3.8 - Nucleic Acids

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How are the two strands that make up DNA held together?

By hydrogen bonds

How are phosphodiester bonds broken?

By hydrolysis

How do DNA nucleotides form polymers?

By the formation of phosphodiester bonds in condensation reactions

How do RNA nucleotides form polymers?

By the formation of phosphodiester bonds in condensation reactions

What elements are found in nucleic acids?

Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and phosphorous

How does complementary base pairing affect the amount of nitrogenous bases in DNA?

Complementary base pairing means that DNA always has equal amounts of adenine and thymine, and equal amounts of cytosine and guanine. This is because in DNA the only base that can bind to adenine is thymine, so there will be equal amounts. The only base that can bind to cytosine in DNA is guanine, so there will be equal amounts.

Nucleotides are linked together by ______ reactions to form a polymer called a _______

Condensation Polynucleotide

What type of reaction combines DNA nucleotides to form polynucleotides?

Condensation reaction

What type of reaction combines RNA nucleotides to form polynucleotides?

Condensation reaction

What type of bond are phosphodiester bonds?

Covalent

What is the name of the base, represented by the letter C?

Cytosine

Name the pyrimidines

Cytosine, Thymine and Uracil

Name all of the types of nucleic acid

DNA and RNA

Describe the differences between DNA and RNA nucleotides

DNA nucleotides have deoxyribose sugars, whereas RNA nucleotides have ribose sugars. DNA contains the bases adenine, cytosine, guanine and thymine. However RNA does not contain the base thymine, and instead has the base uracil.

Explain the relationship between DNA and RNA in protein synthesis

DNA stores all of the genetic information needed by an organism, however the DNA of each eukaryotic chromosome is a very long molecule, and is unable to leave the nucleus in order to supply the information directly to the sites of protein synthesis. The short section of the long DNA molecule corresponding to a single gene is transcribed into a similarly short messenger RNA molecule (mRNA).

What does DNA stand for?

Deoxyribonucleic acid

What components make up the backbone of a DNA molecule?

Deoxyribose sugars and phosphate groups

Explain how the structure of DNA is ideally suited to it's role

It is a polymer so contains a lot of information. The sequence of bases is used to code for proteins. The molecule is double stranded, and therefore stable. The molecule is double stranded and so replication is accurate.

Why is RNA important?

It plays a very important role in the transfer of genetic information from DNA to the proteins that make up the enzymes and tissues of the body

What is mRNA?

Messenger RNA

What is mtDNA?

Mitochondrial DNA

If you were to do a DNA extraction from plant material, using ethanol, salt, protease, detergent etc. what would form/ would the DNA look like?

The DNA will be seen as white strands forming between the layer of sample and layer of alcohol

What happens to the RNA molecules after protein synthesis has occurred?

The RNA molecules are degraded in the cytoplasm- the phosphodiester bonds are hydrolysed and the RNA nucleotides are released and reused

DNA is a double helix composed of two 'backbones', and connected by 'rungs'. What are the 'backbones' and 'rungs' referring to?

The backbones are composed of deoxyribose-phosphate molecules (they are polynucleotides) and the 'rungs' are the pairs of bases (complementary bases connected by hydrogen bonds)

Imagine a vertical strand of DNA. How long would a length of DNA containing 10 base pairs ('rungs') be? And how wide would the base of the strand be?

The length of 10 base pairs would be 3.4 nm, while the width of the strand would be 2 nm

What is the 3 prime end (3' end)?

The part of the pentose with the OH exposed

What is the 5 prime end (5' end)?

The part of the pentose with the phosphate exposed

Where on the pentose sugar is the phosphate group?

The phosphate group is on the fifth carbon (a pentose sugar is a pentagon shape. First carbon is the carbon at the right, fifth carbon is the carbon coming off the ring)

What is complementary base pairing?

The standard arrangement of bases in nucleotides in relation to their opposite pairing, such as thymine being paired with adenine and cytosine paired with guanine.

How does an RNA nucleotide differ from a DNA nucleotide in terms of structure?

The sugar in DNA is deoxyribose, whereas RNA has ribose. Also thymine is not found in RNA, and instead the complementary base of adenine in RNA is uracil.

Describe the structure of DNA

There are two strands of polynucleotides coiled into a double helix. These strands are antiparallel (they run in opposite directions), and the two strands are held together by hydrogen bonds.

What is the name of the base, represented by the letter T?

Thymine

Like ______, uracil is a _______ that forms ______ hydrogen bonds with it's complementary base _______

Thymine Pyrimidine Two Adenine

In DNA, which bases are complementary?

Thymine bonds with Adenine Cytosine bonds with Guanine

What base is different in RNA?

