The two forms of nucleic acids are DNA and RNA
Nucleic acids are made up of nucleotides
Structure of a nucleotides
The structure of a nucleotide includes a
Sugar that contains 5 carbons
Base that is attached to the #1 carbon of the sugar
Phosphate group that is attached to the # 5 carbon of the sugar
The nucleotide is name according to the (base/phosphate group/sugar)
Making the nucleic acid strand
Nucleotides form nucleic acids by linking the phosphate group of one nucleotide to the # (1/2/3/4/5) carbon of the sugar of the next nucleotide
The 5’ end of the nucleic acid chain refers to the end that has a free phosphate group
The 3’ end of the nucleic acid chain refers to the end that has a free #3 carbon of sugar
DNA
DNA is an abbreviation for deoxyribonucleic acid
DNA is organized as 46 chromosomes which are located in the nucleus of the cell
Each cell in our body contains a unique set of DNA molecules (T/F)
Chromosomes
There are 22 pairs of autosomal chromosomes
The X and Y chromosomes are called the sex chromosomes
Females have (two X chromosomes/X and Y chromosomes/ two Y chromosomes)
Males have (two X chromosomes/X and Y chromosomes/ two Y chromosomes)
Y chromosomes are only inherited from fathers to sons
Additional DNA is also present in the (ribosome, mitochondria/ golgi apparatus); this DNA is only inherited from (mothers/fathers) to offspring
Structure of DNA
The sugar in DNA is called deoxyribose which has a chemical formula of C5H10O4
The possible bases in DNA are
Two purine bases: guanine and adenine
Two pyrimidine bases: cytosine and thymine
Complementary Base-Pairing
DNA exist as a double strand by forming (hydrogen/ionic/covalent) bonds between the (bases/ugars/phosphate groups)
Guanine is paired with Cytosine by (1/2/3) hydrogen bonds
Thymine is paired with Adenine by (1/2/3) hydrogen bonds
Antiparallel orientation of strands
If one DNA strand is oriented in a 5’ to 3’ direction then the other strand will have a 3 to 5 orientation
Genes
Genes are regions of DNA that code for a protein
Human DNA contains approximately 20,000 genes which accounts for only 2% of all the DNA
All of DNA (genes and nongenes) are collectively called the genome
The non-gene portion of our DNA are
Possible remnants of ancestral genes
Used to control gene expression
Insertions of foreign DNA from viruses
There are approximately 3 billion pairs of DNA nucleotides in all of our chromosomes
RNA
RNA is the abbreviation for ribonucleic acid
RNA is copied from DNA
Structure of RNA
The sugar of RNA is ribose which has the chemical formula of C5H10O5
The possible bases of RNA are
Two purines: Guanine and Adenine
Two pyrimidines Cytosine and Uracil
Types of RNA
mRNA contains the codes to make proteins
tRNA binds and transports amino acids throughout the cytoplasm
rRNA acts as an enzyme that form peptide bonds during protein synthesis
RNA codons
RNA codons are combination of (2/3/4) RNA nucleotides that code for amino acids
There are 64 possible RNA codons
The initiator codon is AUG which codes for methionine
The three stop codons are UAA, UGA, and UAG.
There are multiple codons for each amino acid. TRUE
Transcription
Transcription is the process of copying DNA into RNA.
Transcription occurs in the NUCLEUS of the cell
Transcription starts when RNA polymerase binds to its promotor which is a region of DNA that is upstream of the (gene/protein/mRNA).
Common promotor sequences are TATATA and TATAA
The promotor is located on the (sense/antisense) strand of the DNA
RNA polymerase opens the DNA and makes (a complementary/the same exact) copy of the DNA stand
As an example, a DNA sequences of GCCATTC will be copied to a RNA sequence of CGGUAAG.
Transcription ends when the RNA polymerase reaches the terminator sequence.
Several RNA polymerases can simultaneously transcribe the DNA into RNA (T/F)
Splicing
The RNA that is initially transcribed contains coding regions called exons and noncoding regions called introns.
