What are the 2 major biological functions of DNA?
What does some of the information in DNA encode?
proteins that provide structure and do much of the work of the cell
What form is genetic information in DNA organized in?
genes
How do genes exist?
in different forms in different individuals, even with a single species
What is gene expression?
turning on of a gene
What is gene regulation?
the molecular process that control whether gene expression occurs at a given time, in a given cell, or at what level
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What are nucleotides composed of?
5-carbon sugar
base
phosphate group(s)
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What are the nucleotide components’ roles in DNA structure?
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What makes DNA a mild acid?
phosphate group attached to 5’ carbon has negative charges on two of its oxygen atoms because at cellular pH, the free hydroxyl groups attached to the phosphorous atom are ionized by the loss of a proton and therefore are negatively charged
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Where is each base located?
attached to 1’ carbon of the sugar and projects above the sugar ring
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What are nucleosides?
combination of sugar and a base
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What is a nucleotide?
a nucleoside with one or more phosphate groups
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What is a nucleotide with one, two, or three phosphate groups called?
nucleoside monophosphate, diphosphate, triphosphate
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What is nucleoside triphosphate?
- carriers of chemical energy in the form of ATP and GTP
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What is a phosphodiester bond?
covalent bond that connects 3’ carbon of one nucleotide to 5’ carbon of the next nucleotide in line through the 5’ phosphate group
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Describe the phosphodiester bond.
in DNA, it is a relatively stable bond that can withstand stresses such as heat and substantial changes in pH that would break weaker bonds
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What gives DNA strand polarity?
phosphodiester linkages
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What does polarity in a DNA strand mean?
one end differs from the other - 5’ end (phosphate) and 3’ end (hydroxyl)
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Describe the Watson-Crick structure of DNA.
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How many base pairs are there per DNA turn?
10 base pairs per complete turn
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What are major and minor grooves?
outside contours of the twisted strands form an uneven pair of grooves
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Why are major and minor grooves important?
because proteins that interact with DNA often recognize a particular sequence of bases by making contact with the bases by the major or minor groove or both
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Describe the ribbon model of DNA.
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What is Chargaff’s rule?