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Viruses force cells to make
more viruses
Virus structure
DNA surrounded by a protein coat
DNA
•Stores the hereditary information of a cell •Genes are discrete units of hereditary information consisting of a specific nucleotide sequence •Genes code to make a protein
percentage of A is equal to
T
percentage of T is equal to
A
percentage of C is equal to
G
percentage of G is equal to
C
Humans have what percentage of A
30%
Monomers of Nucleic Acids
Nucleotides
Polymers of Nucleic Acids
DNA: Deoxyribonucleic acid & RNA: Ribonucleic acid
RNA
assists in protein production
single stranded nucleic acid that passes along genetic messages
Nucleotide structure
Phosphate group 5-carbon sugar [pentose]
Nucleotide bases
Carbon rings that also contain nitrogen
Pyrimidines
Cytosine [1 carbon rings]
Thymine (DNA only) [1 carbon rings]
Uracil (RNA only) [1 carbon rings]
Purines
Adenine [2 carbon rings]
Guanine [2 carbon rings]
Complementary Base pairings T: U: C:
A [2 hydrogen bond] A [2 hydrogen bond] G [3 hydrogen bond]
The carbon double bonded to oxygen (the carbonyl group) is
#1
To form a carbon ring
a covalent bond forms between the hydroxyl group on the 4th carbon and the carbonyl on the 1st carbon
Nucleoside
"sugar + base
dehydration reaction between nitrogenous base and the 1'C of pentose links the base to the sugar"
phosphate group on a nucleoside creates
nucleotide
nucleotide
monomer of DNA & RNA
how do polynucleotides monomers link together
"Dehydration reaction between phosphate group and the hydroxyl on the '3 carbon"
DNA structures
"Two strands of polynucleotides complimentary bases pair between the two strand
Double helix anti-parallel [5'->3']"
RNA structure
single polynucleotide strand Bases in one part can bond to complimentary bases to other part can create complex structures
DNA VS RNA
DNA Double stranded Found in nucleus A,G,C,T Sugar=deoxyribose RNA Single strand found inside and out of the nucleus [cytoplasm] A,G,C,U sugar=ribose
DNA replication
DNA makes a copy of itself for cell division [nucleus]
Begins at the origin of replication and separate the two strands DNA replication
occurs in opposite directions and makes the bubble bigger until it copies the chromosomes
DNA begins to unzip at the replication fork
DNA Transcription
DNA creates messenger RNA [nucleus]
RNA translation
RNA is translated to produce a protein [cytoplasm]
What model does DNA use to replicate
semiconservative model
Conservative model
Two old strands stay together, two new strand pair
Semiconservative Model
Each new double helix contains one original and one new strand [in nucleus]Copies entire strand Occurs before cell division50 nucleotides/second
"Meselson and Stahl's experiment"
Bacteria + 15N [heavier] Bacteria transferred to media with 14N [light] [less dense than the first one] DNA = centrifuged [1x] DNA = centrifuged [2x]
Origins of Replication
Replication begins at a specific site with an specific sequence of nucleotide
replication fork
a Y-shaped point that where the two strands of a DNA separate so that the DNA molecule can be replicated
Bacteria vs Eukaryotes replication
Bacteria - One large Chromosome Eukaryotes - multiple, linear, and larger chromosomes. Has multiple sites of replication; bubbles begin to merge
Helicase
enzyme [protein] that unzips the DNA at the replication fork
Single Stranded Binding Proteins [SSBPs]
stabilizing the new single strands, prevent repairing
Topoisomerase
protein that breaks, swivels, and rejoins the parental DNA ahead of the replication fork
Primase
creates and places primers
primer
short segment of DNA that acts as the starting point for a new strand
DNA polymerases
enzyme that add nucleotides to existing chain [DNA]
DNA polymerase III
adds complementary nucleotides to the template strand
DNA polymerase III can only add new nucleotides to what end of a DNA strand
"the 3' end"
DNA builds in
"5' - 3' direction"
DNA reads from
"3' - 5'"
Leading strand
The new continuous complementary DNA strand synthesized while the replication fork progresses
Lagging strand
"DPIII moves away from the replication fork in a 5' to 3' direction to synthesize a new complementary strand"
Okazaki Fragments
Small DNA segments produced on the lagging strand
what does primase make for each okazaki fragment
RNA primer
what causes the extension of complementary strand
DNA polymerase III extends the CS from the primer until it reaches the former primer and Okazaki fragment
