What is a nucleic acid?
A complex organic substance present in living cells whose molecule consists of many nucleotides.
What are the 3 components of a DNA nucleotide?
What are the 3 components of a RNA nucleotide?
What bond joins nucleotides together?
Phosphodiester bond
Through what reaction are the bonds between the nucleotide’s components formed?
Condensation reaction
Describe RNA
Describe DNA
What are some functional adaptations of DNA?
What is the method of DNA replication called?
Semi-conservative replication
What does ‘semi-conservative replication’ imply?
Every time DNA is copied, half is kept and half is made new
Explain the stages of semi-conservative replication
1) DNA helicase breaks H bonds between polynucleotides
2) DNA unwinds into 2 strands
3) Each exposed strand acts as a template so that free, complementary nucleotides can bind to specific bases
4) The free nucleotides join via a condensation reaction - DNA polymerase joins the new nucleotides together
5) The template strand and the new strand of DNA rejoin via hydrogen bonds and re-coil
6) Each new DNA molecule contains one of the original DNA strands (half the original DNA)
What is ATP?
An immediate source of energy used to power cellular processes
What kind of molecule is ATP?
Phosphorylated molecule (phosphates are added)
What does ATP stand for?
Adenosine triphosphate
What are the 3 components of an ATP molecule?
What happens when ATP is hydrolysed?
It can turn into ADP with 1 Pi group
What enzyme catalyses the hydrolysis reaction that causes ATP to turn into ADP?
ATP hydrolase
What can happen to the Pi released during the hydrolysis of ATP?
It can phosphorylate other compounds, which can make them more reactive
By what reaction does the resynthesis of ADP and Pi undergo?
Condensation
What enzyme catalyses the condensation reaction between ADP and Pi, to make ATP?
ATP synthase
What are some of the uses of ATP?
It’s used in:
- Metabolic processes - Muscle movement - Active transport - Secretion of lysosomes - Activation of molecules (phosphorylating them makes them more reactive)
What are 5 useful properties of water?
What do we mean when we say that water is ‘dipolar’?
Even though the molecule has an overall negative charge, the Hs have a slight +ve charge and the O has a slight -ve charge, meaning it’s got +ve and -ve poles
What is the significance of water and hydrogen bonding?
Hydrogen bonds form important forces that cause water molecules to stick together, giving it its unusual properties