Biochem Midterm II (13,14,15)
Transposable elements
"Jumping genes" Genetic element that has the ability to move (transpose) from one site on a chromosome to another.
how the 5' to 5' phosphate bond forms?
"capping" occurs at 5' end as it is being transcribed GMP is added to terminal phosphate by guanylyl transferase (GTP - GMP)
The short transcript AUCCGUACG would be derived from which of the following template DNA sequences? (Note all sequences are written from 5' to 3') (A) ATCCGTACG (B) CGTACGGAT (C) AUCCGUACG (D) TAGGCATGC (E) GCATGCCTA
(B) CGTACGGAT is copied from DNA so the 3' must pair with the 5'
Reverse transcriptase, an RNA-dependant DNA polymerase, differs from DNA polymerase sigma by which of the following?
(B) Contains 3' to 5' exonuclease activity
Primase is not required during DNA repair processes because of which of the following? (A) All of the primase is associated with replication origins. (B) RNA would be highly mutagenic at a repair site. (C) DNA polymerase I does not require a primer. (D) DNA polymerase III does not require a primer. (E) DNA polyemerase I or III can use any 3' -OH for elongation.
(E) DNA polyemerase I or III can use any 3' -OH for elongation.
DNA gyrase
- is a type of topoisomeras major topoisomerase of bacterial cells
Chaperones
-present in every body cell acts to direct the steps required for proteins to fold into shape that is required for them to function properly
Know the effects of mutations on translation: i. Point mutations ii. Silent iii. Missense iv. Nonsense v. Insertion and Deletion vi. Frameshift
...
The role of hypoxanthine in tRNA and the concept of "wobble"
...
How is rRNA processed?
1) Synthesized by (RNA Pol I) As 45S precursor is released from DNA 2) binds proteins and generate the granular regions of nucleolus 3) 5S produced by RNA pol III by genes outside nucleolus migrates to the nucleolus and joins other ribonucleoprotein particles
How are proteins target in cell or for secretion.
1. Have signal peptides near their N-terminus. 2. Signal recognition particle (SRP) binds to the ribosome and to the signal peptide as the nascent polypeptide emerges. 3. Signal peptide removed by signal peptidase and the newly synthesized protein are transferred to Golgi via small vesicles.
the 3 elongation steps that repeat until a stop codon
1. binding of aminoacyl-tRNA to "A" site on ribosome, 2. formation of peptide bind, 3. translocation of mRNA (3 mRNA codon moves to "A" site)
Posttranslational outcomes?
2. Additional of functional groups 3. Glycosylation 4. Addition of phosphate groups. 5. Carboxylations important in blood coagulation.
DNA is read in the ____ direction and RNA is synthesized in the ____ direction. a) 5' => 3'; 5' => 3' b) 5' => 3'; 3' => 5' c) 3' => 5'; 5' => 3' d) 3' => 5'; 3' => 5'
3' => 5'; 5' => 3'
DNA polymerases ζ, κ, η, and ι lack?
5' exonuclease activity and are used when DNA is damaged = bypass polymerases since they bypass the damaged area
RNA synthesized from DNA in the "what direction" ?
5' to 3' direction
The proximal element could be found immediately ____ to the ____. a) 3'; Cap b) 3'; Poly A tail c) 5'; Cap d) 5'; Poly A tail
5'; Cap
match: 8.1) Binds to 50S, prevents translocation 8.2) Binds to 30S, inhibits aminoacyl-tRNA 8.3) Binds to 50S, inhibits peptidyltransferase 8.4) Binds to 30S, prevents initiation complex a) Streptomycin b) Tetracycline c) Chloramphenicol d) Erythromycin
8.1) D 8.2) B 8.3) C 8.4) A
Missense mutations
A base-pair substitution that results in a codon that codes for a different amino acid.
DNA ligase
A linking enzyme essential for DNA replication; catalyzes the covalent bonding of the 3' end of one DNA fragment (such as an Okazaki fragment) to the 5' end of another DNA fragment (such as a growing DNA chain).
