Replication and Transcription Flashcards
DNA replication is semiconservative , what does that mean?
when a new double strand is made, it has one strand from the original DNA and one newly made strand.
what is replication governed by?
group of proteins called the replisome.
where does replication start?
towards the middle at a site called origin of replication. a eukaryotic chromosome has multiple origins but a prokaryotic circular chromosome has one single origin
what happens from the origin of replication?
two replisome proceed in opposite directions along the chromosome making replication bidirectional.
what is the point where the replisome is attached to the chromosome?
replication fork
DNA helicase is part of the replicasome, what does it do?
unwinds DNA
what about DNA polymerase?
it makes new DNA but it cannot initiate a strand from two nucleotides, it can only add nucleotides to an existing strand. so primate comes in ( its RNA polymerase) , it makes a RNA primer approximately 10 ribonucleotides long to start a strand.
in which direction does DNA polymerase read strand?
in 3’ to 5’ and it makes a new strand in a 5’ to 3’ direction.
what is downstream?
5’- 3’
what is upstream?
3’- 5’
the beginning of transcription is called initiation - where a group of proteins called initiation factors find a promoter on the DNA strand and assemble transcription initiation complex which includes the RNA pol. A promoter is a sequence of DNA it designates the beginning point for transcription.
The most commonly found sequence of a promoter recognized by RNA pol sequence is called the consensus sequence- variation from this sequence causes RNA pol to bind less tightly and less often to the promoter, which leads to those genes being transcribed less frequently.
what does the RNA pol do after it binds to the promoter?
it unzips the DNA helix creates a transcription bubble. NEXT , complex switches to elongation mode.
what happens in elongation?
RNA pol only transcribes 1 strand of the DNA nucleotide sequence into a complementary RNA . the one strand that is transcribed is called the template strand or (-) antisense strand. the other strand, called the coding strand or (=) sense strand, it protects its partner against degradation. THE CODING STRAND WILL RESEMBLE THE DNA
in what direction does RNA pol move?
like DNA pol it moves in 3-5’ and makes a new RNA strand in 5’ -3’. transcription is way slower than DNA replication. RNA pol also does not have proofreading mechanism, so the rate of errors is a lot higher.
errors in RNA are not passed on to progeny.
what is the end of transcription called?
termination- which needs a special sequence so that the pol can break off the DNA.