Module 2: Section 3 - Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids Flashcards
What is a nucleotide made from and what elements do all nucleotides contain?
It’s made from:
- a pentose sugar (that’s a sugar with five carbon atoms)
- a nitrogenous (nitrogen-containing) base
- a phosphate group
All nucleotides contain the elements C, H, O, N and P
What are nucleotides the monomers of?
Nucleotides are the monomers that make up DNA and RNA. DNA and DNA are both types of nucleic acid. DNA is used to store genetic information - the instructions an organism needs to grow and develop. RNA is used to make proteins from the instructions in DNA
What is the pentose sugar in a DNA molecule called?
Deoxyribose
What are the four possible bases of DNA?
Each DNA molecule has the same sugar and phosphate group. The bases on each nucleotide can vary though.
There are four possible bases - adenine (A), thymine (T), cytosine (C) and guanine (G)
What DNA bases are purines and what DNA bases are pyrimidines?
Define a purine base and define a pyrimidine base
A and G are a type of base called a purine
C and T are a type of bases called a pyrimidine
A purine base contains two carbon-nitrogen rings joined together
A pyrimidine base only has one carbon-nitrogen ring. SO a pyrimidine base is smaller than a purine base
What is the sugar in RNA called and how do the bases in RNA differ to the bases in DNA?
1) RNA contains nucleotides with a ribose sugar (not deoxyribose)
2) Like DNA, an RNA nucleotide also has a phosphate group and one of four different bases
3) In RNA though, uracil (a pyrimidine) replaces thymine as a base
4) An RNA molecule is made up of a single polynucleotide chain
ADP and ATP are phosphorylated nucleotides. How do you phosphorylate a nucleotide and what does ADP and ATP contain?
1) to phosphorylate a nucleotide, you add one or more phosphate groups to it
2) ADP (adenosine diphosphate) contains the base adenine, the sugar ribose and two phosphate groups
3) ATP (adenosine triphosphate) contains the base adenine, the sugar ribose and three phosphate groups
What does ATP provide and how is it synthesised?
Oi, mate, draw a diagram ATP being synthesised. The answer is on page 35.
- ATP provides energy for chemical reactions in the cell
- ATP is synthesised from ADP and inorganic phosphate using the energy from an energy-releasing action, e.g. the breakdown of glucose in respiration. The ADP is phosphorylated to form ATP and a phosphate bond is formed
- energy is stored in the phosphate bond. When this energy is needed by a cell, ATP is broken back down into ADP and inorganic phosphate. Energy is released from the phosphate bond and used by the cell.
Nucleotides join together to form polynucleotides. How do they join together, what is this known as and how do they separate again?
1) the nucleotides join up between the phosphate group of one nucleotide and the sugar of another. This forms a phosphodiester bond (consisting of the phosphate group and two ester bonds)
2) the chain of sugars and phosphates is known as the sugar-phosphate backbone
3) polynucleotides can be broken down into nucleotides again by breaking the phosphodiester bonds
Two polynucleotide strands join together to form a double helix. Talk me through the structure of this and how it is formed.
1) Two DNA polynucleotide strands join together by hydrogen bonding between the bases.
2) each base can only join with one particular partner - this is called complimentary base pairing
3) adenine always pairs with thymine (A-T) and cytosine always pairs with guanine (C-G). A purine (A or G) always pairs with a pyrimidine (T or C)
4) two hydrogen bonds form between A and T, and three hydrogen bonds form between C and G
5) two antiparallel polynucleotide strands twist to form the DNA double helix
You can purify DNA using a ppt reaction. How is this reaction carried out (in 7 steps)?
1) break up the cells in your sample. You can do this by using a blender
2) make up a solution of detergent, salt and distilled water
3) add the broken up cells to a beaker containing the detergent solution. Incubate the beaker in a water baths at 60 degrees C for 15 minutes
4) once incubated, put your beaker in an ice bath to cool the mixture down. When its cooled, filter the mixture. Transfer a sample of your mixture to a clean boiling tube
5) add protease enzymes to the filtered mixture. These will break down some proteins in the mixture, e.g. proteins bound to the DNA. Adding RNase enzymes will break down any RNA in the mixture
6) slowly dribble some cold ethanol down the side of the tube, so it forms a layer on top of the DNA detergent mixture
7) if you leave the tube for a few minutes, the DNA will form a white ppt, which you can remove from the tube using a glass rod
This is a nasty one - sorry J-dawg. How does DNA copy itself before cell division?
1) DNA helicase breaks the hydrogen bonds between the two polynucleotide DNA strands. The helix unzips to form two single strands
2) Each original single strand acts as a template for a new strand. Free-floating DNA nucleotides join to the exposed bases on each original template strand by complementary base pairing - A with T and C with G
3) The nucleotides of the new strand are joined together by the enzyme DNA polymerase. This forms the sugar-phosphate backbone. Hydrogen bonds form between the bases on the original and new strand. The stands twist to form a double helix.
4) Each new DNA molecule contains one strand from the original DNA molecule and one new strand
Why is DNA replication known as semi-conservative?
This type of replication is called semi-conservative because half of the strands in each new DNA molecule are from the original piece of DNA (i.e. the new molecule contains one old strand and one new strand).
DNA replication is really accurate - but what happens when it’s not?
DNA replication is really accurate - it has to be, to make sure genetic info is conserved each time the DNA is replicated
Every so often though, a random, spontaneous mutation occurs. A mutation is any change to the DNA base sequence. Mutations don’t always have an effect, but they can alter the sequence of amino acids in a protein. This can cause an abnormal protein to be produced which might function better than the normal protein or might not work at all.
What is a gene?
What does the order of nucleotide bases in a gene determine?
1) a gene is a sequence of DNA nucleotides that codes for a polypeptide - the sequence of amino acids in a polypeptide forms the primary structure of a protein
2) different proteins have a different number and order of amino acids
3) it’s the order of nucleotide bases in a gene that determines the order of amino acids in a particular protein
4) each amino acid is coded for by a sequence of three bases (called a triplet) in a gene
5) different sequences of bases code for different amino acids. So the sequence of bases in a section of DNA is a template that’s used to make proteins during protein synthesis