Nascent polypeptide
A protein that has not yet completed its synthesis; the polypeptide chain is still attached to the ribosome via a tRNA
What is the anti-codon
A sequence of three bases of a tRNA molecule that pairs with the complementary three-nucleotide codon of an mRNA molecule during protein synthesis.
Promoter
A specific nucleotide sequence in DNA that binds RNA polymerase and indicates where to start transcribing RNA.
Codons
A three-nucleotide sequence of DNA or mRNA that specifies a particular amino acid or termination signal; the basic unit of the genetic code.
In a segment of a transcribed gene, the nontemplate strand of DNA has the following sequence: 5'-AGCTCACTG-3' What will be the corresponding sequence in the RNA produced from this segment of the gene? a) CAGUGAGCU b) AGCUCACUG c) CAGTGAGCT d) UCGAGUGAC e) GTCACTCGA
AGCUCACUG
Start Codon
AUG
DNA polymerase
An enzyme that catalyzes the formation of the DNA molecule. adds to 3' end, then primer is replaced by deoxyribonucletides
Telomerase
An enzyme that catalyzes the lengthening of telomeres in eukaryotic germ cells
Differences between prokaryote synthesis and eukaryote DNA synthesis?
As for other differences in their synthesis of DNA is their speed, prokaryotes can replicate their chromosome at about 1,000 bp/sec, while eukaryotes can replicate their chromosomes at about 100 bp/sec. They also differ in the number of ori, eukaryotes (as it was stated above) has multiple ori, while prokaryotes have only one.
The difference between RNA synthesis in prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells
Bacterial cells have a single RNA polymerase. σ (sigma) factor binds core enzyme and directs RNA pol to promoter; dissociates shortly after; there are many σ factors in E. coli. Eukaryotes have 3 RNA polymerases: - I produces most of rRNA - II produces mRNA - III produces small RNAs (tRNA, 5S rRNA)
Translocation
Breaks in chromosomes by x-rays or chemical carcinogens can result in gross chromosomal rearrangements Change to a chromosome in which a fragment of one chromosome attaches to a nonhomologous chromosome
The short transcript AUCCGUACG would be derived from which of the following DNA sequences? (all are 5' to 3') a) ATCCGTACG b) CGTACGGAT c) AUCCGUACG d) TAGGCATGC e) GCATGCCTA
CGTACGGAT
C terminal
Caboxyllic Acid End of Protein
RNA synthesis is initiated by?
Can initiate without primer
What do antibiotics target and what are the mechanisms of antibiotic resistance?
Can target differences between protein synthesis in eukaryotes and prokaryotes: Two mechanisms of resistance: 1. Mutations ingenes that encode the proteins or RNA of bacteria ribosomes can cause resistance. 2. Bacteria take up plasmids that carry genes for inactivation of the antibiotice
Cap 0 vs Cap 1 vs Cap
Cap 0 = methylated guanosine on the N at position 7 Cap 1 = Cap 0 and the addition of a methyl group to the 2' carbon of ribose at position N1 at 5' end of the chain Cap 2 = 1 with the addition of another 2' - methyl group to the next nucleotide (N2).
How does DNA polymerase begin to synthesize DNA? Direction? General scheme? What is major Pol?
Catalyze DNA synthesis All catalyze from 3' to 5' template → create 5' to 3' Deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates are substrates: dATP, dGTP, dCTP, dTTP → form base pair → ester bond with 3'-OH at end → pyrophosphate released Pol III is the major
M phase
Cell division
Interphase
Cell grows, performs its normal functions, and prepares for division; consists of G1, S, and G2 phases. G1 (gap): most variable in length S: DNA replicates, ↑ histone synthesis, chromosome replicated G2: tubulin for spindle apparatus
What would happen if you do not have a hydroxyl group on the 3' carbon?
Chain termination.
Nonsense mutations
Change the codon for an amino acid into a stop codon, resulting in an abnormally short protein.
