Molecular Genetics - DNA Structure, Function, and History Flashcards
1
Q
DNA location, function, structure, and longevity
A
- Located in the nucleus only (except meiosis and mitosis)
- Stores genetic info
- Made of deoxyribose sugar + A, T, C, G bases
- Usually double-stranded, double helix
- Very long (10^6 base pairs)
- Very stable, can survive thousands of years
2
Q
RNA location, function, structure, and longevity
A
- Made in nucleus, used in nucleus + cytoplasm
- Transfers DNA instructions to ribosomes
- Made of ribose sugar + A, U, C, G bases
- Usually single-stranded, single helix or other shapes
- Short (100s - 10^5) nucleotides
- Very fragile, easily broken down by enzymes, only last a few hours
3
Q
Johannes Friedrich Miescher contribution
A
Isolated nucleic acids from nucleus of white blood cells (pus from patient bandages) and called it “nuclein”
4
Q
Frederick Griffith contribution
A
- Used dead S and live R strains of pneumonia (R gained protective coating)
- Couldn’t identify material involved in inheritance
- Understood that some hereditary substance passed from S to R
- Called the process transformation, factor responsible was the transforming principle (either proteins or DNA)
5
Q
Avery, Macleod, + McCarty contribution
A
- DNA was the transforming substance
- Did not reveal due to possibly incorrect results (if some protein not destroyed by enzymes)
- More precise experiments required to confirm
6
Q
Hershey + Chase contributions
A
- DNA is indeed the carrier of genetic info
- Used radioisotopes to tag protein and DNA (DNA w/ phosphorus, protein w/ sulfur)
- Radioactivity only determined in bacteria colony infected by DNA tagged virus
7
Q
Phoebus Levene contribution
A
- Each DNA molecule contains 3 components: deoxyribose sugar, phosphate groups, and nitrogenous bases
- DNA is a polymer made of nucleotide subunits (each made of nitrogenous base attached to 1 deoxyribose sugar, which is connected to a phosphate group)
- Led to bases being identified in 1949: adenine and guanine (purines), thymine and cytosine (pyrimidines)
8
Q
Erwin Chargaff contribution
A
- Bases occur in definite ratios
- Quantities of A + T and G + C match
9
Q
Franklin + Wilkins contribution
A
- Used X-ray crystallography (combination of crystals and X-rays created a pattern of a photographic plate) to study shape of DNA molecule
- Sugar-phosphate backbones face outside of molecule, not inside
- DNA is a double helix, rotates in clockwise direction
- Molecule has a diameter of 2nm and one turn is 3.4 nm in length
10
Q
Watson + Crick contribution
A
- Used information determined by other researchers
- DNA is only stable if two strands run antiparallel
- 3’ end attaches to 5’ end of other strand, other strand must wind around the other
- Nitrogenous bases connected by hydrogen bonds
- Purine and pyrimidine base pairs linked to each other (T-A by 2 bonds, G-C by 3 bonds)
- Symmetry is key to structure and ability to divide accurately + convey genetic info