Campbell Unit 3: Genetics
Genes: What parents endow offspring with, the hereditary unites that information is coded in
Heredity: Transmission of traits from one generation to the next
Variation: Happens along with inherited similarity
Genetics: Study of both heredity and variation
Gametes: Vehicles that transmit genes from one generation to the next
Somatic Cells: All body cells other than gametes (and their precursors)
Locus: Gene’s specific location along the length of a chromosome
Asexual Reproduction: Single individual is the sole parent, copying all of its genes and passing them on to the offspring without fusing gametes
Clone: Genetically identical to parent, from asexual reproduction
Sexual Reproduction: Parents give rise to offspring with unique combinations of genes inherited from both parents
Life Cycle: Generation to Generation sequence of stages in reproductive history of organism
Includes conception all the way to production of offspring
In humans, each somatic cell has 46 chromosomes, set of 23 from mom and set of 23 from dad
Karotype: Images of chromosomes arranged in pairs, starting with the longest
Homologous Chromosomes (Homologs): Chromosomes with same length, centromere position, and staining patterns
Sex Chromosomes: X and Y Chromosomes
XX female, XY male
Autosomes: Other chromosomes
Diploid Cell: A cell with two chromosome sets and a diploid number of chromosomes (Abbreviated 2n)
Haploid Cell: Single set of chromosomes, such as in gametes, with a haploid number of chromosomes (Abbreviated n)
For humans, n = 23
Fertilization: Union of gametes, causing fusion of their nuclei
Zygote: Resulting fertilized egg, diploid
Meiosis: Cell division that causes gamete formation
Three main timing variations of meiosis and fertilization
In humans and most other animals, gametes are the only haploid cells
In plants and some algae, exhibit alternation of generations
Alternation of Generations: Includes both diploid and haploid stages, which are multicellular
Sporophyte: Multicellilar diploid stage
Spores: Haploid cells produced by meiosis in the sporophyte
Gametophyte: the haploid stage, since haploid spore divides mitotically
Sporophyte generation produces gametophyte offspring, gametophyte produces sporophyte
Meiosis preceded by interphase (including S phase)
Followed by two consecutive cell divisions, meiosis I and II, and four daughter cells all with one set not two
During prophase I:
Two members of a homologous pair associate along their length
Each gene is alligned presicely with the corresponding alleles of that gene on the other homolog
DNA of two nonsister chromatids broken by specific proteins at precisely matching points
Formation of synaptonemal complex (zipper like structure) which holds one homolog tightly to the other
Synapsis: When synaptonemal complex holds one homolog tightly to the other ^^
DNA breaks closed up so each broken end is joined to the corresponding segment of the nonsister chromatid
Points where crossing over has occured are visible as chiasmata after synaptonemal complex disassembles and homologs move slightly apart
There are a few things unique to meiosis not in mitosis
Synapsis and crossing over
Alignment of homologous pairs at metaphase plate, instead of individual chromosomes
Seperation of homologs
Meiosis I is called reductional division since there is ½ the number of chromosomes per cell
Meiosis II is called equational division, since sister chromatids seperate, producing haploid daughter cells
Three things contribute to genetic variation from sexual reproduction
Independent Assortment: First mieotic division means each pair sorts maternal and paternal homologs into daughter cells
There are a lot of combinations which the cells can be in, independent of each other
During metaphase I
In metaphase II, there is random orientation
Recombinant Chromosomes: Individual chromosomes carrying genes from two different parents, caused by crossing over
Random fertilization, there are 70 trillion possible diploid combinations
16 square punnett square, using FOIL for the mother and father as top and side
Character: Heritable feature which varies among individuals (ex. color of flower)
Trait: Variant for a character (ex. purple flower)
True Breeding: Offspring from self pollination are all the same variant
Hybridization: Mating/crossing of two true breeding varieties
P Generation: True breeding parents
F1 Generation: Hybrid offspring
F2 Generation: Second filial generation
Mendel’s model has four concepts.
1. Alternative versions of genes account for variations in inherited characters.
Alleles: Alternative versions of a gene (ex. purple vs white flower)
2. For each character, an organism inherits two versions (that is, two alleles) of a gene, one from each parent.
Each somatic cell in diploid organism
3. If the two alleles at a locus differ, then the dominant allele determines the organism’s appearance; the other, the recessive allele, has no noticeable effect on the organism’s appearance.
4. The Law of Segregation: The two alleles for a heritable character segregate during gamete formation and end up in different gametes
An egg or sperm only gets one of the two alleles present in the diploid cells of the organism
If identical alleles for particular character, the allele is present in all gametes.
Punnet Square: A diagram to predict the allele composition of offspring
Homozygote: Organism with pair of identical alleles (homozygous for that gene)
Heterozygote: Two diff alleles for a gene (heterozygous for the gene)
Phenotype: Appearance (ex. purple)
Genotype: Genetic makeup (ex. Pp)
Testcross: Breeding organism of unknown genotype with recessive homozygote
Monohybrids: Heterozygous for one particular character being followed in the cross
Monohybrid Cross: Cross between monohybrids
Mendel crossed YYRR and yyrr
Dihybrids: Heterozygous for two characters being followed in the cross (YyRr)
Dihybrid Cross: Cross between two F2 dihybrids
Law of Independent Assortment: 2+ genes assort independently, meaning they segregate independently of any other pair of alleles during gamete formation
Multiplication Rule: Multiple probability of one event and other event for probability of both to occur
Addition Rule: Probability that at least one of two mutually exclusive events will occur by adding their probabilities
Complete Dominance: One allele in a pair makes the F1 variety only show it over the other
Incomplete Dominance: Intermediate phenotype results
Codominance: Both phenotypes exhibited by heterozygotes
The observed dominant/recessive relationship of alleles depends on the level we examine the phenotype on
Pleiotropy: Most genes have multiple phenotypic effects
Epistasis: Phenotypic expression of gene at one locus alters that of a gene at a second locus
Quantitative Characters: Characteristics that vary based on a scale (like skin color)
Polygenic Inheritance: Additive effect of 2+ genes on a single phenotypic character, indicated by quantitative characters
ex. height
Multifactorial: Many factors (genetic and environmental) collectively influence phenotype
Pedigree: Tree with info about a family’s history for a particular trait
Carriers: Heterozygotes that transmit the recessve allele to offspring in recessive diseases
Human diseases are multifactorial
Aminocentsis: Procedure to see if a developing fetus has a recessive disease, needle inserted into uterus, extracting aminiotic fluid which is tested
Chronic Villus Sampling (CVS): Tube inserted into uterus, takes small amount of placenta tissue, tested
Chromosome Theory of Inheritance: Mendelian genes have specific loci along chromosomes, and the chromosomes undergo segregation and independent assortment
Wild Type: Phenotype most commonly observed in natural populations
Mutant Phenotypes: Alternatives to the wild types, due to alleles assumed to have originated as mutations in the wild type allele
Thomas Hunt Morgan found evidence associating genes with a specific chromosome
Chose a species of fruit flies, with only 4 pairs of chromosomes which are easy to distinguish under a light microscope. 3 pairs of autosomes, 1 pair of sex chromosomes. Female XX, male XY
Red eye wild type, white eye mutant type. Mated white eye male with red eye female. At F1 it had red eyes, so red is dominant. In F2, there was a 3 : 1 ratio (red : white), and white eyes only in males.
Sex Linked Gene: Gene located on either sex chromosome
X linked and Y linked genes
If X linked trait is recessive, female only expresses if she is homozygous for it. Males will express the trait if it’s from their mother
Hemizygous: Since males only have one locus, if receiving recessive allele from mother
Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy: X Linked progressive muscle weakening, loss of coordination, and eventual death
Hemophilia: X Linked recessive disorder defined by absence of one or more proteins required for blood clotting
Almost all of one X chromosome in each cell in female mammals becomes inactivated during embryonic development
Males and females have only one active copy of most X linked genes
Barr Body: Compact object inactive X chromosome condenses into
Linked Genes: Genes located near each other on the same chromosome, inherited together during genetic crosses
Genetic Recombination: Production of offspring with combos of traits that differ from those found in either parent
Parental Types: Same phenotype as either of the parents
Recombinant Types/Recombinants: New combinations different from parents
Crossing over occurs for the recombination of linked genes
Chi square has two types, goodness of fit (how close is it to what i expected?) vs independence (are these two things related?)