Location of the loops in the tRNA
D loop is closest to 5' end The "cloverleaf" model of tRNA emphasizes the two major types of secondary structure, stems and loops. Transfer RNAs typically include many modified bases, particularly in loop domains.
DNA Synthesis in Prokaryotes: What bacteria serves as model? Starts by binding of 30 Dna-A to oriC, where DNA coils around Dna-A Helicase, gyrase, ______-stranded binding protein separate DNA and both strands copy at same time Occurs at _____ replication forks that move away from ______ bidirectionally how fast are the rounds of replication
DNA Synthesis in Prokaryotes: E. coli serves as model Starts by binding of 30 DnaA to oriC, where DNA coils around DnaA Helicase, gyrase, single-stranded binding protein separate DNA and both strands copy at same time Occurs at two replication forks that move away from oriC bidirectionally One round: 40 min; new round can start before end
DNA pol I _____ gap? DNA ligase ____?
DNA pol I fills gap DNA ligase joins
S Phase
DNA replication
why the genetic code is unambiguous
Each codon specifies only 1 aa: unambiguous
Transcription stopped in bacteria (2 mechanisms)?
Elongation until termination signal: 1:hairpin loop 2: rho factor binding
Which of the following eukaryotic DNA control sequences does not need to be in a fixed location, and is most responsible for high rates of transcription of particular genes? a) Promoter b) Promoter-proximal element c) Enhancer d) Operator e) Splice donor site
Enhancer
DNA polymerase
Enzyme involved in DNA replication that joins individual nucleotides to produce a DNA molecule
Topoisomerases
Enzymes that relieve twists and kinks in a DNA molecule by breaking and rejoining the strands. Topoisomerases break phosphodiester bonds & rejoin them, relieve supercoiling caused by unwinding
Helicases
Enzymes that sperate the DNA strands. (example DnaB) separate strands and unwind duplex
eukaryotic initiation factors
Eukaryotic initiation factors (eIF) are proteins involved in the initiation phase of eukaryotic translation. They function in forming a complex with the 40S ribosomal subunit and Met-tRNAi called the 43S preinitation
Fill in the blank of the process (part 2) of DNA replication ? ________ & ________ unwind parental strand; single- strand binding proteins prevent ______? DNA polymerase copies template in #' to #' direction → creates new strand in #' to #' direction _______________ serve as precursors One strand grows continuously, the other forms ________ fragments; DNA ligase joins _________ fragments
Fill in the blank of the process (part 2) of DNA replication ? Helicases & topoisomerases unwind parental strand; single- strand binding proteins prevent reannealing DNA polymerase copies template in 3' to 5' direction → creates new strand in 5' to 3' direction Deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates serve as precursors One strand grows continuously, the other forms Okazaki fragments; DNA ligase joins Okazaki fragments
Fill in the blank of the process (part 3) of DNA replication ? DNA polymerase cannot initiate synthesis; ________ is used, DNA polymerase adds to #' end, then primer is replaced by _________? Telomeres: ? Telomerase: ? Errors during replication can lead to ___________; very low error rate Damage to DNA also causes __________; repair mechanisms remove or replace damaged strand Some genetic change is desirable to produce new proteins or variations to increase survival of species. Genetic change is by ________ mutations and recombination (chromosome portions are exchanged)
Fill in the blank of the process (part 3) of DNA replication ? DNA polymerase cannot initiate synthesis; small RNA primer is used, DNA polymerase adds to 3' end, then primer is replaced by deoxyribonucletides Telomeres: end of linear chromosomes Telomerase: an RNA-dependent DNA polymerase that carries its own RNA template Errors during replication can lead to mutations; very low error rate Damage to DNA also causes mutations; repair mechanisms remove or replace damaged strand Some genetic change is desirable to produce new proteins or variations to increase survival of species. Genetic change is by unrepaired mutations and recombination (chromosome portions are exchanged)
Fill in the blank of the process (part 1) of DNA replication ? Two parental strands serve as template → each DNA generated contains # parental + # new strand DNA replication occurs during "what phase" of cell cycle in eukaryotes Cell divides during "what phase" → each cell gets a copy Replication occurs at "________" → each parental strand separates in front of the _____?
