Nucleic Acids & Gene Expression

0.0(0)
studied byStudied by 0 people
0.0(0)
full-widthCall Kai
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
GameKnowt Play
Card Sorting

1/113

encourage image

There's no tags or description

Looks like no tags are added yet.

Study Analytics
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced

No study sessions yet.

114 Terms

1
New cards

Nucleotides

Monomers of nucleic acids made of C, H, O, N, and P atoms; also called nucleoside phosphates

2
New cards

Main components of a nucleotide

Pentose sugar, phosphate group, nitrogenous base

3
New cards

Most common sugar types in nucleotides

2-deoxy-D-ribose and D-ribose (2'-OH)

4
New cards

Purine bases

Adenine and Guanine, double ring (9C) structure

5
New cards

Pyrimidine bases

Cytosine, Thymine, and Uracil, Single ring (6C)

6
New cards

Phosphorylation states of nucleotides

Phosphate → ADP → ATP (via phosphoric anhydride linkages and dehydration synthesis)

7
New cards

Nucleoside

Nitrogenous base + sugar linked by glycosidic bond

8
New cards

Role of sugar in nucleosides

Increases water solubility compared to free bases

9
New cards

Nucleoside naming conventions

-idine for pyrimidines, -osine for purines

10
New cards

Adenine nucleoside

Adenosine

11
New cards

Adenine nucleotide

Adenosine-5'-phosphate or Adenylic acid

12
New cards

Guanine nucleoside

Guanosine

13
New cards

Guanine nucleotide

Guanosine-5'-phosphate or Guanylic acid

14
New cards

Cytosine nucleoside

Cytidine

15
New cards

Cytosine nucleotide

Cytidine-5'-phosphate

16
New cards

Thymine nucleoside

Thymidine

17
New cards

Thymine nucleotide

Thymidine-5'-phosphate or Thymidilic acid

18
New cards

Uracil nucleoside

Uridine

19
New cards

Uracil nucleotide

Uridine-5'-phosphate or Uridylic acid

20
New cards

Nucleic acid

Linear polymer of nucleotides joined by 3'-5' phosphodiester bonds

21
New cards

Phosphodiester bond formation

Phosphate of one nucleotide bonds to sugar of the next; water is released

22
New cards

Reason DNA uses thymine instead of uracil

Allows repair enzymes to detect deaminated cytosine (uracil) as a mutation

23
New cards

Reason DNA uses deoxyribose

Lacking 2'-OH increases stability and reduces hydrolysis

24
New cards

DNA vs RNA

Double-stranded vs Single-stranded

2-deoxy-D-ribose (2'-H) vs D-ribose (2'-OH)

Thymine vs Uracil

25
New cards

DNA helix twist

Right-handed, ~10-15 bases per turn

one complete turn 34 A

long base pairs are 3.4 A apart in B-DNA

diameter outside 20-21 A, inside 11 A

26
New cards

DNA strands orientation

Antiparallel

27
New cards

Base pairing in DNA

A-T via 2 H-bonds, G-C via 3 H-bonds

28
New cards

Stabilizing factors in DNA

Hydrogen bonds, electrostatic interactions (phosphate repulsion stabilizes the helix interior), base stacking

29
New cards

Major and minor grooves in DNA

Binding sites for proteins or drugs

30
New cards

Tertiary structure of DNA

Includes supercoiling and nucleosome organization

31
New cards

Nucleosome

Eukaryotic DNA wrapped around histone octamers

32
New cards

B-DNA

Principal form of DNA

33
New cards

A-DNA

11 base pairs per turn; base pairs not perpendicular to helix

34
New cards

Z-DNA

Left-handed helix

35
New cards

Erwin Chargaff

Showed DNA contains purines and pyrimidines in equal amounts; strands are antiparallel

36
New cards

Rosalind Franklin

X-ray diffraction data revealed double-stranded helix with inward-facing bases

37
New cards

James Watson

Noted A-T and G-C base pairs have similar lengths

38
New cards

Francis Crick

Proposed double helix structure of DNA

39
New cards

messenger RNA (mRNA)

RNA transcript used to make protein

40
New cards

Prokaryotic mRNA

One mRNA can code for multiple polypeptides

41
New cards

Eukaryotic mRNA

Each mRNA codes for one polypeptide and has a more complex structure

42
New cards

hnRNA (heterogeneous nuclear RNA)

Initial eukaryotic mRNA containing both introns and exons

43
New cards

Introns

Non-coding sequences removed from hnRNA during processing

44
New cards

transfer RNA (tRNA)

Transfers specific amino acids to the ribosome during protein synthesis

45
New cards

tRNA structure

73-94 nucleotides

anticodon, acceptor stem, T & D arm

Contains methylated bases

46
New cards

Aminoacyl-tRNA

Active form of tRNA with an amino acid attached

47
New cards

tRNA acceptor stem

CCA-3'-OH forms ester bond with amino acid

48
New cards

tRNA anticodon loop

Binds to mRNA codon via complementary base pairing

49
New cards

tRNA Secondary structure

Cloverleaf, stabilized by intrastrand hydrogen bonds

50
New cards

tRNA loops

Non-hydrogen bonded regions of tRNA structure

51
New cards

ribosomal RNA (rRNA)

Structural and functional component of the ribosome

two-thirds of the ribosome’s mass (the rest is protein).