Genetic Map: Ordered list of genetic loci along a particular chromosome
The further apart two genes are, the higher probability a crossover will occur between them and the higher the recombination frequency
Recombination frequency is percentage of recombinant offspring
Linkage Map: Genetic map based on recombination frequencies
Map Units: Distances between genes, one is 1% recombination frequency
Nondisjunction: Pair of homologous chromosomes don’t move apart properly during meiosis I or fail to separate during meiosis II
One gamete gets two of the same type of chromosome, the other doesn’t get any
Aneuploidy: Zygote has abnormal number of a chromosome. If either abnormal gamete unites with a normal one at fertilization, zygote will have this
Monosomic: 2n-1 chromosomes, missing a copy
Trisomic: 2n+1 chromosomes, extra copy of chromosome
Nondisjunction in meiosis I
Nondisjunction in meiosis II
Polyploidy: More than two complete chromosome sets in all somatic cells (triploidy and tetraploidy), common in plants
Bananas triploid, wheat hexaploid, strawberries octaploid
Few fishes and amphibians are polyploids
Four types of changes in chromosome structure
Deletion: Chromosonal fragment is lost
Duplication: Lost fragment is reattached as an extra segment to sister or nonsister chromatid
Inversion: Fragment reattaches to original chromosome but in reverse orientation
Translocation: Fragment joins a nonhomologous chromosome
Down Syndrome: Trisonomy 21, extra chromosome 21 so each body cell has 47 chromosomes
Sometimes there are extra X and Y chromosomes
XXY, Klinefelter syndrome, testes are small with little to no sperm, but have male sex organs
Taller height, less muscle mass, bigger breasts
XYY just taller than average
XXX, Trisonomy X, just taller than average
Monosomy X, sex organs don’t mature, so they are sterile unless they take estrogen
Genomic Imprinting: When the allele inherited depending on which parent (male or female) changes the phenotype
Imprints are formed during gamete production. The result is that one allele is not expressed in offspring
Inheritance of traits controlled by genes present in mitochondria and plastids depend solely on the material parent (since zygote’s cytoplasm containing these organelles come from the egg)
Diseases affecting nervous and muscular systems are caused by defects in mitochondrial genes which prevent cells from making enough ATP
The two components of chromosomes are proteins and DNA
Until the 1940s, people thought proteins were genetic material because they were a class of macromolecules with good diversity and function specificity
Nucleic acids were also mostly unexplored and too uniform
In 1928, Griffith was trying to make a vaccine for pneumonia. He had two strains of bacteria, pathogenic (disease causing, S strain) and nonpathogenic (harmless, R strain).
When he killed the pathogenic bacteria and then mixed the remains with the nonpathogenic, some of the nonpathogenic bacteria became pathogenic, inherited by the descendants of the originally nonpathogenic bacteria
Transformation: A change in genotype and phenotype due to assimilation of external DNA by a cell
1944, Avery, Macleod, and McCarty found when they destroyed the DNA of
Bacteriophages/Phages: Viruses that infect bacteria
Virus: DNA (Sometimes RNA) enclosed by a protective coat (usually protein)
In 1952, Hershey and Chase used radioactive sulfur to tag phage’s protein in one batch, and radioactive phosphorus in the other
Sulfur is in protein but not DNA, phosphorus is in DNA but not protein
Phage DNA entered host cells, protein did not, so DNA must carry genetic information, not proteins
DNA is a polymer of nucleotides, each with a nitrogenous base, a deoxyribose (pentose sugar) backbone, and a phosphate group
Nitrogenous base can be Thymine (T), Guanine (G), Cytosine (C), and Adenine (A)
Pyrimidines: 1 ring, T & C (& Uracil in RNA)
CUT ✂
Purines: 2 rings, A & G
Pure as gold (AG)!
Chargaff’s Rules:
DNA base composition varies between species
For every species, the % of A and T are equal, same with C and G
Franklin took a picture of a DNA strand, showing us the double helix structure of DNA
Used X-Ray Crystallography, using pure DNA instead of mixed forms
Watson and Crick found sugar phosphate backbones are antiparallel (subunits run in opposite directions)
A and T pair, C and G pair
2 hydrogen bonds between A and T, 3 between C and G
You need to know which side has the phosphate group (5’) and which one has the OH group of the sugar (3’)
He was expecting the mouse to be healthy, since, unaware of the concept of transformation, Griffith most likely assumed the result would be the same as in the other two trials.
DNA Replication: Copying of DNA
Hydrogen bonds first broken, so the two sides unwind and separate. Since they’re complementary, they serve as templates for the other side
Semiconservative Model: Daughter molecules each have one old strand and one new strand (Predicted by Watson and Crick)
Conservative Model: Two parental strings come back together after the process
Dispersive Model: All 4 strands have a mixture of old and new DNA
Origins of Replication: Where replication starts
Proteins that initiate replication recognize it and make a replication bubble
Replication Forks: Form at each end of the bubble, y shaped region where parental strands are being unwound
Helicase: “Unzips” the double helix at the forks and separates them
Single Strand Binding Proteins: Bind to the unpaired strands and keeps them open
Topoisomerase: Relieves strain of untwisting double helix by rejoining DNA strands
Primase: Places RNA primer to guide synthesis
DNA Polymerase III: 5’ to 3’, can only add nucleotides to free 3’ end of primer
Leading Strand: One primer for entire leading strand
Lagging Strand: Series of segments, called Okazaki Fragments
DNA Polymerase I: Removes RNA Primers from 5’ end and replaces them with DNA nucleotides added to 3’ end of adj fragment
Ligase: The “glue”
Mismatch Repair: Other enzymes remove and replace incorrectly paired nucleotides
Nuclease: “Cuts” DNA
Nucleotide Excision Repair: Detect damaged DNA, nuclease cuts the damaged DNA, repair synthesis by polymerase, and it’s sealed by Ligase
Telomeres: Become shorter after replication. “Buffer zone” against organism gene shortening, and prevent staggered ends (can trigger cell death) of daughter molecule from activating cell’s systems for monitoring DNA damage
It means it can be used as a template
Synthesizes, idk second
DNA has two polynucleotide strands, and is 2 nm across
Histones: Main proteins for packing DNA into chromosomes in interphase
>1/5 of histone’s amino acids are + charged, and bind tightly to DNA (- charge)
4 types most common in chromatin, and are all very similar among eukaryotes
Unfolded chromatins are ~10 nm in diameter, and looks like beads on a string
Nucleosome: The “beads”, basic unit of DNA packing
DNA wound 2x around core (8 histones, 2 of each of the 4 types)
Histone tail (the amino end of each histone) involved in regulation of gene expression, extends outward
Linker DNA: The “string”
Euchromatin: Less compacted/loosely arranged, more dispersed interphase chromatin, DNA is accessible to proteins to be expressed
Heterochromatin: Densely arranged, genes usually not expressed
Chromatin: Complex of eukaryotic DNA and protein
It is DNA wound twice around a core of 8 histone proteins with histone tails sticking out
Euchromatin is more loosely arranged and its DNA is easy to access for gene expression. Heterochromatin isn’t used for gene expression and is more tightly bound
can’t
Gene Expression: Process in which DNA directs synthesis of proteins
Two stages, transcription and translation
In prokaryotes transcription and translation occur together and sometimes at the same time
In eukaryotes RNA must be processed first to make
One gene one enzyme hypothesis states that the function of a gene is to dictate production of a specific enzyme
Has been modified since. Genes code for polypeptide chains or RNA molecules
Transcription: Synthesis of RNA using information from the DNA
Produces mRNA
Messenger RNA (mRNA): Carries genetic message from DNA to protein synthesizing machinery of cell
Takes place in nucleus
Translation: Synthesis of polypeptide using info from mRNA. Translates mRNA into amino acid sequence of a polypeptide
Takes place in cytoplasm
Ribosomes: Site of translation
Primary Transcript: Initial RNA transcript from any gene
Central Dogma: Genetic info only flows one way, DNA → RNA → Protein
Triplet Code: Genetic instructions for a polypeptide chain are written in DNA in three nucleotide words
Template Strand: The strand that is used as a template for replication
Codons: mRNA nucleotide triplets, how genetic information is coded, = 3 ribonucleotides = 1 amino acid
Coding Strand: Nontemplate DNA strand
Reading Frame: Reading symbols in correct groupings
AUG represents methionine amino acid or “start”
UAG, UAA, or UGA is “stop”
RNA Polymerase: Pries two strands of DNA apart, joines RNA nucleotides complementary to DNA template strand
Catalyzes RNA synthesis
Promoter: DNA sequence where RNA polymerase attaches and begins transcription
Region where proteins bind and begin synthesis, start point
TATA Box: In some (~25-33%) genes, promoter DNA sequence that helps eukaryotic RNA polymerase to recognize promoter sequences
Terminator: Sequence that ends transcription
Transcription Unit: Stretch of DNA that is transcribed into RNA
Start Point: Nucleotide where RNA polymerase actually begins synthesizing
3 stages of transcription
Initiation: After polymerase binds to the promoter, the polymerase unwinds DNA and starts RNA synthesis at the start point on the template strand
Elongation: Polymerase keeps moving, unwinding and adding to the RNA 5’ to 3’
Termination: RNA transcript is released and polymerase detaches from DNA
RNA Processing: Enzymes in eukaryotic nucleus modify pre mRNA before the message is dispatched to the cytoplasm
Both ends of primary transcript are altered
Interior sections of RNA are cut out and remaining parts are spliced for ever to make it ready for translation
5’ Cap and Poly-A Tail share important functions
5’ Cap: Modified form of Guanine nucleotide added onto 5’ end after transcription of the first 20-40 nucleotides
Poly-A Tail: Added to 3’ end, a string of 50-250 adenine nucleotides
Facilitate export of mature mRNA from nucleus
Help protect mRNA from hydrolysis
Help ribosomes attach to 5’ end of mRNA once it reaches the cytoplasm
RNA Splicing: Large portions of RNA primary transcript molecules are removed and remaining portions are reconnected.
