How are nucleotide monomers linked together to form a single strand?
Nucleotide monomers are linked together via condensation reactions in which the phosphate grouch of one nucleotide attaches to the sugar of another nucleotide at the 3’ of the 5 carbon sugar, resulting in a phosphodiester bond.
What is RNA and its role in the cell?
RNA is a more versatile single stranded form of nucleic acid that transfers genetic information for decoding
what are sone similarities between DNA and RNA
both have adenine, guanine, cytosine
both polymers of nucleotides
both have five carbon sugars
What are the three components of a nucleotide?
phosphate group (circle)
5 carbon pentose sugar (pentagon)
nitrogenous base (rectangle)
what are two types of nucleic acids present in cells?
RNA and DNA
What is DNA and what is its role in the cell?
DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) is a stable double stranded form of nucleic acid and acts as the genetic blueprint of a cell
How doe DNA and RNA differ in terms of composition?
DNA
deoxyribose pentose sugar
AGCT
adenine
guanine
cytosine
thymine
double stranded
longer
antiparallel
double helix
RNA
ribose pentose sugar
AGCU
Adenine
guanine
cytosine
uracil
single stranded
shorter
How are two polynucleotide chains of DNA held together?
Two polynucleotide chains of DNA are held together via hydrogen bonding between complementary nitrogenous bases.
Adenine (A) pairs with Thymine (T) via two hydrogen bonds
Guanine (G) pairs with Cytosine (C) via three hydrogen bonds
Why must the strands of DNA be running in opposite directions for the bases to be able to pair?
The strands of DNA must be running in opposite directions for the bases to be able to pair because the nitrogenous bases are only complementary in a specific orientation.
How are the two strands of DNA described in terms of their directionality and how do they organise themselves?
The two strands of DNA are described as being antiparallel.
As the antiparallel chains lengthen, the atoms will organise themselves into the most stable energy configuration
This atomic arrangement results in the double-stranded DNA forming a double helix
Draw an annotated diagram that shows the organisation of DNA
include base pairs and number of bonds
include the way that individual nucleotides bond through the phosphate groups
make sure strands are antiparallel
label that the two strands form a double helix
How did Watson and Crick create their DNA model
used other scientists’ findings including Rosalind Franklin to construct models to visualise and assess the viability of potential structures
their models were created using trial and error until they were able to build a scale model of a DNA model and discovered
DNA strands are antiparallel and form a double helix
DNA strands pair via complementary base pairings (A=T, C=G)
Outer edges of bases remain exposed (allows access to replicate and transcriptional proteins )
What is DNA?
DNA is the genetic blueprint which codes for, and determines, the characteristics of an organism, including the physical, behavioural, and physiological features.
How is DNA packaged and organized in a cell?
DNA is packaged and organized into discrete structures called chromosomes.
What is a gene?
A gene is a sequence of DNA that encodes for a specific trait. Traits may also be influenced by multiple genes.
What is the name given to the position of a gene on a particular chromosome?
The position of a gene on a particular chromosome is called the locus (plural = loci).
How do genes determine the characteristics of an organism?
Genes contain the information necessary to produce specific proteins, which in turn determine the traits of an organism.
What are alleles and how do they differ from one another?
Alleles are alternative forms of a gene that code for the different variations of a specific trait.
As alleles are alternative forms of the one gene, they possess very similar gene sequences
Alleles only differ from each other by one or a few bases
What is an example of a gene that has alleles that encode different variations of a trait?
The gene for eye colour has alleles that encode different shades/pigments.
What is a gene mutation?
A gene mutation is a change in the nucleotide sequence of a section of DNA coding for a specific trait.
and also forms new alleles
What is a beneficial mutation?
Missense Mutation
A beneficial mutation changes the gene sequence (missense mutations) to create new variations of a trait that is an advantage to the organism.
What is a detrimental mutation?
Nonsense Mutation
A detrimental mutation truncates the gene sequence (nonsense mutations) to abrogate the normal function of a trait, which can negatively impact the organism's survival or reproductive success.
What is a neutral mutation?
Silent Mutation
A neutral mutation has no effect on the functioning of the specific feature (silent mutations), and does not confer an advantage or disadvantage to the organism.
What is a genome?
The genome is the totality of genetic information of a cell, organism or organelle
What does the human genome consist of?