52
New cards

rRNA structure

Complex secondary structure with intrastrand H-bonds

Can contain pseudouridine and ribothymidine

53
New cards

Prokaryotic ribosome size

70S

54
New cards

Prokaryotic small subunit

30S with 16S rRNA and 21 proteins

55
New cards

Prokaryotic large subunit

50S with 23S, 5S rRNA and 31 proteins

56
New cards

Eukaryotic ribosome size

80S

57
New cards

Eukaryotic small subunit

40S with 18S rRNA and 33 proteins

58
New cards

Eukaryotic large subunit

60S with 28S, 5.8S, 5S rRNA and 49 proteins

59
New cards

snRNA (small nuclear RNA)

Involved in mRNA splicing

60
New cards

Non-coding RNA

Includes introns and regulatory RNAs

61
New cards

Codon

Triplet of RNA bases that corresponds to a specific amino acid

62
New cards

Codon recognition

Recognized by aminoacyl-tRNA

63
New cards

Genetic code

Triplet sequences in mRNA converted to amino acid sequences by the cell

64
New cards

Universality of genetic code

Used by all organisms

65
New cards

Degeneracy of genetic code

Multiple codons may code for the same amino acid

66
New cards

Second genetic code

Mechanism by which aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases attach the correct amino acid to tRNA

67
New cards

DNA replication

Copying of DNA during the S phase of the cell cycle via complementary base pairing

68
New cards

Replication directionality

Bi-directional and semi-discontinuous with 5' to 3' synthesis

69
New cards

Semi-conservative replication

Each new DNA contains one old and one new strand

70
New cards

DNA gyrase/Topoisomerase

Relieves supercoiling ahead of the replication fork

71
New cards

Helicase (DnaB)

Unwinds DNA by breaking hydrogen bonds between base pairs

72
New cards

Single-strand binding proteins (SSBPs)

Stabilize separated DNA strands

73
New cards

Primase (DnaG)

Synthesizes RNA primers with a free 3'-OH

74
New cards

DNA Polymerase III

Main enzyme that extends new DNA strand from RNA primer

75
New cards

Leading strand

Synthesized continuously, sense strand

76
New cards

Lagging strand

Synthesized in fragments called Okazaki fragments

77
New cards

DNA Polymerase I

Replaces RNA primers with DNA

78
New cards

DNA Ligase

Seals nicks between DNA fragments

79
New cards

Beta clamp

Tethers DNA polymerase to DNA for processivity

80
New cards

DNA synthesis mechanism

3'-OH attacks alpha phosphate of incoming dNTP; PPi released

81
New cards

E. coli DNA polymerase III

III = Main enzyme for replication

I, II, V = Involved in DNA repair

82
New cards

Watson & Crick

Predicted that DNA can be copied using each strand as a template

83
New cards

Arthur Kornberg

Discovered DNA polymerase I

84
New cards

Promoter

DNA region where RNA polymerase binds and transcription starts ontains specific recognition sequences (e.g., TATA box in eukaryotes).

85
New cards

TATA box

AT-rich sequence in promoter recognized by RNA polymerase

is easier to unwind

86
New cards

Terminator

DNA sequence where transcription ends

87
New cards

Antisense strand

DNA strand that is transcribed into RNA (template strand)

88
New cards

Sense strand

DNA strand not transcribed; identical to mRNA except T ↔ U

89
New cards

Transcription

Process where DNA is copied into RNA by DNA-dependent RNA polymerase

Reads 3' to 5', synthesizes RNA 5' to 3'

90
New cards

Transcription substrates

rNTPs (ATP, GTP, CTP, UTP) and Mg²⁺

91
New cards

RNA polymerase holoenzyme

Core enzyme (α₂ββ′ω)

σ factor (Directs RNA polymerase to promoter in prokaryotes)

92
New cards

Initiation process(transcription)

RNA polymerase binds promoter

forms RNA polymerase:closed promoter complex

RNA polymerase unwinds ~12 pairs of DNA, forming open promoter complex

RNA polymerase adds NTPs

93
New cards

Initiation site

first NTPs are paired and joined here usually with purine (ATP/GTP)

94
New cards

Elongation site

binds the second incoming NTP

3’-OH of first NTP attacks α-phosphate of second NTP → phosphodiester bond. Releases pyrophosphate (PPi).

95
New cards

Eukaryotic initiation

General transcription factors (GTFs) recruit RNA polymerase II

96
New cards

Elongation (transcription)

RNA polymerase synthesizes RNA 5’ → 3’

After 6–10 nucleotides, σ subunit dissociates forming core polymerase

DNA is unwound ahead and rewound behind (topoisomerases/gyrases relieve supercoiling ahead and behind the bubble.)

97
New cards

Elongation rate

20-50 bases/second

slower in C/G rich regions → 3 H-bonds makes it more stable

98
New cards

Termination (transcription)

Rho factor binds the rut site and moves 5’ → 3’ along the RNA.

RNA polymerase slows or pauses at a termination sequence.

Rho catches up, disrupts the RNA-DNA hybrid → RNA is released.

99
New cards

Rho binding site (rut)

RNA site recognized by Rho factor

100
New cards

Rho factor

ATP-dependent helicase that terminates transcription