Biology 1: Exam 3: With Victoria Mccurdy at Mississippi State University Fall 2017

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253 Terms

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DNA

stores genetic material by encoding it in a sequence of nucleotides and is packaged into chromosomes that are stored in the nucleus..

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Humans

23 chromosomes = 22 homologous pairs + 1 sex pair..

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5 Levels of Organization

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1. Nucleotides

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2. Single strand

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3. Double Helix

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4. Chromosome

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5. Genome..

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3 Component of DNA

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1. Phosphate Group

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2. Sugar

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• Deoxyribose

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3. Base

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• Guanine

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• Cytosine

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• Adenine

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• Thymine..

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3 Components of RNA

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1. Phosphate Group

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2. Sugar

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• Ribose

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3. Base

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• Guanine

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• Cytosine

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• Adenine

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• Uracil..

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Numbering

sugar carbons are 1' to 5' with the base attaching at 1' and phosphate at 5'..

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Phosphodiester bonds

link nucleotide together and form sugar-phosphate backbone..

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Directionality

nucleotide sequence is written 5' to 3'..

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Strand

a linear linkage of nucleotides that has directionality..

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Double stranded helix

has strands that run antiparallel with a sugar-phosphate backbone and bases projected towards the center (away from the backbone)..

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Complementary Base Pairing rule

leads to complementary strands-

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• Adenine (A) pairs with Thymine (T)

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• Cytosine (C) pairs with Guanine (G)..

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DNA has to replicated whenever a cell divides to produce new cells and follows the AT/GC rule

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1. Parental strands separate and serves as a template for DNA synthesis

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2. Replication is semi

conservative with each new helix composed of 1 original parent and 1 new daughter strand..

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Steps

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1. Replication begins at an origin of replication

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2. The two strands unwind

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3. Replication proceeds from 2 forks and is bidirectional..

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Formation and Movement of the replication fork

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1. Single

strand binding proteins: bind single strands to prevent them from reforming a double helix

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2. DNA topoisomerase: prevents tangling of DNA ahead of the fork

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3. DNA helicase: unwinds DNA at the fork..

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Synthesis of DNA strands

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1. DNA polymerase: covalently links nucleotides together to form DNA strands

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• Can only add nucleotides to existing strands in the 5'

3' direction

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• Extends DNA from the RNA primer

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2. RNA primer (made by DNA primase) is needed to prime replication

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• Removed and replaced by nucleotides

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• DNA Ligase

seals the gaps between fragments..

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Synthesis of Leading and Lagging strands

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• Leading strand

is synthesized continuously 5'-3' towards the replication fork and requires only one primer

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• Lagging strand

is synthesized discontinuously as short Okazaki fragments: away from the replication fork and requires a primer for each fragment..

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DNA polymerase

is unlikely to catalyze bonds between adjacent mismatched nucleotides because they do not fit the enzyme active site optimally and has a 3'-5' proofreading mechanism that checks for mistakes afterwards..

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Because DNA is unable to replicate the 3' end of the template DNA, there is a shortening of DNA with each round of replication

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Telomeres prevent loss of genetic material and are added to the end of chromosomes by telomerase

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DNA is highly compactable

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• Has a double helix

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• Nucleosomes: DNA wound around histone proteins + chromatin = DNA + histone proteins

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• 30 nm diameter

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• Radial loop domain

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• Compacted radial loop domain

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Euchromatin

regions of less compact DNA with active genes

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Heterochromatin

regions of highly compact DNA with inactive/silent genes

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Chapter 12:

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Genes - transcription mRNA - translation polypeptides

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Genes

segment of DNA that encodes a functional product

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• Most genes encode a polypeptide (DNA

> mRNA -> polypeptide)

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• Or a functional RNA molecule (DNA

> ribosomal RNA)

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• Different genes are expressed in different cells

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• Structure of a Gene

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o Promoter: region where RNA polymerase binds to start transcription

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o Regulatory sequence: regulatory proteins bind + control the rate of transcription

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o Transcribed Region

contains the information that specifies amino acid sequence

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o Terminator: signals the end of transcription

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Transcription

produces an RNA copy of the gene

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• mRNA sequence is complimentary to the DNA template strand (non

coding strand)

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• mRNA = non

template strand = coding strand

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• Initiation: a sigma factor recognizes a promoter and recruits an RNA polymerase

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• Elongation: makes a complimentary RNA strand

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o DNA RNA

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o G pairs with C

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o A pairs with U

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o T pairs with A

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• Termination: DNA polymerase dissociates after the terminator sequence (bacteria) or polyA signal sequence (eukaryotes)

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mRNA

a copy of a genes that contains information to make a polypeptide

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• mRNA vs tRNA

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o mRNA = codons (sets of 3 RNA nucleotides that specify an amino acid)

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o tRNA = anticodons (sequences of 3 nucleotides that are compilatory to a codon

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• Organization

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o Ribosomal

binding site (prokaryotes only)

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o Start codon: specifies the first amino acid

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o Coding sequence: codons that determine the sequence of amino acids

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o Stop codon: specifies stop (UAA, UAG, UGA)

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Translation

produces polypeptides using information in mRNA (one language to another)

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• Translation: has initiation, elongation, and termination