46 chromosomes (barring aneuploidy)
~3 billion base pairs
~21,000 genes
What was the Human Genome Project and what were the outcomes?
an international cooperative venture established to sequence the human genome
Mapping – The number, location, size and sequence of human genes
Screening – This has allowed for the production of specific gene probes to detect sufferers and carriers of genetic diseases
Medicine – The discovery of new proteins have lead to improved treatments
Ancestry – Comparisons with other genomes have provided insight into the origins, evolution and migratory patterns of man
Create the table of gene comparisons between different species
number of genes present in an organism will differ between species
not an valid indicator of biological complexity
Number of Genes Comparison
Bacteria = 4,200
Chicken = 17,000
Human = 21,000
Water Flea = 31,000
Rice = 38,000
What is the DNA organisation of prokaryotes? draw and label diagram
Prokaryotes do not possess a nucleus – instead genetic material is found free in the cytoplasm in a region called the nucleoid, bacterial chromosomes have long uncoiled DNA
Some have shorter DNA strands called plasmids that only contain a few genes and are capable of self-replication
What is the organisation of DNA in a Eukaryotic cell?
consist of multiple linear molecules of DNA that are associated with histone proteins
DNA coiled and wrapped around a set of 8 histones form a nucleosome
where genes are found and is a locus for gene position
has pairs of chromosomes = homologous chromosomes
same genes, loci, length, centromere position
What is a homologous pair?
sexually reproducing organisms inherit their genetic sequences from both parents
organisms possess two copies of each chromosome (1 mom and 1 dad)
same genes at the same loci but not the always the same allele
what are the difference between diploids and haploids?
as sexually reproducing organisms receive genetic material from both parents, that have two sets of chromosomes (23 pairs of 46 chromosomes), called diploids
however, to reproduce, organisms must create gametes with half the number of chromosomes in order to fuse with another chromosome’s gametes, called haploids
What does a diploid possess?
Nuclei possessing pairs of homologous chromosomes
These nuclei will possess two gene copies (alleles) for each trait
All somatic (body) cells in the organism will be diploid, with new diploid cells created via mitosis
What does a haploid possess?
Nuclei possessing only one set of chromosomes
These nuclei will possess a single gene copy (allele) for each trait
only gametes
What is a heterosome?
sex is determined by a pair of chromosomes called the sex chromosomes (or heterosomes) 23rd pair in a karyogram
Female is XX
Male is XY (y is short)
female is default without the y present
what is an autosome?
any other chromosome in the organism and do not determine sex
What is a karyogram?
a process to determine the number and types of chromosomes in a eukaryotic cell
chromosomes obtained by chorionic villus sampling or amniocentesis (placenta or white blood cells)
inducing cell division then arresting mitosis when chromosomes are supercoiled in P1
stained to generate an image
How are karyograms organised and used for?
chromosomes of an organism are arranged into homologous pairs according to size, length
Determine the gender of the unborn child (via identification of the sex chromosomes)
Test for chromosomal abnormalities
What is down syndrome?
disjunction of chromosome 21, where there is an extra chromosome
The extra genetic material causes mental and physical delays in the way the child develops
What is autoradiography?
process to measure the length of DNA
grow prokaryotic cells in radioactive thymine and there is no T in RNA
DNA extracted from cells and fixed onto photographic paper
radiation released and after a period of exposure an image appears on the page and can be visualised
What are the chromosome numbers in different species?
Homo Sapian (Human) = 46
Pan Troglodytes (Chimpanzee) = 48
Canis Familiarts (Dog) = 78
Oryza Sativa (Rice) = 24
Parascaris Equorum (Roundworms) = 4
What are the genome sizes in in different chromosomes?
T2 Phage (Virus) = 180,000 base pairs
Escherichia Coli (Bacteria) = 4.6 million
Drosophilia Melanogaster (fruit fly) = 130 million
Homo Sapien (Human) = 3.2 billion
Paris Japonica (Plant) = 150 billion
What is mitotic division
Meiosis is the process by which sex cells (gametes) are made in the reproductive organs
reduction division of diploid cells into 4 genetically unique haploid cells
two cellular divisions
halve chromosomes in Anaphase 1
chromosomes split into chromatids in Anaphase 2
What are sister chromatids?
replication to form chromosome in S phase, genetically identical DNA molecules
What processes occur in Meiosis 1?
