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Carbohydrates monomer
Carbon
Hydrogen
Oxygen
Simple Carbohydrates
Easily broken down: 1-2 linked sugars ( monosaccharides): fruits, vegetables, dairy, honey
Complex carbohydrates
Long to digest: 3-10 linked sugars (oligosaccharides), 11+ (polysaccharide):
starches found in grains, potatoes, and vegetables
Lipids
Energy-rich organic compounds, such as fats, oils, and waxes, that are made of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen.
Lipids functions
Promoting brain function, providing insulation and protective cushioning for organs. Support body's immune system.
Nucleic acids
Long polymer chains of ribonucleic acids (RNA) or DNA
Nucleic acid monomer
Phosphate, a sugar (nucleotide), and a nitrogenous base
5 nucleotides are
(A) adenine
(T) thymine
(C) cytosine
(G) guanine
(U) uracil
DNA nucleotide
Thymine
RNA nucleotides
Uracil
DNA and RNA nucleotides
Adenine
Cytosine
Guanine
Nucleotides function
Responsible for all genetic coding in living organisms
Types of protein molecules
Globular (compact, soluble, + spherical)
Fiberous (elongated + insoluble)
Primary protein structure
Unique sequence of amino acids are linked together to form a protein.
A carbon + hydrogen + carboxyl group + amino acid group = a variable group or "R" group
secondary protein structure
coiling or folding of a polypeptide due to H-bonding between amino acids
Types of secondary protein structure
alpha helix and beta pleated sheet
Tertiary protein structure
3D folding pattern of a protein due to side chain interactions
hydrophobic interactions
a type of weak chemical interaction caused when molecules that do not mix with water coalesce to exclude water. Avoid water.
hydrogen bonding
the intermolecular force in which a hydrogen atom that is bonded to a highly electronegative atom is attracted to an unshared pair of electrons of an electronegative atom in a nearby molecule.
Helps to stabilize protein structure
disulfide bonds
Strong chemical side bonds that can only be broken by chemical solutions
Quaternary protein structure
association between two or more polypeptide chains within one protein.
Ex: hemoglobin contains 4 subunits= 2 alpha + 2 beta
Prophase
first and longest phase of mitosis in which the genetic material inside the nucleus condenses (so that it's easier to distribute to daughter cell with less tangling) and the chromosomes become visible.
sister chromatids
Identical copies of a chromosome; full sets of these are created during the S subphase of interphase.
mitotic spindle
a structure that separates the duplicated chromosomes during anaphase
Prometaphase
The second stage of mitosis, in which the nuclear envelope fragments and the spindle microtubules attach to the kinetochores of the chromosomes. Units of the nuclear envelope are reserved in vesticles to be used later to assemble nuclear envelope for daughter cells.
Metaphase
the duplicated chromosomes line up on the mid plane and spindle fibers connect to the centromeres
Metaphase to anaphase
The remaining cohesion proteins joining the sister chromatids at their centromere
Anaphase (Mitosis)
sister chromatids are pulled apart
Chromatids into chromosomes
Telophase (mitosis)
chromosomes arrive at the poles and begin to uncoil, spindles break down, new nucleur membrane forms.
Cytokinesis
Begins in Telophase. division of the cytoplasm to form two separate daughter cells. Last step in M phase.
G1/S checkpoint (restriction point)
1st key checkpoint
Checks:
Enough nutrients?
Receiving reproductive signal (growth factor)?
Sufficient cell size?
DNA undamaged?
Will not allow synthesis to begin
G2-M checkpoint
The second cell-division control point, at which division can be delayed if DNA has not been properly replicated or is damaged.
4 phases of cell cycle
G1- gap 1 phase
S- synthesis
G2- gap 2 phase
M- mitosis
metaphase to anaphase checkpoint
ensures that all the chromosomes are attached to the spindle and aligned properly at the equator of the cell
protein kinase
enzymes that activate or inactivate other proteins by phosphorylating them
Cyclin
Cyclin dependent kinases active only when they bind tightly to regulatory proteins
G2 to M phase: control system triggers
1. Cyclin is synthesized and accumulates
2. Cyclin dependent kinases (cdk)associates with cyclin, forming Mitosis (cdk) and a cdk complex
3.M-cdk phosphorylates proteins, activating those that facilitate mitosis and inactiving those that inhibit mitosis.
4.an activated enzyme complex recognizes a specific amino acid sequence in cyclin and targets it for destruction.
5. When cyclin is degraded M-cdk activity is terminated and the cells formed by mitosis enter G1
6. Cdk is not degraded but is recycled and reused
DNA replication steps
1) Helicase- unwinds the parental double helix
2) DNA topoisomerase - upstream of helices alleviating torsional strain
3) Single-strand binding proteins (SSBP) stabilize unwound DNA, aided by DNA gyrase.
4) Primase synthesizes a short RNA primer for DNA polymerase to bind to in the 5' to 3' direction to start replication on each strand.
5) DNA polymerase synthesizes the leading strand in 5' to 3' direction while the lagging strand is made discontinuously by primase making short pieces and then DNA polymerase extending these to make Okazaki fragments.
6) DNA ligase joins the Okazaki fragments together
origin of replication
Site where the replication of a DNA molecule begins, consisting of a specific sequence of nucleotides.