Fill in the blank of the process of DNA (part 1) replication ? Two parental strands serve as template → each DNA generated contains 1 parental + 1 new strand DNA replication occurs during S phase of cell cycle in eukaryotes Cell divides during M phase → each cell gets a copy Replication occurs at "replication fork" → each parental strand separates in front of the fork
RNA polymerases σ (sigma)
Found in Bacterial cells. σ (sigma) factor binds core enzyme and directs RNA pol to promoter.
basal transcription factors
General term for proteins, present in all cell types, that bind to eukaryotic promoters and help initiate transcription.
Which of the following enzymes is required to actively enhance the separation of DNA strands during replication? (A) Helicase (B) 3' to 5' exonuclease (C) DNA ligase (D) Primase (E) AP endonuclease
Helicase
ddIs terminate cell grown (DNA antiviral medication) when converted to ddCs because of the absence of a ____ group on either the 2' or 3' carbon. a) Hydrogen b) Phosphate c) Ester d) Hydroxyl e) Amino
Hydroxyl
In bacterial DNA, parental strands contain methyl groups on _______ bases enzymes can tell diff between parental and new
In bacterial DNA, parental strands contain methyl groups on adenine bases enzymes can tell diff between parental and new. not known in human.
Posttranslational: Fate of initial Met
Initial Met is removed by specific proteases
______ are removed during splicing; ______ are part of mRNA
Introns are removed during splicing; exons are part of mRNA
Silent mutations
Is when a mutation is there, but does not change the normal gene function.
What is the function of ligase? a) Works with continuous 5' => 3' synthesis b) Works on the leading strand c) Undoes the work of DNA polymerase d) Joins the Okazaki fragments e) Winds the leading and lagging strands together
Joins the Okazaki fragments
Telomeres
Made of repeating nucleotides that do not form genes. DNA at the tips of chromosomes
why the genetic code is degenerate?
Many Amino Acids made by > 1 codon is degenerate
During the initiation of translation in eukaryotes, a tRNA complex is formed with: a) His (CAU) b) Ser (UCG) c) Met (AUG) d) Gly (GGG) e) Val (GUA)
Met (AUG)
What type of DNA repair acts when replication finds an incorrect, but normal base? a) Nucleotide excision repair b) Base excision repair c) Mismatch repair d) Transcription-coupled repair
Mismatch repair
What type of mutations involves a change that produces a stop codon? a) Point b) Silent c) Missense d) Nonsense e) Deletion
Nonsense
Wobble base pair
Occurs on 3' nucleotide on codon and 5' nucleotide in anticodon (wobble base as it can shift slightly to match up with a couple different bases on RNA G can pair with U and A,G,U can pair with hypoxanthine - I- in tRNA
Insertion and Deletion (frameshift)
Occurs when a the number of inserted or deleted nucleotides is not a multiple of three. The reading frame shifts at the point where the insertion or deletion begins.
Proofreading during DNA synthesis and its effect on error rates
Pol III performs proofreading: has 3'-5'- exonuclease activity.
Enhancer elements ____ affect the ____ of transcription. a) Negatively; Speed b) Negatively; Frequency c) Positively; Speed d) Positively; Frequency
Positively; Frequency
Pre-mRNA have guanosine cap at #' and poly(A) tail at #' end
Pre-mRNA have guanosine cap at 5' and poly(A) tail at 3' end
How the primer that initiates DNA synthesis is removed?
Primer removed by flap endonuclease 1 (FEN1) and RNase H, gap filled by DNA pol, DNA ligase joins.
Primer: RNA oligonucleotide Made in what direction?
Primer: RNA oligonucleotide Made in 5'-3' direction by an RNA pol (primase) that copies DNA template
Homologous recombination
Process by which a cell replaces a stretch of DNA with a segment that has a similar nucleotide sequence. Important in repairing double strand breaks in DNA
The role of promoters in RNA synthesis
Promoter, usually contiguous with transcribed region, controls RNA pol binding & ID start-point
operon
Protein producing genes linked and controlled by single promoter called an operon. A unit of genetic function found in bacteria and phages, consisting of a promoter, an operator, and a coordinately regulated cluster of genes whose products function in a common pathway.