Thymine is changed to Uracil

RNA molecules are small enough to leave the nucleus. Where do they go?

To the ribosomes- the site of protein synthesis

True or false? Both deoxyribose and ribose are pentose sugars

True

True or false? Nucleic acids are large molecules

True

True or false? Nucleic acids are polymers

True

True or false? Nucleotides are monomers

True

True or false? Phosphodiester bonds are covalent

True

True or false? Purine bases are larger, while pyrimidine bases are smaller

True

True or false? The phosphate group found in nucleotides are acidic

True

True or false? Uracil is a pyrimidine

True

How many carbon rings do purines have?

Two

How many carbon rings does Adenine have?

Two

How many types of nucleic acid are there?

Two

The four bases found in DNA can be divided into how many groups?

Two

What is the sugar in DNA?

deoxyribose

How does deoxyribose differ from ribose?

deoxyribose has one less oxygen atoms/ ribose has one more oxygen atoms than deoxyribose

A phosphodiester bond forms between the phosphate group attached to the fifth carbon and the ______ group attached to the _____ carbon of an adjacent nucleotide

hydroxyl group attached to the third carbon

What is the anagram for messenger RNA?

mRNA

In terms of nucleic acids, the monomer is called a _______ and the polymer a ________

monomer = a nucleotide polymer = polynucleotide

What is the anagram for mitochondrial DNA?

mtDNA

Define heredity

the passing on of physical or mental characteristics genetically from one generation to another.

Explain the base pairing rule

-A pyrimidine base always pairs with a purine base, and vice versa -Adenine and thymine/uracil always hydrogen bond together -Cytosine and guanine always hydrogen bond together

A sample of DNA was tested and 17% of the total bases present were found to be adenine. Calculate the percentages of each of the other three bases present in this sample.

17% = thymine 33% = cytosine 33% = guanine

How many carbon rings does Guanine have?

2

How many hydrogen bonds does uracil form with it's complementary base?

2

What type of bond forms between thymine and adenine, and how many?

2 hydrogen bonds

Which of the following represents the genetic material that DNA is transcribed into, for transport to the site of protein synthesis? 1) mDNA 2) mRNA 3) mtDNA 4) mtRNA

2)mRNA

A 6.8 nm long section of DNA contains 11 guanine bases. Determine the remaining number of bases present.

20 base pairs overall (10 base pairs= 3.4 nm, so 20 base pairs= 6.8 nm) 11 cytosine bases 9 thymine bases 9 adenine bases

A 3.4 nm long section of DNA contains 3 cytosine bases and 7 thymine bases. How many guanine bases are there?

3

An individual nucleotide is made up of ___ components

3

What type of bond forms between cytosine and guanine, and how many?

3 hydrogen bonds

Which of the following represents the genetic material in mitochondria? 1) mDNA 2) mRNA 3) mtDNA 4) mtRNA

3) mtDNA

How many carbon atoms are in a pentose monosaccharide?

5

How many carbon atoms does deoxyribose have?

5

How many carbon atoms does ribose have?

5

A 3.4 nm long section of DNA contains 4 cytosine bases and 6 adenine bases. How many thymine bases are there?

6

What is a nitrogenous base?

A complex organic molecule containing one or two carbon rings in its structure as well as nitrogen

What type of sugar is deoxyribose?

A pentose monosaccharide

What type of sugar is ribose?

A pentose monosaccharide

State the components of a nucleotide

A pentose monosaccharide A phosphate group A nitrogenous base

Name the 3 components of a nucleotide

A pentose sugar A phosphate group A nitrogenous base

What is a polynucleotide?

A polymer made up of nucleotide monomers

Explain the base pairing rules in terms of purines and pyrimidines

A small pyrimidine base always binds to a larger purine base

Name all 4 bases in DNA by their letters

A, C, G, T

Nucleic acids are slightly ______

Acidic

What is the name of the base, represented by the letter A?

Adenine

Which is larger: Adenine or Cytosine?

Adenine

Name the purines

Adenine and Guanine

Classify the following bases as pyrimidines and purines: Adenine, Cytosine, Guanine, Thymine

Adenine and Guanine = Purines Cytosine and Thymine = Pyrimidines

Name the bases that are found in DNA

Adenine, cytosine , guanine and thymine

What are the bases found in RNA?

Adenine, cytosine, guanine and uracil

What groups are involved in a phosphodiester bond?

An OH group and phosphate group

Why are the two coiled polynucleotide chains parallel to one another?

Because of the arrangement of the bases- a small pyrimidine base always binds to a larger purine base

Why is there a constant distance between the DNA 'backbones'?