Removes introns (non coding material) and joins exons (stuff read by ribosome)
Introns/Intervening Sequences: Non coding material
Exons: Stuff read by ribosomes, parts that are eventually expressed and translated
Carried out by spliceosomes
Fold it in and “pop out” the introns
Ribozymes: Catalytic RNA molecules that function as enzymes and splice their own RNA, such as removing introns on their own
Alternative RNA Splicing: Which segment is considered an exon can vary, so genes may give rise to 2+ different polypeptides
Domains: Discrete structural and functional regions of proteins
Make up modular architecture of proteins
Different exons code for different domains
Transfer RNA (tRNA): Translator of a genetic message of codons along an mRNA molecule
Not all identical
Each has a specific amino acid on one end and an anticodon on the other
Anticodon: Particular nucleotide triplet that base pairs to a specific RNA codon
Single RNA strand ~80 nucleotides long, L shaped
Accurate translation of a genetic message requires two things
tRNA that binds to an mRNA codon specifying a particular amino acid that must carry that amino acid only to the ribosome
Aminoacetyl-tRNA Synthetases: Family of related enzymes that correctly match up tRNA and amino acid
20 different synthetases one for each amino acid, active site only fits a specific combo of amino acid and tRNA
Pairing of tRNA anticodon with appropriate mRNA codon
Wobble: Third base of mRNA can pair with more than one kind of base in the tRNA anticodon
Ribosomal RNA (rRNA): + a protein to make a ribosome
Ribosome has three binding sites for tRNA, a P, A, and E site
P(eptidyl tRNA binding) Site: Holds tRNA carrying the growing polypeptide chain
A(minoacetyle tRNA binding) Site: Holds tRNA carrying the next amino acid to be added to the chain
E(xit) Site: Where discharged tRNAs leave the ribosome
Initiation stage brings together mRNA, tRNA, and two subunits of a ribosome
In elongation, amino acids are added one by one onto the previous
Termination happens when a stop codon is read
A number of ribosomes can simultaneously bond to the same mRNA molecule
Signal Peptide: Marks polypeptides of proteins destined for the endomembrane system or secretion
Signal Recognition Particle (SRP): Recognizes signal peptide as it emerges from the ribosome, protein RNA complex
Polyribosomes: Strings of ribosomes that translate an mRNA at the same time
Mutations: Changes to genetic information of a cell.
Point Mutations: Changes in a single nucleotide pair of a gene
If occurs in a gamete or cell that gives rise to gametes, may be transmitted to offspring
Nucleotide Pair Substitution: Replacement of one nucleotide and its partner with another pair of nucleotides
Silent Mutation: Change in nucleotide pair transforms one codon into another that is translated into the same amino acid
Missense Mutation: Substitution that changes one amino acid into another
Nonsense Mutation: Codon for amino acid changed into a stop codon, causing the polypeptide to be shorter than usual
Insertion: Addition of nucleotide pairs in a gene
Deletion: Loss of nucleotide pairs in a gene
Frameshift Mutation: Number of nucleotides inserted or deleted is not a multiple of three
Mutagens: Physical and chemical agents that cause mutations in DNA
Gene Editing: Altering genes in a specific, predictable way
CRISPR-Cas9 System: New technique for gene editing
Cas9 is a bacterial protein that helps dfend bacteria against viruses that infect them
Operon: DNA required for enzyme production and the tryptophan pathway + operator + promoter
Operator: Segment of DNA that acts as an on-off switch for transcription units
Genes of related function are grouped into a transcription unit
Repressor: Binds to the operator to prevent RNA polymerase from transcribing genes and acting as the “off switch” of an operator
Regulatory Gene: Encodes the repressor protein, among bacterial genes that are expressed continually
Corepressor: Small molecule that cooperates with the repressor to turn an operon off
Inducer: Binds to the operator and inactivates the repressor
Cyclic AMP (cAMP): Small orgamic molecule, interaction with allosteric regulatory protein stimulates transcription
Activator: Protein that binds to DNA and stimulates transcription
Differential Gene Expression: Expression of different genes by cells with the same genome
Causes differences between cell types
Histone Acetylation: Addition of an acetyl group to an amino acid in a histone tail, promotes transcription by opening up chromatin structure
DNA Methylation: Methylating the DNA on certain bases, usually cytosine
Epigenetics: Study of inheritance of traits transmitted by mechanisms not involving nucleotide sequence itself
Control Elements: Segments of noncoding DNA that serve as binding sites for proteins (transcription factors, which bind to control elements and regulate transcription)
Enhancers: Groupings of distal control elements, may be thousands of nucleotides up or downstream of a gene or within an intron
Gene may have multiple, but an enhancer is only associated with that gene
Alternative RNA Splicing: Different mRNA molecules are produced from the same primary transcript depending on which parts are considered exons example of regulation at RNA processing level
MicroRNAs (miRNAs): Small, single stranded RNA molecules capable of binding to complementary sequences in mRNA molecules
Small Interfering RNAs (siRNAs): Class of small noncoding RNAs similar in size and function to miRNAs
RNA interference (RNAi): Blocking of gene expression by siRNAs
Long Noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs): Long and noncoding strings of RNA
Differentiation: Process by which cells become specialized in structure and function
Morphogenesis: Deveopment of form of an organism and its structures
Cytoplasmic Determinants: Maternal substances in the egg that influence course of early development
Induction: Signals conveyed to an embryonic cell from other embryonic cells in the vicinity causes changes in target cells
Determination: Point at which an embryonic cell is irreversibly committed to becoming a particular cell type
Pattern Formation: When cytoplasmic determinants and inductive signals both contribute to spatially organizing the tissues and organs of an organism in their characteristic places
Positional Information: Molecular cues that control pattern formation
Homeotic Genes: Regulatory genes that control pattern formation
Embryonic Lethals: Mutations with phenotypes causing death at the embryonic or larval stage
Maternal Effect Gene: Gene when mutation in the mother results in a mutated phenotype in the offspring
Morphogens: Gradients of substances that establish an embryo’s axes and other features of its form
Oncogenes: Cancer causing genes in certain types of viruses
Proto Oncogenes: Normal versions of the oncogenes
Tumor Suppressor Genes: Genes whose products inhibit cell division
Ras Gene: G protein that relays a signal from a growth factor receptor on the plasma membrane to a cascade of protein kinases. Encodes the ras protein
p53 Gene: Tumer suppressor gene named for molecular weight of the protein product
Virus: Infectious particle with mostly just genes packaged in a protein coat
Capsid: Protein shell enclosing the viral genome
Can be rod shaped, polyhedral, or more complex in shape
Viral Envelopes: Membranous envelope surrounding capsids of any viruses, derived from membranes of the host cell
Bacteriophages/Phages: Viruses that infect bacteria
Host Range: The limited number of host species each virus can infect cells of
Virus enter the cell and is uncoated, releasing viral DNa and capsid proteins
Host enzymes replicate the viral genome
Host enzymes transcribe the viral genome into mRNA, used by host ribosomes to make more capsid proteins
Viral genomes and capsid proteins self assemble into new virus particles which exit the cell
Lytic Cycle: Phage replicative cycle that culminates in the death of the host cell
Virulent Phage: Phage that only replicates by a lytic cycle
Lysogenic Cycle: Allows replication of phage genome without destroying the host
Temperate Phages: Phages able to use both lytic and lysogenic cycle to replicate
Prophage: Viral DNA integrated into the bacterial chromosome by viral proteins that break both circular DNA molecules and join them to each other
One prophage gene codes for a protein that prevents transcription of most of the other prophage genes
Restriction Enzymes: Cellular enzymes cut up phage DNA since it is identified as foregin, and restrict the phage’s ability to replicate within the bacterium
Retroviruses: RNA animal viruses with the most complicated replicative cycles
Reverse Transcriptase: Transcribes RNA → DNA, in retroviruses
Includes HIV and AIDS
When virus enters a host cell its reverse transcriptase molecules are released into the cytoplasm
Provirus: Integrated viral DNA, enters cell nucleus, integrates into the DNA of the chromosome, and never leaves the host’s genome
