T6 Flashcards
1
Q
DNA (Deoxyribonucleic Acid)
A
- Pentose sugar - Deoxyribose
- Nitrogen-containing base - Adenine, Guanine, Cytosine, Thymine
- Double stranded in the form of double helix. (Only 1 form of DNA)
- Larger molecule
- Found mostly in the nucleus with small amounts in the mitochondria & chloroplasts
2
Q
RNA (Ribonucleic Acid)
A
- Pentose sugar - Ribose
- Nitrogen-containing base - Adenine, Guanine, Cytosine, Uracil
- Single stranded (3 types of RNA - mRNA, rRNA, tRNA)
- Relatively small molecule
- Synthesised in the nucleus but found mainly in the cytoplasm
3
Q
Five different types of bases
A
- Adenine
- Guanine
- Cytosine
- Thymine
- Uracil
4
Q
Purines
A
Bases with double ring structure comprising of a six-sided ring and five-sided ring.
Example : Adenine & Guanine
5
Q
Pyrimidines
A
Bases with a single ring structure each with six sided
Examples : Cytosine, Thymine & Uracil
6
Q
Formation of Nucleotides, Dinucleotides & Polynucleotides
A
- The 3 components (phosphoric acid, pentose sugar & nitrogen-containing base) combine together to form a nucleotide via condensation reaction.
- Phosphoric acid is attached to the sugar molecule at carbon atom 5.
- 2 nucleotides are joined together by covalent bonds between phosphate group of one nucleotide and the pentose sugar of the next resulting in phosphodiester bond
- Phosphodiester bond occurs between carbon atom 3 (3’) of one sugar and carbon atom 5 (5’) of the next
7
Q
DNA Replication
A
The process by which a DNA molecule can produce an exact copy of itself
8
Q
Mechanism of DNA replication
A
- The enzyme DNA helicase causes a region of the double helix original (parental) DNA molecule to unwind and unzip at the origin of replication by breaking the weak hydrogen bonds between the nitrogen-containing bases.
- This causes the two (parental) strands of DNA molecule to separate and expose their bases.
- Each single strand of DNA now acts as a template for synthesising new (daughter) DNA strands. The above mentioned specific or complementary base-pairing enables a free DNA nucleotide to find and match up against its complementary nucleotide on each of the open parental strand. (Adenine with Thymine, Cytosine with Guanine)
- Weak hydrogen bonds are formed between these complementary base pairs
- The enzyme DNA polymerase catalyses the formation of a phosphodiester bond between two adjacent nucleotides between the phosphate group of one nucleotide and the pentose sugar.
- At the end of the replication, the two newly formed (daughter) molecules of DNA wind up again into double helix.