The first meiotic division is a reduction division (diploid → haploid) in which homologous chromosomes are separated
P-I: Chromosomes condense, nuclear membrane dissolves, homologous chromosomes form bivalents, crossing over occurs
M-I: Spindle fibres from opposing centrosomes connect to bivalents (at centromeres) and align them along the middle of the cell
A-I: Spindle fibres contract and split the bivalent, homologous chromosomes move to opposite poles of the cell
T-I: Chromosomes decondense, nuclear membrane may reform, cell divides (cytokinesis) to form two haploid daughter cells
What occurs in Meiosis 2?
The second division separates sister chromatids (these chromatids may not be identical due to crossing over in prophase I)
P-II: Chromosomes condense, nuclear membrane dissolves, centrosomes move to opposite poles (perpendicular to before)
M-II: Spindle fibres from opposing centrosomes attach to chromosomes (at centromere) and align them along the cell equator
A-II: Spindle fibres contract and separate the sister chromatids, chromatids (now called chromosomes) move to opposite poles
T-II: Chromosomes decondense, nuclear membrane reforms, cells divide (cytokinesis) to form four haploid daughter cells
What is crossing over?
when two homologous chromosomes pair up in prophase 1 and one of each sister chromatids cross over and trade genetic material, then when separated in metaphase 1, each chromatid is genetically unique. and sisters are no longer identical
What is random assortment?
the order line up of chromosomes in the equator of the cell in metaphase with mom left and dad right or dad left and mom right
order is completely random
What is non-disjuction and where are the two places they can occur in meiosis?
chromosomes failing to spearate correctly, resulting in gametes with one extra or one less chromosome
occurs via:
Failure of homologues to separate in Anaphase I (resulting in four affected daughter cells)
Failure of sister chromatids to separate in Anaphase II (resulting in only two daughter cells being affected)
What was Mendel’s experiment?
he crossed varieties of purebred peaplants, collected and grew seeds to determine characteristics
then crossed the offspring with each other in over 5000 repreated experiments creating reliable data and consistency
Method
crossed parents with different traits
PP x pp
F1 (first gen) 100% one trait: Pp
crossed 2 F1 plants: Pp x Pp
F2 results in 3 dominant traits and 1 recessive
3:1 → 75% and 25%
What is the Law of Dominance?
alleles can be dominant or recessive
the dominant phenotype is expressed with one or two dominant alleles: homozygous dominant or heterozygous genotypes. PP, Pp
the recessive phenotype is expressed with two recessive alleles: homozygous recessive genotype. pp
What is the law of Segregation?
each phenotype is controlled by two alleles
only one allele for a trait is passed on through gametes to offspring from each parent
offspring receive one allele for a trait from each parent
What is the Law of Independent Assortment?
the inheritance of one gene does not affect the inheritance of another gene
homologous chromosomes undergo random orientation in Metaphase I
genes on non-homologous chromosomes are randomly assorted in Anaphase I
What is a haploid gamete?
only carry one allele of each gene
the two alleles of each gene is separated into different haploids during meiosis
what are Punnett grids?
A monohybrid cross determines the allele combinations for potential offspring for one gene only
What is cystic fibrosis?
autosomal recessive disease
extra info: thick and sticky mucus clogs bronchioles and secretory ducts; leads to respiratory failure and pancreatic cysts
What is Huntington’s disease?
autosomal dominant disease
extra info: neurodegenerative disease (neurons in the brain break down); manifests in mid-life.
What is sickle cell anaemia?
autosomal codominant disease
causes fibrous hemoglobin rather than globular; cells become sickle shaped; leads to poor oxygen transport, clogged vessels, and malaria resistance
What is Hemophilia and Red-green colorblindness?
sex-linked recessive disorders
extra info: hemophilia is a blood clotting disorder; colorblindness is the inability to perceive certain colors
What are the Human ABO blood types?
multiple alleles (≥2): IA IB i
autosomal dominant-recessive and codominant
controls type of glycoprotein used for cell recognition
What are the inheritance patterns?
What is a pedigree chart and what does is do?
A pedigree is a chart of the genetic history of a family over several generations
Males are represented as squares, while females are represented as circles
Shaded symbols mean an individual is affected by a condition, while an unshaded symbol means they are unaffected
A horizontal line between man and woman represents mating and resulting children are shown as offshoots to this line
Generations are labeled with roman numerals and individuals are numbered according to age (oldest on the left)