Vaccine: Harmless derivative of a pathogen stimulates the iune system to mount defenses against the harmful pathogen
Epidemic: Widespread outbreak
Pandemic: Global epidemic
Outbreaks of emerging viral diseases in humans are usually not new but caused by existing viruses that expand past their host territory
Viruses enter plant cells through damaged cell walls or are inherited from a parent
Prions: Proteins that appear to cause degenerative brain diseases
DNA Technology: Techniques for manipulating DNA]
Genetic Engineering: Direct manipulation of genes, uses nucleic acid hybridization
Nucleic Acid Hybridization: Base pairing of one strand of nucleic acid to complimentary strand (Can be DNA or RNA)
DNA Sequencing: Using complimentary base pairings to find nucleotide sequence of DNA
First automated procedure called dideoxy sequencing, developed by Frederick Sanger
DNA Cloning: Isolate the segment of DNA carrying a gene and copying it
First isolates plasmids from bacterial cells and alters them using genetic engineering. It becomes a recombinant DNA molecule, which is then returned to the bacterial cell, making a recombinant bacterium
Cell repeatedly does cell division until full population of copies (gene cloning)
Plasmids: Small, cicular DNA molecules with only a small number of genes, which many bacteria have
Recombinant DNA Molecule: Molecule with DNA from 2 sources (Usually different species)
Gene Cloning: Production of many copies of single gene. Used to either amplify (make copies of) a gene or produce a protein product from it
Cloning Vector: DNA that carries foreign DNA into a host cell, replicating there
In above picture, the plasmid is one. TBacterial plasmids are often used as cloning vectors, because they’re easy to obtain, manipulate, and introduce into bacterial cells
Restriction Endonucleases/Enzymes: “Cut” DNA at a number of specific locations.
Restriction Site: Where restriction enzymes recognize a short DNA sequence (cuts both ends). DNA sequence usually four-eight nucleotide pairs, and most restriction sites are symmetrical (read same way from 5’ to 3’ direction)
Restriction Fragments: The multiple fragments resulting from cuts of DNA, the same every time
Sticky End: Single stranded end
Nucleic Acid Probe: Cloned short single straded nucleic acid complementary to mRNA of interest
In Situ Hybridization: Solution containing probe molecules is applied and allows the probe to hybridize specifically any complementary sequences on the mRNAs in embryonic cells in which the gene is being transcribed
Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-PCR): Method used to detect mRNA
Turns sample sets of mRNAs into double stranded DNA
Transcriptase enzyme is used to synthesize a complementary DNA to each mRNA in the sample
The mRNA is degraded by addition of a specific enzyme
Second DNA strand complementary to the first is synthesized by DNA polymerase
Complimentary DNA (cDNA): Resulting double stranded DNA
PCR step, quantitative RT-PCR
Gel electrophoresis
RNA Sequencing/RNA Seq: Rapid inexpensive DNA seqiencing method, sequencing cDNA samples from different tissues or embryonic stages
DNA Microarray Assays: Large number of single stranded DNa fragments representing different genes fixed to a glass slide in an array
In Vitro Mutagenesis: Specific mutations are introduced into a cloned gene, and the mutated gene is returned to the cell and disables the normal cellular copies of the same gene. Used to edit genetic material in a predictable way
Gene Drive: Introduces a modified gene, biased inheritence of gene makes it spread rapidly in the population
RNA interference (RNAi) is used to silence expression of selected genes, synthetic double stranded RNA molecules matching the sequence of a particular gene are used to trigger breakdown of the gene’s mRNA or to block its translation
Genome Wide Association Studies: Analyze genomes of large numbers of people and look for genetic markers (DNA sequences that vary in the population)
Single Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP): Single base pair site where variation is found in at least 1% of the population
Stem Cells: Relatively unspecialized cell that can both reproduce indefinitely and deffrentiate into specialized cells of 1+ types
Embyronic from animal embryos, adult from adult tissues, can reproduce and diffrentiate both in the lab and the organism
Totipotent: Capable of generating all tissues of a complete new plant
Usually single diffrentiated cells from plants are
Pluripotent: Capable of diffrentiating into many different cell types
Biotechnology: Manipulation of organisms or their components to make useful products
Personalized Medicine: Type of medical care where each person’s specific genetic profile can provide information about diseases or conditions for which the person is especially at risk
Gene Therapy: Introduction of genes into an afflicted individual for therapeutic purposes
Transgene: Gene transferred from one organism into another
Transgenic Organism: Embryo developed by being surgically implanted in a surrogate female
Genetic Profile: Person’s unique set of genetic markers
Genomics: Studying whole sets of genes and their interactions
Human Genome Project: The project to find the sequencing of the human genome in 1990, completed in 2003
Still several gaps, but 99% complete
Reference Genome: Full sequence that best represents the genome of a species
Whole Genome Shotgun Approach: Starts with cloning and sequencing of DNA fragments from randomly cut DNA, which are them assembled using computer programs into a continuous sequence
Metagenomics: DNA from entire community of species is collected and sequenced
Gene Annotation: Process to identify all protein coding genes in a long DNA squence and their functions
First computers are used to search for patterns that indicate the presence of genes
Uses software to scan stored sequences for start and stop signals, RNA splicing sites, and other signs of protein coding genes
Proteomics: Systematic studies of sets of proteins and their properties
Systems Biology: Aims to odel dynamic behavior of whole biological systems based on the study of interactions among a system’s parts
Pseudogenes: Former genes that have accumulated mutations over a long time and no longer produce functional proteins, unique noncoding DNA
Repetitive DNA: Sequences that are present in multiple copies in the genome
Transposable Elements: Stretches of DNA that can move from one location to another within the genome. In eukaryotic, two types, transposons and retrotransposons
~75% of human repetitive DNA
Transposons: Move within a genome using a DNA intermediate. Either a “copy and paste” or “cut and paste” method using transposase
Retrotransposons: Move by means of an RNA intermediate, a transcript of the retrotransposon DNA, and always leave a copy at the original site
Simple Sequence DNA: Stretches of DNA that contain many copies of tandemly repeated short sequences
Short Tandem Repeat (STR): Series of repeats in a unit
Multigene Families: Collections of 2+ identical or very similar genes
Ones with identical DNA sequences, they’re clustered tandemly and have RNAs as their final products
Ones with nonidentical genes enclode globins, a group of proteins that include the a and B polypeptide subunits of hemoglobin
Errors in cell division leads to extra copies of all or part of entire chromosome sets which may diverge if one set accumulates sequence changes
Polyploidy occurs more often among plants than animals and contributes to speciation
Chromosonal organization of genomes can be compared among species to provide info about evolutionary relationships
Genes encoding various relaed but different globin proteins evolved from one common ancestral globin gene which duplicated and diverged into a globin and B globin
Rearrangement of exons within and between genes during evolution has led to genes containing multiple copies of similar exons and/or different exons derived from other genes
Movement of transposable elements or recombination between copies of the same element generate new sequence combinations
These are beneficial to the organism
Evo-Devo: Evolutionary developmental biology
Homeobox: 180 nucleotide sequence that codes for homeodomain (amino acid) in the encoded proteins
Genes: What parents endow offspring with, the hereditary unites that information is coded in
Heredity: Transmission of traits from one generation to the next
Variation: Happens along with inherited similarity
Genetics: Study of both heredity and variation
Gametes: Vehicles that transmit genes from one generation to the next
Somatic Cells: All body cells other than gametes (and their precursors)
Locus: Gene’s specific location along the length of a chromosome
Asexual Reproduction: Single individual is the sole parent, copying all of its genes and passing them on to the offspring without fusing gametes
Clone: Genetically identical to parent, from asexual reproduction