DNA polymerase I
Replaces the DNA polymerase III after it falls off from extension. Removes the RNA primer and replaces it will new DNA nucleotides
DNA ligase
catalyzes the covalent bond between the two Okazaki fragments
Gene Expression
Process where DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or just RNA
DNA is ____ into RNA
transcribed
Transcription
makes an mRNA from DNA [Initiation, Elongation, Termination]
occurs in the nucleus creates mRNA from a DNA template for one gene only one of the two strands is used as the template for the mRNA
RNA is ______ into Protein
Translated
Translation
creates polypeptide using the genetic information in an mRNA molecule [nucleotides -> amino acids]
Are DNA and Ribosomes in the same place
NO
What bases does DNA use
A, G, C, T
What bases does RNA use
A, G, C, and U
"During transcription, what does RNA 'U' pair with"
"DNA 'A'"
mRNA [messenger RNA]
"carries the genetic information to the ribosome 5' to 3'antiparallel to template strand"
non-template strand [coding strand]
the strand of DNA that is not transcribed into RNA during transcription
Central Dogma of Biology
DNA -> RNA -> Protein
initiation [Transcription]
Transcription factors [protein] bind to the DNA first. RNA polymerase forms a complex with the transcription factors [transcription initiation complex]
elongation [transcription]
"RNA polymerase untwist DNA, exposing about 10-20 nucleotides at a time.
RNA nucleotides complementary to DNA template are added to the 3' end"
Termination [transcription]
RNA polymerase passes through a specific sequence with a signal [AAUAAA]. 10-35 nucleotides downstream of the signal associated with the new pre-mRNA cut it free
TATA box
promoters contain a sequence, TATAAAA, to which transcription factors bind in order to establish the initiation complex
start point
site where transcription actually begins
template strand
the strand of DNA that specifies the complementary mRNA molecule
RNA polymerase
links ribonucleotides into a growing RNA chain during transcription
promotor
A region of DNA with a specific sequence that tells RNA polymerase where to begin transcription.
transcription unit
The stretch of DNA that is transcribed into RNA
The direction of transcription
downstream
the direction opposite of transcription
upstream
Transcription factors
A regulatory protein that binds to DNA and affects transcription of specific genes.
Transcription initiation complex
The completed assembly of transcription factors and RNA polymerase bound to a promoter.
terminator sequences
Sequence of bases at the end of a gene that signals the RNA polymerase to stop transcribing
Pre-mRNA
newly made mRNA before 5' cap, poly A tail, and splicing
primary transcript
initial RNA transcript from any gene before it is processed.
Ex: pre-mRNA
RNA processing
"extensive processing that alters both ends of the RNA and cuts sequences out of the middle
The 5' end of the pre-mRNA receives a 5' cap
50-250 nucleotides [poly-A tail] added to 3' end"
"Chargaff's rule"
A=T and C=G
Watson & Crick model
Double-helix structure of DNA
"Rosalind Franklin's contribution"
X-ray diffraction to get information about the structure of the DNA molecule
base pair rule
A =T & G =C
every species have different amount of A,T, etc
Nitrogenous Base
Cytosine, Guanine, Adenine, Thymine [DNA], Uracil [RNA]
Deoxyribose
penta sugar in DNA
polynucleotides
polymers of nucleotides monomers in a chain
untranslated regions
region of RNA that are not translated
introns [intervening sequences]
noncoding regions of nucleotides that lie between coding regions
exons
regions of nucleotides that are expressed
RNA splicing
introns are cut out of the pre-mRNA [primary transcript]
spliceosome
large complex of RNA that splices mRNA by interacting with ends of an RNA intron, releasing the intron, and joining the two adjacent exon
Alternate RNA splicing
creates different mRNA molecules from the same primary transcript
Functional domains
descrete structural and functional region
ex: dna binding domain, active site for an enzyme
how many nucleotides to produce 20 amino acids
combination of 3 nucleotides produce 64 possible arrangements = enough to generate 20 amino acids
triplet code
set of three-nucleotides-long words specify the amino acids for polypeptide chains
codons
mRNA nucleotide triplets
what are synthetic mRNA used to discovered
genetic code
AUG codes for
methionine [start codon]