Because of the arrangement of the bases- a small pyrimidine base always binds to a larger purine base.

The temperature should be kept low throughout the DNA extraction procedure. Suggest why.

Because the procedure involves the use of a protease. This is an enzyme, and so will denature if the temperature is too high.

Where do phosphodiester bonds form?

Between the phosphate group on the fifth carbon of one pentose sugar, and the hydroxyl (OH) group of the third carbon of an adjacent pentose sugar

How are phosphodiester bonds formed?

By condensation

How are nucleotides linked together?

By condensation reactions

Explain why detergent breaks down cell membranes.

Detergent contains emulsifiers, which have a polar end and non-polar end. These act on the cell membrane, which is made up of phospholipids, which also have regions of polarity and non-polarity.

What phrase is used to describe the shape of DNA?

Double helix

True or false? Nucleic acids are monomers

False

True or false? Nucleic acids are neither polymers nor monomers

False

True or false? Nucleic acids are small molecules

False

True or false? Nucleotides are polymers

False

True or false? Phosphodiester bonds are ionic

False

True or false? Purine bases are usually equal in size to pyrimidine bases

False

True or false? Purines bond with purines and pyrimidines bond with pyrimidines

False

True or false? Pyrimidine bases are larger, while purine bases are smaller

False

True or false? The phosphate group found in nucleotides are alkaline

False

True or false? Uracil is a purine

False

How many different bases are there in DNA?

Four

The nucleotides in DNA each have one of how many bases?

Four

Explain the procedure to extract DNA from plant material. State each step, and explain why this step is necessary

Grind sample with a pestle and mortar- this breaks down the cell walls Mix the sample with detergent- this breaks down the cell membrane, releasing the cell contents into the solution Add salt- this breaks the hydrogen bonds between the DNA and water molecules Add protease enzyme- this will break down the proteins associated with the DNA in the nuclei Add a layer of ethanol on top of the sample- alcohol causes the DNA to precipitate out of solution

What is the name of the base, represented by the letter G?

Guanine

Which is larger: Guanine or Uracil?

Guanine

Nucleic acids are the basis of ______

Heredity

________ bonds are formed between two bases

Hydrogen

Complementary bases bond to one another. What type of bonds are formed between these bases?

Hydrogen bonds

What type of bond holds the two strands of DNA together?

Hydrogen bonds

What reaction breaks down polynucleotides into nucleotides

Hydrolysis

What reaction breaks phosphodiester bonds?

Hydrolysis

Are DNA molecules small enough to leave the nucleus?

No

What is the name of the polymer that is made up of nucleotides?

Nucleic acids

What molecule/s are/is the basis of heredity?

Nucleic acids (DNA and RNA)

What is the name of the monomer that makes up nucleic acids?

Nucleotides

How many bases are attached to each sugar in the sugar-phosphate backbone?

One

How many carbon rings do pyrimidines have?

One

How many carbon rings does Cytosine have?

One

How many carbon rings does Thymine have?

One

A phosphodiester bond forms between the hydroxyl group attached to the third carbon and the ______ group attached to the _____ carbon of an adjacent nucleotide

Phosphate group attached to the fifth carbon

What is the name of the bond that holds RNA nucleotides together in a polymer?

Phosphodiester bonds

What is the name of the bonds that hold nucleotides together in a polynucleotide?

Phosphodiester bonds

What type of bond forms when the backbone of a polynucleotide is synthesised?

Phosphodiester bonds

Condensation of deoxyribose nucleotides forms covalent phosphodiester bonds. What other word could be used instead of 'condensation'?

Polymerisation

What is the name of the larger bases?

Purines

What type of base has a double carbon ring?

Purines

What is the name of the smaller bases?

Pyrimidines

What type of base has a single carbon ring?

Pyrimidines

What are the two types of bases?

Pyrimidines and purines

What are the groups that the four bases found in DNA can be divided into? Which bases are in which groups?

Pyrimidines- Thymine and cytosine Purines- Adenine and guanine

What does RNA stand for?

Ribonucleic acid

What phrase is used to describe the structure of an RNA molecule?

Single Helix

State two roles of DNA

Storage and transfer of genetic information Synthesis of polypeptides

State two roles of RNA

Storage and transfer of genetic information Synthesis of polypeptides

DNA cannot be transported to the site of protein synthesis. Why? How is this problem overcome?

The DNA of each eukaryotic chromosome is a very long molecule, and is unable to leave the nucleus. The short section of the long DNA molecule corresponding to a single gene is transcribed into a similarly short messenger RNA molecule (mRNA).

Are RNA molecules small enough to leave the nucleus?

Yes


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