Sexual Reproduction: Parents give rise to offspring with unique combinations of genes inherited from both parents
Life Cycle: Generation to Generation sequence of stages in reproductive history of organism
Includes conception all the way to production of offspring
In humans, each somatic cell has 46 chromosomes, set of 23 from mom and set of 23 from dad
Karotype: Images of chromosomes arranged in pairs, starting with the longest
Homologous Chromosomes (Homologs): Chromosomes with same length, centromere position, and staining patterns
Sex Chromosomes: X and Y Chromosomes
XX female, XY male
Autosomes: Other chromosomes
Diploid Cell: A cell with two chromosome sets and a diploid number of chromosomes (Abbreviated 2n)
Haploid Cell: Single set of chromosomes, such as in gametes, with a haploid number of chromosomes (Abbreviated n)
For humans, n = 23
Fertilization: Union of gametes, causing fusion of their nuclei
Zygote: Resulting fertilized egg, diploid
Meiosis: Cell division that causes gamete formation
Three main timing variations of meiosis and fertilization
In humans and most other animals, gametes are the only haploid cells
In plants and some algae, exhibit alternation of generations
Alternation of Generations: Includes both diploid and haploid stages, which are multicellular
Sporophyte: Multicellilar diploid stage
Spores: Haploid cells produced by meiosis in the sporophyte
Gametophyte: the haploid stage, since haploid spore divides mitotically
Sporophyte generation produces gametophyte offspring, gametophyte produces sporophyte
Meiosis preceded by interphase (including S phase)
Followed by two consecutive cell divisions, meiosis I and II, and four daughter cells all with one set not two
During prophase I:
Two members of a homologous pair associate along their length
Each gene is alligned presicely with the corresponding alleles of that gene on the other homolog
DNA of two nonsister chromatids broken by specific proteins at precisely matching points
Formation of synaptonemal complex (zipper like structure) which holds one homolog tightly to the other
Synapsis: When synaptonemal complex holds one homolog tightly to the other ^^
DNA breaks closed up so each broken end is joined to the corresponding segment of the nonsister chromatid
Points where crossing over has occured are visible as chiasmata after synaptonemal complex disassembles and homologs move slightly apart
There are a few things unique to meiosis not in mitosis
Synapsis and crossing over
Alignment of homologous pairs at metaphase plate, instead of individual chromosomes
Seperation of homologs
Meiosis I is called reductional division since there is ½ the number of chromosomes per cell
Meiosis II is called equational division, since sister chromatids seperate, producing haploid daughter cells
Three things contribute to genetic variation from sexual reproduction
Independent Assortment: First mieotic division means each pair sorts maternal and paternal homologs into daughter cells
There are a lot of combinations which the cells can be in, independent of each other
During metaphase I
In metaphase II, there is random orientation
Recombinant Chromosomes: Individual chromosomes carrying genes from two different parents, caused by crossing over
Random fertilization, there are 70 trillion possible diploid combinations
16 square punnett square, using FOIL for the mother and father as top and side
Character: Heritable feature which varies among individuals (ex. color of flower)
Trait: Variant for a character (ex. purple flower)
True Breeding: Offspring from self pollination are all the same variant
Hybridization: Mating/crossing of two true breeding varieties
P Generation: True breeding parents
F1 Generation: Hybrid offspring
F2 Generation: Second filial generation
Mendel’s model has four concepts.
1. Alternative versions of genes account for variations in inherited characters.
Alleles: Alternative versions of a gene (ex. purple vs white flower)
2. For each character, an organism inherits two versions (that is, two alleles) of a gene, one from each parent.
Each somatic cell in diploid organism
3. If the two alleles at a locus differ, then the dominant allele determines the organism’s appearance; the other, the recessive allele, has no noticeable effect on the organism’s appearance.
4. The Law of Segregation: The two alleles for a heritable character segregate during gamete formation and end up in different gametes
An egg or sperm only gets one of the two alleles present in the diploid cells of the organism
If identical alleles for particular character, the allele is present in all gametes.
Punnet Square: A diagram to predict the allele composition of offspring
Homozygote: Organism with pair of identical alleles (homozygous for that gene)
Heterozygote: Two diff alleles for a gene (heterozygous for the gene)
Phenotype: Appearance (ex. purple)
Genotype: Genetic makeup (ex. Pp)
Testcross: Breeding organism of unknown genotype with recessive homozygote
Monohybrids: Heterozygous for one particular character being followed in the cross
Monohybrid Cross: Cross between monohybrids
Mendel crossed YYRR and yyrr
Dihybrids: Heterozygous for two characters being followed in the cross (YyRr)
Dihybrid Cross: Cross between two F2 dihybrids
Law of Independent Assortment: 2+ genes assort independently, meaning they segregate independently of any other pair of alleles during gamete formation
Multiplication Rule: Multiple probability of one event and other event for probability of both to occur
Addition Rule: Probability that at least one of two mutually exclusive events will occur by adding their probabilities
Complete Dominance: One allele in a pair makes the F1 variety only show it over the other
Incomplete Dominance: Intermediate phenotype results
Codominance: Both phenotypes exhibited by heterozygotes
The observed dominant/recessive relationship of alleles depends on the level we examine the phenotype on
Pleiotropy: Most genes have multiple phenotypic effects
Epistasis: Phenotypic expression of gene at one locus alters that of a gene at a second locus
Quantitative Characters: Characteristics that vary based on a scale (like skin color)
Polygenic Inheritance: Additive effect of 2+ genes on a single phenotypic character, indicated by quantitative characters
ex. height
Multifactorial: Many factors (genetic and environmental) collectively influence phenotype
Pedigree: Tree with info about a family’s history for a particular trait
Carriers: Heterozygotes that transmit the recessve allele to offspring in recessive diseases
Human diseases are multifactorial
Aminocentsis: Procedure to see if a developing fetus has a recessive disease, needle inserted into uterus, extracting aminiotic fluid which is tested
Chronic Villus Sampling (CVS): Tube inserted into uterus, takes small amount of placenta tissue, tested
Chromosome Theory of Inheritance: Mendelian genes have specific loci along chromosomes, and the chromosomes undergo segregation and independent assortment
Wild Type: Phenotype most commonly observed in natural populations
Mutant Phenotypes: Alternatives to the wild types, due to alleles assumed to have originated as mutations in the wild type allele
Thomas Hunt Morgan found evidence associating genes with a specific chromosome
Chose a species of fruit flies, with only 4 pairs of chromosomes which are easy to distinguish under a light microscope. 3 pairs of autosomes, 1 pair of sex chromosomes. Female XX, male XY
Red eye wild type, white eye mutant type. Mated white eye male with red eye female. At F1 it had red eyes, so red is dominant. In F2, there was a 3 : 1 ratio (red : white), and white eyes only in males.
Sex Linked Gene: Gene located on either sex chromosome
X linked and Y linked genes
If X linked trait is recessive, female only expresses if she is homozygous for it. Males will express the trait if it’s from their mother
Hemizygous: Since males only have one locus, if receiving recessive allele from mother
Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy: X Linked progressive muscle weakening, loss of coordination, and eventual death
Hemophilia: X Linked recessive disorder defined by absence of one or more proteins required for blood clotting
Almost all of one X chromosome in each cell in female mammals becomes inactivated during embryonic development
Males and females have only one active copy of most X linked genes
Barr Body: Compact object inactive X chromosome condenses into
Linked Genes: Genes located near each other on the same chromosome, inherited together during genetic crosses
Genetic Recombination: Production of offspring with combos of traits that differ from those found in either parent
Parental Types: Same phenotype as either of the parents
Recombinant Types/Recombinants: New combinations different from parents
Crossing over occurs for the recombination of linked genes
Chi square has two types, goodness of fit (how close is it to what i expected?) vs independence (are these two things related?)