What polymerase transcribes the mRNA?
RNA polymerase I makes rRNA RNA Polymerase II makes mRNA RNA Polymerase II makes tRNA.
What polymerase transcribes the rRNA?
RNA polymerase I makes rRNA RNA Polymerase II makes mRNA RNA Polymerase II makes tRNA.
Pol II
RNA polymerase II is an enzyme found in eukaryotic cells. It catalyzes the transcription of DNA to synthesize precursors of mRNA and most snRNA and microRNA.
Which of the following is true of both eukaryotic and prokaryotic gene expression? a) After transcription, a 3' poly A tail and a 5' cap are added to mRNA b) Translation of mRNA can begin before transcription is complete c) mRNA is synthesized in the 3' o 5' direction d) RNA polymerase binds at a promoter region upstream to the gene e) Mature mRNA is always precisely co-linear to the gene from which it was transcribed
RNA polymerase binds at a promoter region upstream to the gene
RNA polymerase must recognize point on the template strand to ........? RNA polymerase must recognize ......? RNA recognizes signals called ....? Promoters are _____ acting since they are on the _____ side of DNA as gene
RNA polymerase must recognize point on the template strand to start transcription RNA polymerase must recognize which genes to transcribe RNA recognizes signals called promoters (boxes or elements) Promoters are cis acting since they are on the same side of DNA as gene
Rifampin/Rifamycin is a tuberculosis drug that inhibits ____ in ____. a) DNA polymerase; Eukaryotes b) DNA polymerase; Prokaryotes c) RNA polymerase; Eukaryotes d) RNA polymerase; Prokaryotes
RNA polymerase; Prokaryotes
DNA template strand
Read in a 3' to 5' direction; base pairs with the DNA coding strand. mRNA is synthesized from this strand in a 5' to 3' direction.
RNase H
Removes RNA primers from DNA
Replication occurs in what direction?
Replication occurs in 3' to 5' direction.
Zidovudine (AZT), a drug given to treat HIV, inhibits viral: a) RNA polymerase b) DNA polymerase c) Reverse transcriptase d) DNA ligase e) Topoisomerase
Reverse transcriptase
Okazaki fragments
Short fragments of DNA that are a result of the synthesis of the lagging strand during DNA replication.
Which of the following is considered the promoter sequence (Pribnow box) in the prokaryote E. coli? a) TATAAT b) PyAPy c) AUG d) ATG e) AGGT
TATAAT
TTAGGG thousands of times would be related to what?
Telomere
S-adenosylmethionine (SAM's)
The principle source of methyl groups in the body requires the vitamins folate and B12 to form
What is the role of aminoacyl-tRNA?
This enzyme is responsible for charging tRNA with the correct amino acid. It has proofreading to ensure fidelity. There are at least 20 different ones.
Which of the following relieves the torsional strain on the parental duplex of DNA caused by unwinding during synthesis? a) DNA polymerase b) Primase c) Helicase d) DNA ligase e) Topoisomerase
Topoisomerase
What elements are proteins that bind to DNA and facilitate or prevent the binding of RNA polymerase? a) Cis-actin b) Trans-actin c) Distal d) Proximal e) Silencer
Trans-actin
Stop codon
UAG, UAA, or UGA; the codon that ends all RNA.
Know the base modifications that occur in tRNA?
Uracil is methylated by SAM to form thymine one of the double bonds of uracil is reduced to form di-hydrouracil A uracil residue is rotated to form pesudouridine that contains a uracil linked to ribose by a carbon-carbon bond.