RNA primer
short segment of RNA used to initiate synthesis of a new strand of DNA during replication
DNA primase
synthesizes a short RNA primer to provide a 3'-OH group for the attachment of DNA nucleotides
DNA helicase
An enzyme that unwinds the DNA double helix during DNA replication
spliceosome
A large complex made up of proteins and RNA molecules that splices RNA by interacting with the ends of an RNA intron, releasing the intron and joining the two adjacent exons.
Introns
Noncoding segments of nucleic acid that lie between coding sequences.
DNA ligase
A linking enzyme essential for DNA replication; catalyzes the covalent bonding of the 3' end of a new DNA fragment to the 5' end of a growing chain.
DNA polymerase
Links nucleotide subunits to form a new DNA strand complementary to a DNA template
initiation of transcription
RNA polymerase attaches to the promoter region on the DNA and begins to unzip the DNA into two strands.
elongation (transcription)
Additional nucleotides are added to the 3' end of RNA molecules. DNA double helix re-forms following transcription.
termination of transcription
The third, and last, phase of transcription in which the mRNA transcript is released when RNA polymerase reaches the terminator sequence
initiation of translation
Protein (initiation factor) becomes attached to the small ribosomal subunit
1. Methionine of the initiator tRNA is not modified
2. small subunit with 10 protein initiation factors, forms an initiation complex that binds to the 5'cap of the mRNA
elongation (translation)
amino acids are added one by one to the preceding amino acid to make a polypeptide chain.
1. The polypeptide chain is covalently bonded to the tRNA that carries the amino acids most recently added to the chain. The tRNA is in the P site of the ribosomes
2. An aminoacyl tRNA binds to the A site by complementary base pairing between the tRNAs anticodon and the mRNAs codon
3. The growing polypeptide chain detached from the tRNA molecules in the P site and becomes attached by peptide bond to the amino acid linked to the tRNA. At the A site
4. The ribosome moves one codon toward the 3' end of the mRNA. The growing polypeptide chain is transferred to the P site. The uncharged tRNA in the E site exits the ribosome.
termination of translation
The synthesis of the polypeptide chain is terminated by a release factor, a protein that recognizes the stop codon at the end of the coding sequence.
RNA polymerase in transcription
runs along the DNA strand unzipping it and copying the DNA while zipping back after the DNA's nitrogenous bases have been copied allowing the new RNA strand to peel away.
Promoter (transcription)
DNA sequence where RNA polymerase attaches and initiates transcription
transcription factors
Collection of proteins that mediate the binding of RNA polymerase and the initiation of transcription.
5' cap
At the end of the 5' end of the mRNA chain. The cap is formed of 7-methylguanosine, which is linked to the mRNA transcript by three phosphate groups
3' poly (A) tail
Near the 3' end of a completed message usually lies a sequence of bases that serves as a signal for adding many adenine-containing nucleotides (poly-A tail) enzymes recognizes the signal for poly-A tail and cut the mRNA molecule at the site.
Exons
expressed sequence of DNA; codes for a protein
Ribosome
Cytoplasmic organelles at which proteins are synthesized.
tRNA in translation
The molecule that bridges the gap between mRNA and proteins. DNA contains genes that are transcribed to form tRNAs
Role of tRNA in translation
tRNA molecules deliver exactly the right amino acid called for by each codon on the mRNA; anti-codons
Role of ribosomes in translation
Proteins and rRNA contains 3 binding sites for tRNA molecules (A, E, P, binding sites)
P site (peptidyl-tRNA binding site)
One of a ribosome's three binding sites for tRNA during translation. The P site holds the tRNA carrying the growing polypeptide chain.
A site (aminoacyl-tRNA binding site)
holds the tRNA carrying the next amino acid to be added to the chain
E site (exit site)
One of a ribosome's three binding sites for tRNA during translation. The E site is the place where discharged tRNAs leave the ribosome. (E stands for exit.)
amino acids in translation
The amino acids on one end of the polypeptide chain has a free amino group (the amino end) and the amino acid at the other end has a free carboxyl group.
Codon translation
set of 3 RNA nucleotides which code for a specific amino acid
- AUG = methionine
- CUG = leucine
Release factor at the end of a coding sequence
stop codon
UAA, UAG, UGA - stop translation and polypeptide is released
Any of the 3 codons in mRNA that do not code for amino acids but signal termination of translation.
start codon
codon that signals to ribosomes to begin translation; codes for the first amino acid in a protein
AUG methionine
Anti-codon
group of three bases on a tRNA molecule that are complementary to an mRNA codon
Cell Cycle: G1
5 hrs
Growth and normal metabolism occurs. Cells not dividing
Toward end: enzymes for DNA synthesis become more active
Cell Cycle: Synthesis Phase
4.5 hrs
DNA replication
cell cycle: G2 phase
2 hrs
Increased protein synthesis occurs as final steps in the cells prepare for division to take place
Cel cycle: mitosis
30 minutes
Mitosis and cytokinesis
The nuclear division that produces two nuclei containing chromosomes identical to the parental nucleus ( begins at end of G2)
Translation order of events
1. mRNA codon matches with tRNA anticodon
2. Peptide bond forms between amino acids
3. Ribosomes shift position
4. Unchanged tRNA ejected from ribosome
glycerol and fatty acids
nucleotide, DNA, RNA
amino acid, polypeptide