Genetic Map: Ordered list of genetic loci along a particular chromosome
The further apart two genes are, the higher probability a crossover will occur between them and the higher the recombination frequency
Recombination frequency is percentage of recombinant offspring
Linkage Map: Genetic map based on recombination frequencies
Map Units: Distances between genes, one is 1% recombination frequency
Nondisjunction: Pair of homologous chromosomes don’t move apart properly during meiosis I or fail to separate during meiosis II
One gamete gets two of the same type of chromosome, the other doesn’t get any
Aneuploidy: Zygote has abnormal number of a chromosome. If either abnormal gamete unites with a normal one at fertilization, zygote will have this
Monosomic: 2n-1 chromosomes, missing a copy
Trisomic: 2n+1 chromosomes, extra copy of chromosome
Nondisjunction in meiosis I
Nondisjunction in meiosis II
Polyploidy: More than two complete chromosome sets in all somatic cells (triploidy and tetraploidy), common in plants
Bananas triploid, wheat hexaploid, strawberries octaploid
Few fishes and amphibians are polyploids
Four types of changes in chromosome structure
Deletion: Chromosonal fragment is lost
Duplication: Lost fragment is reattached as an extra segment to sister or nonsister chromatid
Inversion: Fragment reattaches to original chromosome but in reverse orientation
Translocation: Fragment joins a nonhomologous chromosome
Down Syndrome: Trisonomy 21, extra chromosome 21 so each body cell has 47 chromosomes
Sometimes there are extra X and Y chromosomes
XXY, Klinefelter syndrome, testes are small with little to no sperm, but have male sex organs
Taller height, less muscle mass, bigger breasts
XYY just taller than average
XXX, Trisonomy X, just taller than average
Monosomy X, sex organs don’t mature, so they are sterile unless they take estrogen
Genomic Imprinting: When the allele inherited depending on which parent (male or female) changes the phenotype
Imprints are formed during gamete production. The result is that one allele is not expressed in offspring
Inheritance of traits controlled by genes present in mitochondria and plastids depend solely on the material parent (since zygote’s cytoplasm containing these organelles come from the egg)
Diseases affecting nervous and muscular systems are caused by defects in mitochondrial genes which prevent cells from making enough ATP
The two components of chromosomes are proteins and DNA
Until the 1940s, people thought proteins were genetic material because they were a class of macromolecules with good diversity and function specificity
Nucleic acids were also mostly unexplored and too uniform
In 1928, Griffith was trying to make a vaccine for pneumonia. He had two strains of bacteria, pathogenic (disease causing, S strain) and nonpathogenic (harmless, R strain).
When he killed the pathogenic bacteria and then mixed the remains with the nonpathogenic, some of the nonpathogenic bacteria became pathogenic, inherited by the descendants of the originally nonpathogenic bacteria
Transformation: A change in genotype and phenotype due to assimilation of external DNA by a cell
1944, Avery, Macleod, and McCarty found when they destroyed the DNA of
Bacteriophages/Phages: Viruses that infect bacteria
Virus: DNA (Sometimes RNA) enclosed by a protective coat (usually protein)
In 1952, Hershey and Chase used radioactive sulfur to tag phage’s protein in one batch, and radioactive phosphorus in the other
Sulfur is in protein but not DNA, phosphorus is in DNA but not protein
Phage DNA entered host cells, protein did not, so DNA must carry genetic information, not proteins
DNA is a polymer of nucleotides, each with a nitrogenous base, a deoxyribose (pentose sugar) backbone, and a phosphate group
Nitrogenous base can be Thymine (T), Guanine (G), Cytosine (C), and Adenine (A)
Pyrimidines: 1 ring, T & C (& Uracil in RNA)
CUT ✂
Purines: 2 rings, A & G
Pure as gold (AG)!
Chargaff’s Rules:
DNA base composition varies between species
For every species, the % of A and T are equal, same with C and G
Franklin took a picture of a DNA strand, showing us the double helix structure of DNA
Used X-Ray Crystallography, using pure DNA instead of mixed forms
Watson and Crick found sugar phosphate backbones are antiparallel (subunits run in opposite directions)
A and T pair, C and G pair
2 hydrogen bonds between A and T, 3 between C and G
You need to know which side has the phosphate group (5’) and which one has the OH group of the sugar (3’)
He was expecting the mouse to be healthy, since, unaware of the concept of transformation, Griffith most likely assumed the result would be the same as in the other two trials.
DNA Replication: Copying of DNA
Hydrogen bonds first broken, so the two sides unwind and separate. Since they’re complementary, they serve as templates for the other side
Semiconservative Model: Daughter molecules each have one old strand and one new strand (Predicted by Watson and Crick)
Conservative Model: Two parental strings come back together after the process
Dispersive Model: All 4 strands have a mixture of old and new DNA
Origins of Replication: Where replication starts
Proteins that initiate replication recognize it and make a replication bubble
Replication Forks: Form at each end of the bubble, y shaped region where parental strands are being unwound
Helicase: “Unzips” the double helix at the forks and separates them
Single Strand Binding Proteins: Bind to the unpaired strands and keeps them open
Topoisomerase: Relieves strain of untwisting double helix by rejoining DNA strands
Primase: Places RNA primer to guide synthesis
DNA Polymerase III: 5’ to 3’, can only add nucleotides to free 3’ end of primer
Leading Strand: One primer for entire leading strand
Lagging Strand: Series of segments, called Okazaki Fragments
DNA Polymerase I: Removes RNA Primers from 5’ end and replaces them with DNA nucleotides added to 3’ end of adj fragment
Ligase: The “glue”
Mismatch Repair: Other enzymes remove and replace incorrectly paired nucleotides
Nuclease: “Cuts” DNA
Nucleotide Excision Repair: Detect damaged DNA, nuclease cuts the damaged DNA, repair synthesis by polymerase, and it’s sealed by Ligase
Telomeres: Become shorter after replication. “Buffer zone” against organism gene shortening, and prevent staggered ends (can trigger cell death) of daughter molecule from activating cell’s systems for monitoring DNA damage
It means it can be used as a template
Synthesizes, idk second
DNA has two polynucleotide strands, and is 2 nm across
Histones: Main proteins for packing DNA into chromosomes in interphase
>1/5 of histone’s amino acids are + charged, and bind tightly to DNA (- charge)
4 types most common in chromatin, and are all very similar among eukaryotes
Unfolded chromatins are ~10 nm in diameter, and looks like beads on a string
Nucleosome: The “beads”, basic unit of DNA packing
DNA wound 2x around core (8 histones, 2 of each of the 4 types)
Histone tail (the amino end of each histone) involved in regulation of gene expression, extends outward
Linker DNA: The “string”
Euchromatin: Less compacted/loosely arranged, more dispersed interphase chromatin, DNA is accessible to proteins to be expressed
Heterochromatin: Densely arranged, genes usually not expressed
Chromatin: Complex of eukaryotic DNA and protein
It is DNA wound twice around a core of 8 histone proteins with histone tails sticking out
Euchromatin is more loosely arranged and its DNA is easy to access for gene expression. Heterochromatin isn’t used for gene expression and is more tightly bound
can’t
Gene Expression: Process in which DNA directs synthesis of proteins
Two stages, transcription and translation
In prokaryotes transcription and translation occur together and sometimes at the same time
In eukaryotes RNA must be processed first to make
One gene one enzyme hypothesis states that the function of a gene is to dictate production of a specific enzyme
Has been modified since. Genes code for polypeptide chains or RNA molecules
Transcription: Synthesis of RNA using information from the DNA
Produces mRNA
Messenger RNA (mRNA): Carries genetic message from DNA to protein synthesizing machinery of cell
Takes place in nucleus
Translation: Synthesis of polypeptide using info from mRNA. Translates mRNA into amino acid sequence of a polypeptide
Takes place in cytoplasm
Ribosomes: Site of translation
Primary Transcript: Initial RNA transcript from any gene
Central Dogma: Genetic info only flows one way, DNA → RNA → Protein
Triplet Code: Genetic instructions for a polypeptide chain are written in DNA in three nucleotide words
Template Strand: The strand that is used as a template for replication
Codons: mRNA nucleotide triplets, how genetic information is coded, = 3 ribonucleotides = 1 amino acid
Coding Strand: Nontemplate DNA strand
Reading Frame: Reading symbols in correct groupings
AUG represents methionine amino acid or “start”
UAG, UAA, or UGA is “stop”
RNA Polymerase: Pries two strands of DNA apart, joines RNA nucleotides complementary to DNA template strand
Catalyzes RNA synthesis
Promoter: DNA sequence where RNA polymerase attaches and begins transcription
Region where proteins bind and begin synthesis, start point
TATA Box: In some (~25-33%) genes, promoter DNA sequence that helps eukaryotic RNA polymerase to recognize promoter sequences
Terminator: Sequence that ends transcription
Transcription Unit: Stretch of DNA that is transcribed into RNA
Start Point: Nucleotide where RNA polymerase actually begins synthesizing
3 stages of transcription
Initiation: After polymerase binds to the promoter, the polymerase unwinds DNA and starts RNA synthesis at the start point on the template strand
Elongation: Polymerase keeps moving, unwinding and adding to the RNA 5’ to 3’
Termination: RNA transcript is released and polymerase detaches from DNA
RNA Processing: Enzymes in eukaryotic nucleus modify pre mRNA before the message is dispatched to the cytoplasm
Both ends of primary transcript are altered
Interior sections of RNA are cut out and remaining parts are spliced for ever to make it ready for translation
5’ Cap and Poly-A Tail share important functions
5’ Cap: Modified form of Guanine nucleotide added onto 5’ end after transcription of the first 20-40 nucleotides
Poly-A Tail: Added to 3’ end, a string of 50-250 adenine nucleotides
Facilitate export of mature mRNA from nucleus
Help protect mRNA from hydrolysis
Help ribosomes attach to 5’ end of mRNA once it reaches the cytoplasm
RNA Splicing: Large portions of RNA primary transcript molecules are removed and remaining portions are reconnected.