Reverse transcriptase
Uses single-stranded RNA template and makes a DNA copy known as cDNA Retroviruses contain RT and double-stranded cDNA becomes ( complementary DNA; complementary to RNA transcript) integrated into genome
Polysomes
a complex formed by ribosomes simultaneously translating mRNA
Deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates
a monomer that can be polymerized to form DNA. Consists of deoxyribose (A, T, G, or C) and 3 phosphate groups
function of met-tRNAi
a single species of methionyl tRNA that forms a tertiary complex with eukaryotic initiation factor 2 (eIF2) which has bound to GTP as a first step in the initiation of protein synthesis.
What can cause two adjacent pyrimidines to form a covalent dimmer (DNA thymine dimmer)? a) UV light b) High pH c) Low pH d) Benzo[a]pyrene e) High heat
a) UV light
Heterogeneous nuclear RNA (hnRNA) contains both intronic and exonic sequences. It is modified such that a ____ is added to the 5' end and a ____ is added to the 3' end. a) Promoter; Cap b) Cap; Poly (A) tail c) Poly (A) tail; Cap d) Cap; Promoter e) Promoter; Terminator
b) Cap; Poly (A) tail
During the elongation phase of translation in eukaryotes, the start codon is located at the ____ site with the ____ determining what will form a peptide bond at the A site. a) P; Codon b) P; Anticodon c) A; Codon d) A; Anticodon
b) P; Anticodon
What type of mutation involves a change that specifies the same amino acid? a) Point b) Silent c) Missense d) Nonsense e) Deletion
b) Silent
The anticodon is a set of three nucleotides on the 3'-end of ____, which corresponds to the codon on the ____. a) tRNA; mRNA b) mRNA; tRNA c) tRNA; rRNA d) rRNA; tRNA e) tRNA; hnRNA
b) mRNA; tRNA
As replication progresses, RNA primers are removed from Okazaki fragments
by DNA pol I and RNase H
alpha-amanitin, a poison found in certain mushrooms, inhibits ____ in ____. a) DNA polymerase; Eukaryotes b) DNA polymerase; Prokaryotes c) RNA polymerase; Eukaryotes d) RNA polymerase; Prokaryotes
c) RNA polymerase; Eukaryotes
1) DNA is synthesized and transcribed to mRNA, which is translated (tRNA on ribosomes) to a protein. This process can be circumvented by which of the following enzymes? a) RNA polymerase b) DNA polymerase c) Reverse transcriptase d) DNA ligase e) Topoisomerase
c) Reverse transcriptase
Point mutations
changes in a DNA sequence caused by substitution of one nucleotide for another
UGA in mitochondria codes for?
codes for tryptophan instead of stop
Which of the following is NOT considered a post-translational modification? a) Fatty acylation b) Methylation c) Prenylation d) Aminoacylation e) ADP-ribosylation
d) Aminoacylation
I-cell disease (Mucolipidosis II) is a disorder of protein targeting where ____ proteins are not sorted properly from the Golgi to the target. a) Mitochondrial b) RER c) SER d) Lysosomal e) Nucleic
d) Lysosomal
TATA box
determine start-point
Where is there an exception to universaility such that certain nucleotide sequences do not code as they do elsewhere? a) Golgi b) Cytoplasm c) Nucleus d) Lysosome e) Mitochondria
e) Mitochondria
5.4) What causes peptidyltransferase to hydrolyze the bond between the peptide chain and tRNA, terminating translation? a) tRNA codon b) tRNA anticodon c) mRNA condon d) tRNA stop codon e) Release factors
e) Release factors
Cistron
encodes single polypeptide chain
N terminal
end of protein w/ free NH3
Regions of a gene that are transcribed
exons
Which of the following is the correct sequence leading to mRNA synthesis? a) hnRNA => Capping => Poly A tail => Exon removal b) pre-RNA => Poly A tail => Capping => Intron removal c) pre-RNA => Capping => Poly A tail => Intron removal d) hnRNA => Poly A tail => Capping => Intron removal e) hnRNA => Capping => Poly A tail => Intron removal
hnRNA => Capping => Poly A tail => Intron removal
Process of translation: i. How translation is initiated ii. The"P" "A" and "E" sites iii. What a kozak consensus sequence does iv. How the polypeptide chain is elongated v. The role of eEF1 alpha vi. What are peptidyltransferase and its function? vii. How is translation terminated? viii. What is fate of polypeptide chain?
