesis forms a double stranded molecule. The displaced DNA uses the past DNA strand as a template to pair. A Holliday junction forms
- Resolution occurs and recombinants are formed
6
Q
How is double strand break repair similar to recombination?
A
A double stranded break Degradation of DNA strands Strand invasion, DNA synthesis Holliday junction formation Resolution can lead to cross over
7
Q
TRUE/FALSE
Bacteria are diploid
A
FALSE
Bacteria is haploid
8
Q
How do bacteria replicate?
A
Clonally
9
Q
How many chromosomes do bacterial cells have and what shape is it?
A
1x per cell, circular