Removes introns (non coding material) and joins exons (stuff read by ribosome)
Introns/Intervening Sequences: Non coding material
Exons: Stuff read by ribosomes, parts that are eventually expressed and translated
Carried out by spliceosomes
Fold it in and “pop out” the introns
Ribozymes: Catalytic RNA molecules that function as enzymes and splice their own RNA, such as removing introns on their own
Alternative RNA Splicing: Which segment is considered an exon can vary, so genes may give rise to 2+ different polypeptides
Domains: Discrete structural and functional regions of proteins
Make up modular architecture of proteins
Different exons code for different domains
Transfer RNA (tRNA): Translator of a genetic message of codons along an mRNA molecule
Not all identical
Each has a specific amino acid on one end and an anticodon on the other
Anticodon: Particular nucleotide triplet that base pairs to a specific RNA codon
Single RNA strand ~80 nucleotides long, L shaped
Accurate translation of a genetic message requires two things
tRNA that binds to an mRNA codon specifying a particular amino acid that must carry that amino acid only to the ribosome
Aminoacetyl-tRNA Synthetases: Family of related enzymes that correctly match up tRNA and amino acid
20 different synthetases one for each amino acid, active site only fits a specific combo of amino acid and tRNA
Pairing of tRNA anticodon with appropriate mRNA codon
Wobble: Third base of mRNA can pair with more than one kind of base in the tRNA anticodon
Ribosomal RNA (rRNA): + a protein to make a ribosome
Ribosome has three binding sites for tRNA, a P, A, and E site
P(eptidyl tRNA binding) Site: Holds tRNA carrying the growing polypeptide chain
A(minoacetyle tRNA binding) Site: Holds tRNA carrying the next amino acid to be added to the chain
E(xit) Site: Where discharged tRNAs leave the ribosome
Initiation stage brings together mRNA, tRNA, and two subunits of a ribosome
In elongation, amino acids are added one by one onto the previous
Termination happens when a stop codon is read
A number of ribosomes can simultaneously bond to the same mRNA molecule
Signal Peptide: Marks polypeptides of proteins destined for the endomembrane system or secretion
Signal Recognition Particle (SRP): Recognizes signal peptide as it emerges from the ribosome, protein RNA complex
Polyribosomes: Strings of ribosomes that translate an mRNA at the same time
Mutations: Changes to genetic information of a cell.
Point Mutations: Changes in a single nucleotide pair of a gene
If occurs in a gamete or cell that gives rise to gametes, may be transmitted to offspring
Nucleotide Pair Substitution: Replacement of one nucleotide and its partner with another pair of nucleotides
Silent Mutation: Change in nucleotide pair transforms one codon into another that is translated into the same amino acid
Missense Mutation: Substitution that changes one amino acid into another
Nonsense Mutation: Codon for amino acid changed into a stop codon, causing the polypeptide to be shorter than usual
Insertion: Addition of nucleotide pairs in a gene
Deletion: Loss of nucleotide pairs in a gene
Frameshift Mutation: Number of nucleotides inserted or deleted is not a multiple of three
Mutagens: Physical and chemical agents that cause mutations in DNA
Gene Editing: Altering genes in a specific, predictable way
CRISPR-Cas9 System: New technique for gene editing
Cas9 is a bacterial protein that helps dfend bacteria against viruses that infect them
Operon: DNA required for enzyme production and the tryptophan pathway + operator + promoter
Operator: Segment of DNA that acts as an on-off switch for transcription units
Genes of related function are grouped into a transcription unit
Repressor: Binds to the operator to prevent RNA polymerase from transcribing genes and acting as the “off switch” of an operator
Regulatory Gene: Encodes the repressor protein, among bacterial genes that are expressed continually
Corepressor: Small molecule that cooperates with the repressor to turn an operon off
Inducer: Binds to the operator and inactivates the repressor
Cyclic AMP (cAMP): Small orgamic molecule, interaction with allosteric regulatory protein stimulates transcription
Activator: Protein that binds to DNA and stimulates transcription
Differential Gene Expression: Expression of different genes by cells with the same genome
Causes differences between cell types
Histone Acetylation: Addition of an acetyl group to an amino acid in a histone tail, promotes transcription by opening up chromatin structure
DNA Methylation: Methylating the DNA on certain bases, usually cytosine
Epigenetics: Study of inheritance of traits transmitted by mechanisms not involving nucleotide sequence itself
Control Elements: Segments of noncoding DNA that serve as binding sites for proteins (transcription factors, which bind to control elements and regulate transcription)
Enhancers: Groupings of distal control elements, may be thousands of nucleotides up or downstream of a gene or within an intron
Gene may have multiple, but an enhancer is only associated with that gene
Alternative RNA Splicing: Different mRNA molecules are produced from the same primary transcript depending on which parts are considered exons example of regulation at RNA processing level
MicroRNAs (miRNAs): Small, single stranded RNA molecules capable of binding to complementary sequences in mRNA molecules
Small Interfering RNAs (siRNAs): Class of small noncoding RNAs similar in size and function to miRNAs
RNA interference (RNAi): Blocking of gene expression by siRNAs
Long Noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs): Long and noncoding strings of RNA
Differentiation: Process by which cells become specialized in structure and function
Morphogenesis: Deveopment of form of an organism and its structures
Cytoplasmic Determinants: Maternal substances in the egg that influence course of early development
Induction: Signals conveyed to an embryonic cell from other embryonic cells in the vicinity causes changes in target cells
Determination: Point at which an embryonic cell is irreversibly committed to becoming a particular cell type
Pattern Formation: When cytoplasmic determinants and inductive signals both contribute to spatially organizing the tissues and organs of an organism in their characteristic places
Positional Information: Molecular cues that control pattern formation
Homeotic Genes: Regulatory genes that control pattern formation
Embryonic Lethals: Mutations with phenotypes causing death at the embryonic or larval stage
Maternal Effect Gene: Gene when mutation in the mother results in a mutated phenotype in the offspring
Morphogens: Gradients of substances that establish an embryo’s axes and other features of its form
Oncogenes: Cancer causing genes in certain types of viruses
Proto Oncogenes: Normal versions of the oncogenes
Tumor Suppressor Genes: Genes whose products inhibit cell division
Ras Gene: G protein that relays a signal from a growth factor receptor on the plasma membrane to a cascade of protein kinases. Encodes the ras protein
p53 Gene: Tumer suppressor gene named for molecular weight of the protein product
Virus: Infectious particle with mostly just genes packaged in a protein coat
Capsid: Protein shell enclosing the viral genome
Can be rod shaped, polyhedral, or more complex in shape
Viral Envelopes: Membranous envelope surrounding capsids of any viruses, derived from membranes of the host cell
Bacteriophages/Phages: Viruses that infect bacteria
Host Range: The limited number of host species each virus can infect cells of
Virus enter the cell and is uncoated, releasing viral DNa and capsid proteins
Host enzymes replicate the viral genome
Host enzymes transcribe the viral genome into mRNA, used by host ribosomes to make more capsid proteins
Viral genomes and capsid proteins self assemble into new virus particles which exit the cell
Lytic Cycle: Phage replicative cycle that culminates in the death of the host cell
Virulent Phage: Phage that only replicates by a lytic cycle
Lysogenic Cycle: Allows replication of phage genome without destroying the host
Temperate Phages: Phages able to use both lytic and lysogenic cycle to replicate
Prophage: Viral DNA integrated into the bacterial chromosome by viral proteins that break both circular DNA molecules and join them to each other
One prophage gene codes for a protein that prevents transcription of most of the other prophage genes
Restriction Enzymes: Cellular enzymes cut up phage DNA since it is identified as foregin, and restrict the phage’s ability to replicate within the bacterium
Retroviruses: RNA animal viruses with the most complicated replicative cycles