i. Methionyl-tRNAiMet complexes with eukaryotic initiation factor 2 (eIF2) + GTP ii. Ribosome has 3 binding sites for tRNA: Peptidyl (P) site, Aminoacyl (A) site, and Ejection (E) iii. Kozak consensus sequence: recognized by ribosome as the translational start site an A or G: GCCAUGG iv. Involvesbindingofaminoacyl-tRNAtoA,formationofpeptide bond, translocation of peptidyl-tRNA to P vii. eEF1A-GTP can bind another aminoacyl- tRNA. vi. Peptidyltransferase: not a protein but the rRNA of 60S catalyzes the bond formation vii. stop codon moves into A site on ribosome. Release factors bind to ribosome → hydrolyzes bond between peptide chain and tRNA. Newly synthesized polypeptide released. viii. Chaperones (heat shock proteins) bind to nascent polypeptide and mediate folding. Then released.
Know the purpose of having multiple points of origin for replication in Eukaryotes
increases the speed of replication for the long sequence.
polycistronic
mRNA codes for more than one protein. Found mainly in Prokaryotes.
The coding strand of DNA is the same as the associated mRNA EXCEPT for: a) mRNA uses U instead of T b) mRNA uses T instead of U c) mRNA uses G instead of C d) mRNA uses C instead of G e) mRNA uses A instead of T
mRNA uses U instead of T
DNA polymerases γ is located in?
mito and replicated mito DNA. mito = mitochondria
Frameshift mutations
mutation that shifts the "reading" frame of the genetic message by inserting or deleting a nucleotide
How DNA damage is repaired in eukaryotic cells by?
nucleotide excision repair - Involves mismatches or bulky adducts base excision repair - DNA glycosylases recognize small distortions by single base damage + cleave N-glycosidic bond mismatch repair - enzyme complex recognize mismatch when normal base is incorrectly incorporated
Replication is semiconservative: what does this mean?
parental strands are conserved but no longer together.
RNA polymerases II
produces mRNA
RNA polymerases I
produces most of rRNA
RNA polymerases III
produces small RNAs (tRNA, 5S rRNA)
Why do eukaryotic chromosomes have multiple origins of replication, whereas prokaryotic chromosomes typically have only one origin?
prokaryotes' circular DNA is limited in size and so replication at a single site can form new strands in a reasonable amount of time. large linear eukaryotic chromosomes, however, contain far too much DNA to be replicated readily from a single origin
Pol III
prokaryotic polymerase this polymerase is the major replicative in prokaryotes
What is the purpose of the 3' poly a tail?
protects from degradation Attached to the 3' end of the mRNA. It is a sequence of about 100 to 200 adenine nucleotides. It provides stability and protects the 3' end from degradtion.
Processivity
remains bound to parental template: a feature of DNA poymerases
Pol I
repairs primers
DNA polymerases δ, ε, and α involved in:
replication, and DNA repair
RNA primer
short segment of RNA used to initiate synthesis of a new strand of DNA during replication
reannealing
strands of DNA go back together to form double helix
tRNA is produced by RNA pol #?
tRNA is produced by RNA pol III
In the read-out of the genetic code in prokaryotes, which of the following processes acts before any of the others? a) tRNAi alignment with mRNA b) Termination of transcription c) Movement of the ribosome from one codon to the next d) Recruitment of termination factors to the A site e) Export of mRNA from the nucleus
tRNAi alignment with mRNA
CCA sequence
the end of tRNA that binds to amino acid. The terminal adenosine at the 3' end is the site at which the specific amino acid for each tRNA is bound and activated for incorporation into a protein.
heterogeneous nuclear RNA
the initially synthesized mRNA strand containing both introns and exons
DNA coding strand
this strand of the DNA is read 5' to 3' and mirrors the mRNA strand