This type of RNA is called (pre-mRNA/mRNA)
During splicing, enzymes are used to remove (introns/exons) from the RNA
The remaining (introns/exons) are joined together to create (mRNA/tRNA)
The intron/exons can be joined in (a single/multiple) arrangements
This is called alternative splicing
This allows for a single gene to code for (a single/several) proteins
After splicing the mRNA is exported to the cytoplasm where it is used to form a (DNA strand/protein)
Translation
Translation is the process of synthesizing proteins based on the codons contained in RNA
Translation primarily occurs in the (nucleus/cytoplasm)
Steps of Translation
The 3 stages of translation are initiation, elongation, and termination.
Initiation
The small ribosomal unit (SRU) slides along the mRNA until it recognizes AUG which is called the START codon
Next, a tRNA that is attached to methionine amino acid with an anticodon sequence of UAC forms temporary (covalent/hydrogen/ionic) with the AUG codon
This tRNA is called the (terminator tRNA/initiator tRNA)
Next, the large ribosomal unit (LRU) attaches to the SRU such that the initiator tRNA is in the (E/A/P) site
The E and A sites of the LRU remain unoccupied.
Elongation
A second tRNA enters and bind to the codon in the (A/P/E) site
This tRNA will be bound to an amino acid that is appropriate for the (anticodon/codon) that is currently sitting in the (A/P/E) site
The amino acid in the P site is transferred to and bounded to the amino acid in the A site by a (peptide/hydrogen) bond. This bond is formed by rRNA which acts as an enzyme
The entire ribosome complex will slide by (1/2/3) codon in a direction that is (away from/toward) the start codon
The sliding will move
the tRNA from the A site into the P site and
the tRNA from the P site into the E site
After sliding, the A site will be vacant
A new tRNA with its amino acid will bind to the codon in the now vacant A site
Next, the dipeptide in the P site will be transferred and bound to the amino acid in the A site
The ribosome will slide again and another tRNA will enter the A site to lengthen the peptide by one amino acid
The process of sliding followed by tRNA entry followed by peptide bond formation will repeat until ribosome reaches a STOP codon.
Termination
When a codon of UAA, UGA or UAG enters the A site of the ribosome, an enzymes cuts the bond between the growing polypeptide and the tRNA in the P site.
Afterwhich, the ribosome separates into LRU and SRU.
Several ribosomes may simultaneously translate the same mRNA codon (T/F); this is called a polyribosome.
Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of (interphase/mitosis)
DNA replication is used to copy single chromosomes into duplicated chromosomes which contain two sister chromatids. This is a necessary preparation step for (cell division/ATP synthesis/Translation)
Steps of DNA replication
DNA helicase unwinds and separates a portion of the DNA strand
The replication fork is the region of exposed DNA that is (ahead of/behind) the DNA helicase
DNA polymerase attach to each exposed strand and synthesize a (identical/complementary) DNA strand
Each DNA polymerase must synthesize the new strand in a (3’-5’/5’-3’) direction
As a result, each newly built strand is synthesized in (the same/opposite) direction
The DNA strand that is synthesized in the direction of the replication fork is called the (leading/lagging) strand
The DNA strand that is synthesized in the direction that away from the replication fork is called the lagging strand. This strand is made in pieces called Okazaki fragments which are joined by an enzyme called ligase.
The leading and lagging strands are paired with (each other/a complementary strand from the original DNA)
Semi-Conservative Replication means that at the end of replication,
One DNA molecule will contain both of the original strands of DNA and the other DNA molecule will contain two new strands (T/F)
Each DNA molecule will contain an old strand and a new strand (T/F).
Multiple DNA Polymerase work on each strand simultaneously (T/F)
DNA polymerase can work at a rate of 100 base/sec
It takes approximately 6-8 hours to copy all of the chromosomes in a cell
The error rate of DNA polymerase is 1 error in 1 billion.