Reverse Transcriptase: Transcribes RNA → DNA, in retroviruses
Includes HIV and AIDS
When virus enters a host cell its reverse transcriptase molecules are released into the cytoplasm
Provirus: Integrated viral DNA, enters cell nucleus, integrates into the DNA of the chromosome, and never leaves the host’s genome
Vaccine: Harmless derivative of a pathogen stimulates the iune system to mount defenses against the harmful pathogen
Epidemic: Widespread outbreak
Pandemic: Global epidemic
Outbreaks of emerging viral diseases in humans are usually not new but caused by existing viruses that expand past their host territory
Viruses enter plant cells through damaged cell walls or are inherited from a parent
Prions: Proteins that appear to cause degenerative brain diseases
DNA Technology: Techniques for manipulating DNA]
Genetic Engineering: Direct manipulation of genes, uses nucleic acid hybridization
Nucleic Acid Hybridization: Base pairing of one strand of nucleic acid to complimentary strand (Can be DNA or RNA)
DNA Sequencing: Using complimentary base pairings to find nucleotide sequence of DNA
First automated procedure called dideoxy sequencing, developed by Frederick Sanger
DNA Cloning: Isolate the segment of DNA carrying a gene and copying it
First isolates plasmids from bacterial cells and alters them using genetic engineering. It becomes a recombinant DNA molecule, which is then returned to the bacterial cell, making a recombinant bacterium
Cell repeatedly does cell division until full population of copies (gene cloning)
Plasmids: Small, cicular DNA molecules with only a small number of genes, which many bacteria have
Recombinant DNA Molecule: Molecule with DNA from 2 sources (Usually different species)
Gene Cloning: Production of many copies of single gene. Used to either amplify (make copies of) a gene or produce a protein product from it
Cloning Vector: DNA that carries foreign DNA into a host cell, replicating there
In above picture, the plasmid is one. TBacterial plasmids are often used as cloning vectors, because they’re easy to obtain, manipulate, and introduce into bacterial cells
Restriction Endonucleases/Enzymes: “Cut” DNA at a number of specific locations.
Restriction Site: Where restriction enzymes recognize a short DNA sequence (cuts both ends). DNA sequence usually four-eight nucleotide pairs, and most restriction sites are symmetrical (read same way from 5’ to 3’ direction)
Restriction Fragments: The multiple fragments resulting from cuts of DNA, the same every time
Sticky End: Single stranded end
Nucleic Acid Probe: Cloned short single straded nucleic acid complementary to mRNA of interest
In Situ Hybridization: Solution containing probe molecules is applied and allows the probe to hybridize specifically any complementary sequences on the mRNAs in embryonic cells in which the gene is being transcribed
Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-PCR): Method used to detect mRNA
Turns sample sets of mRNAs into double stranded DNA
Transcriptase enzyme is used to synthesize a complementary DNA to each mRNA in the sample
The mRNA is degraded by addition of a specific enzyme
Second DNA strand complementary to the first is synthesized by DNA polymerase
Complimentary DNA (cDNA): Resulting double stranded DNA
PCR step, quantitative RT-PCR
Gel electrophoresis
RNA Sequencing/RNA Seq: Rapid inexpensive DNA seqiencing method, sequencing cDNA samples from different tissues or embryonic stages
DNA Microarray Assays: Large number of single stranded DNa fragments representing different genes fixed to a glass slide in an array
In Vitro Mutagenesis: Specific mutations are introduced into a cloned gene, and the mutated gene is returned to the cell and disables the normal cellular copies of the same gene. Used to edit genetic material in a predictable way
Gene Drive: Introduces a modified gene, biased inheritence of gene makes it spread rapidly in the population
RNA interference (RNAi) is used to silence expression of selected genes, synthetic double stranded RNA molecules matching the sequence of a particular gene are used to trigger breakdown of the gene’s mRNA or to block its translation
Genome Wide Association Studies: Analyze genomes of large numbers of people and look for genetic markers (DNA sequences that vary in the population)
Single Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP): Single base pair site where variation is found in at least 1% of the population
Stem Cells: Relatively unspecialized cell that can both reproduce indefinitely and deffrentiate into specialized cells of 1+ types
Embyronic from animal embryos, adult from adult tissues, can reproduce and diffrentiate both in the lab and the organism
Totipotent: Capable of generating all tissues of a complete new plant
Usually single diffrentiated cells from plants are
Pluripotent: Capable of diffrentiating into many different cell types
Biotechnology: Manipulation of organisms or their components to make useful products
Personalized Medicine: Type of medical care where each person’s specific genetic profile can provide information about diseases or conditions for which the person is especially at risk
Gene Therapy: Introduction of genes into an afflicted individual for therapeutic purposes
Transgene: Gene transferred from one organism into another
Transgenic Organism: Embryo developed by being surgically implanted in a surrogate female
Genetic Profile: Person’s unique set of genetic markers
Genomics: Studying whole sets of genes and their interactions
Human Genome Project: The project to find the sequencing of the human genome in 1990, completed in 2003
Still several gaps, but 99% complete
Reference Genome: Full sequence that best represents the genome of a species
Whole Genome Shotgun Approach: Starts with cloning and sequencing of DNA fragments from randomly cut DNA, which are them assembled using computer programs into a continuous sequence
Metagenomics: DNA from entire community of species is collected and sequenced
Gene Annotation: Process to identify all protein coding genes in a long DNA squence and their functions
First computers are used to search for patterns that indicate the presence of genes
Uses software to scan stored sequences for start and stop signals, RNA splicing sites, and other signs of protein coding genes
Proteomics: Systematic studies of sets of proteins and their properties
Systems Biology: Aims to odel dynamic behavior of whole biological systems based on the study of interactions among a system’s parts
Pseudogenes: Former genes that have accumulated mutations over a long time and no longer produce functional proteins, unique noncoding DNA
Repetitive DNA: Sequences that are present in multiple copies in the genome
Transposable Elements: Stretches of DNA that can move from one location to another within the genome. In eukaryotic, two types, transposons and retrotransposons
~75% of human repetitive DNA
Transposons: Move within a genome using a DNA intermediate. Either a “copy and paste” or “cut and paste” method using transposase
Retrotransposons: Move by means of an RNA intermediate, a transcript of the retrotransposon DNA, and always leave a copy at the original site
Simple Sequence DNA: Stretches of DNA that contain many copies of tandemly repeated short sequences
Short Tandem Repeat (STR): Series of repeats in a unit
Multigene Families: Collections of 2+ identical or very similar genes
Ones with identical DNA sequences, they’re clustered tandemly and have RNAs as their final products
Ones with nonidentical genes enclode globins, a group of proteins that include the a and B polypeptide subunits of hemoglobin
Errors in cell division leads to extra copies of all or part of entire chromosome sets which may diverge if one set accumulates sequence changes
Polyploidy occurs more often among plants than animals and contributes to speciation
Chromosonal organization of genomes can be compared among species to provide info about evolutionary relationships
Genes encoding various relaed but different globin proteins evolved from one common ancestral globin gene which duplicated and diverged into a globin and B globin
Rearrangement of exons within and between genes during evolution has led to genes containing multiple copies of similar exons and/or different exons derived from other genes
Movement of transposable elements or recombination between copies of the same element generate new sequence combinations
These are beneficial to the organism
Evo-Devo: Evolutionary developmental biology
Homeobox: 180 nucleotide sequence that codes for homeodomain (amino acid) in the encoded proteins