1 / 67

DNA structure

DNA structure. DNA is a polymer made of four monomers (A, T, G, C). Each monomer is contains: a nucleobase (nitrogeneous base) attached to a sugar (deoxyribose) and a phosphate . a nucleobase (nitrogeneous base) attached to a sugar (deoxyribose) and a lipid

astrobel
Télécharger la présentation

DNA structure

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DNA structure

  2. DNA is a polymer made of four monomers (A, T, G, C). Each monomer is contains: a nucleobase (nitrogeneous base) attached to a sugar (deoxyribose) and a phosphate. a nucleobase (nitrogeneous base) attached to a sugar (deoxyribose) and a lipid a nucleobase (nitrogeneous base) attached to an aminoacid and a phosphate. an amino acid attached to a sugar (deoxyribose) and a phosphate.

  3. True or False: One end of a DNA strand is called the 5’-end and the other end is called the 3’-end. The two strands of DNA are anti-parallel, meaning they run in opposite directions. The backbone of DNA (the strands) are composed of sugars (deoxyribose) attached to each by phosphates.

  4. If you know the sequence of one strand, you can figure out the sequence of the other. If the sequence of one strand is 5’-ATGCAT-3’, what is the sequence of its complementary strand?

  5. The two strands of DNA are held together by Hydrogen bonds between the nucleobases. There are three hydrogen bonds holding together G:::C, and two hydrogen bonds holding together A::T. Which of the following strands of DNA is most stable? A. 5’GCGGCC-3’ 3’CGCCGG-5’ B. 5’AAAAAA-3’ 3’TTTTTT-5’ C. 5’TATATG-3’ 3’ATATAC-5’ D. 5’ATGCAT-3’ 3’TACGTA-5’

  6. DNA replication sdfds

  7. What enzyme unzips (unwinds) the DNA molecule? DNA polymerase Helicase Primase DNA ligase unzipase

  8. Which of the following are limitations of DNA polymerase? It can only add bases to the exposed 3’ end of a pre-existing strand It can only replicate the leading strand It can only replicate the lagging strand None of the above

  9. T or F: The point where separation of the DNA occurs is called the replication fork.

  10. Put the following events in the proper order: DNA polymerase extends the RNA primer in opposite directions using monomers present in the cell. DNA ligase joins together two adjacent strands of DNA Helicase unwinds/separates the two DNA strands RNA primase then adds a short complementary strand of RNA (a RNA primer) to each strand DNA polymerase extends each strand until it runs into another section that is already copied

  11. Bidirectional DNA replication

  12. DNA replication in bacteria begins at: A single origin and proceeds in one direction A single origin and proceeds in both directions Two origins and proceeds in both directions Many origins and proceeds in one direction Many origins and proceeds in two directions

  13. True or False: The bacterial chromosome is linear

  14. mRNA synthesis (transcription) Can you find a mistake in this animation?

  15. The segment of the DNA molecule where mRNA synthesis begins is called the: Promoter region Sigma factor Transcription terminator Polymerase Template

  16. The complementary mRNA stand that would be synthesized from the DNA sequence 5’-CTGAC-3’ would be: 3’-GACTG-5’ 3’-GACUG-5’ 3’-CTGAC-5’ 5’-CTGAC-3’

  17. The name of the structure that causes the synthesis of mRNA to cease is called the: Promoter region Sigma factor Transcription terminator Polymerase Template

  18. T or F: The synthesis of mRNA is called translation. The synthesis of mRNA is in the 5’ to 3’ direction. The name of the enzyme that synthesizes mRNA is RNA polymerase

  19. Exon Shuffling:

  20. What is the name of the part of mRNA (in the primary transcript) that does not encode a protein, and is removed by splicing before a protein is made: a. Exon b. Intron c. Gene d. 5’cap e. 3’polyA tail

  21. The 5’-cap and 3’-polyA tails added to mRNA serve what purpose? a. to make the mRNA more stable b. to make the mRNA longer c. to enable splicing out of introns d. All of the above

  22. One mRNA can be spliced many different ways, including all or just some of the exons. This allows 30,000 genes in humans to make over 100,000 different proteins. This is called: a. Alternative splicing b. Intron shuffling c. Transcription d. translation

  23. Processing of Gene Information: Prokaryotes vs Eukaryotes

  24. Which of the following statements is true for eukaryotic mRNA, but not true for prokaryotic mRNA? a. A cap is added to their 5’end. b. A poly-A tail is added to their 3’ end. c. Each usually specifies only a single protein. d. All of the above are true for eukaryotic mRNA, and false for prokaryotic mRNA.

  25. T or F: Prokaryotic mRNA can be translated by many ribosomes at the same time as it is being transcribed from DNA, but eukaryotic mRNA must first be processed and then transported from nucleus to the cytoplasm before it can be translated into a protein. An operon consists of a set of related genes that are transcribed as a single mRNA and are found in eukaryotes.

  26. Transposons:aka jumping genes Does anyone know what a bacterial plasmid is?

  27. Transposons are: a. Segments of mRNA b. Plasmids c. Segments of DNA d. Segments of transfer RNA (tRNA)

  28. Transposons are transported between different cells by: a. Transduction b. A sex pilus c. Conjugation d. Bacteriophages e. Plasmids

  29. Which of the following is true about transposons (include all that are true)? They are capable of moving from one cell to another They can move into the host cell genome They can more from one site in the host cell genome to another site They can replicate themselves before moving

  30. Addition and deletion mutations

  31. The nucleic acid sequence in mRNA is determined by: The order of amino acids in the protein The nucleotide sequence in DNA The nucleotide sequence in tRNA All of the above

  32. T or F: One amino acid in a protein chain is encoded by three consecutive bases in RNA; the three bases in mRNA that code for one amino acid is called a codon.

  33. Classify the following three “mutations” as either a point mutation or a frame-shift mutation. If it is a frame-shift mutation, is it an addition or deletion? Original THE BIG FAT CAT ATE ALL THE ICE mutant#1 THE BIG ATC ATA TEA LLT HEI CEN mutant#2 THE BIG FAT CAT TAT EAL LTH EIC mutant#3 THE BIG CAT CAT ATE ALL THE ICE What type of mutation has the least impact on the message?

  34. If a frame-shift mutation creates a stop codon in the DNA sequence, then The resulting protein will not be affected The phenotype will change but not the genotype The resulting protein will be too short and non-functional The resulting protein will be too long and non-functional

  35. A nucleotide deletion that occurs during DNA replication: Causes one amino acid of the protein to be deleted Causes all of the amino acids of the protein to be incorrect Causes the amino acids after the deletion to be corrected Causes the amino acids before the deletion to be incorrect Has no effect on the resulting protein

  36. Mutations in DNA, such as point mutations or frame-shift mutations, can be caused by: Uncorrected errors during DNA replication Mutagens such as the chemicals found in smoke High energy particles such as radiation and UV light Insertion of transposons into an exonic region All of the above

  37. Restriction Endonucleases

  38. Which of the following could NOT be the recognition site of a restriction endonuclease? a. GAATTC CTTAAG b. ATCGAT TAGCTA c. CTGCAG GACGTC d. GCTTGC CGAACG e. GGATCC CCTAGG

  39. The single-stranded ends of DNA molecules can be joined together by: Restriction endonucleases DNA ligase DNA polymerase Primase Helicase

  40. Human DNA cut with restriction enzyme A will have the same sticky ends as (and can therefore be ligated/joined to) which of the following: Human DNA cut with restriction enzyme B Human DNA that is uncut Bacterial DNA that is uncut Corn DNA that is cut with restriction enzyme A None of the above

  41. T or F: The ligating (joining) of sticky ends involves the formation of phosphodiester bonds.

  42. If you have a piece of bacterial DNA that is 1280 bases long, and you add to it a restriction endonuclease that recognizes and cuts the following sequence: 5’-CATG-3’ 3’-GTAC-5’ approximately how many times will the bacterial DNA be cut? Hint: if you flip a coin four times, how often to you expect to get heads four times in a row?

  43. PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction

  44. PCR requires all of the following except: Primers DNA ligase DNA polymerase (usually Taq DNA polymerase) At least one strand of DNA (polymer) to copy/amplify Deoxyribonucleotides (monomers)

  45. The purpose of heating the DNA during each cycle of PCR is to Activate the polymerase enzyme Speed up catalysis by the polymerase enzyme Separate the two strands of DNA template Increase binding of primers to the DNA template

  46. T or F: Even though Taq polymerase is an enzyme from a bacteria, it can copy DNA from any species, including humans. During the PCR, the hydrogen bonds holding the two strands of DNA molecules together are broken by the helicase enzyme.

  47. You can determine which part of OJ Simpon’s DNA you wish to amplify by changing which of the following: The sequence of the primer The temperature of the PCR The amount of polymerase

  48. If you start with one drop of OJ Simpson’s blood, containing ten cells (and therefore ten copies of his DNA), and you amplify it by PCR for 10 cycles of “heat-cool-copy-repeat”, how many copies of the DNA have you made?

  49. What temperature do you think your DNA polymerase works best at? Do you think your DNA polymerase works at 95C (nearly the temperature of boiling water)? Where do you think scientists found a polymerase that is active even at very high temperatures, such as Taq DNA polymerase?

  50. Reconstruction of the Primate Alcohol Metabolic Pathway: Did Ardi Party Hearty? Matthew Carrigan Research Fellow Foundation for Applied Molecular Evolution www.ffame.org

More Related