Scientists
Structure
Rules
Replication
Replication and Chromosomes
100

Which scientist's X-ray diffraction photo helped reveal the structure of DNA?

Rosalind Frankllin

100

The structure of DNA is often referred to as a _______ _______ _____.

Double stranded helix

100

In complementary base pairing, which base pairs with cytosine?

Guanine

100

During which phase of cell division does DNA replication occur?

S (synthesis) phase

100

What does DNA stand for?

Deoxyribosenucleic Acid

200

Who created the first 3D helical model of DNA?

Watson and Crick

200

The strands (backbone) of the DNA molecule are made of what two components?

Sugar and phosphate

200

In complementary base pairing, which base pairs with thymine?

Adenine

200
If the DNA has the sequence ATCGGA, what is the sequence of the complementary strand?

TAGCCT

200

Which enzyme acts as a proofreader in DNA replication because it only adds a new nucleotide if the preceding one was correctly paired?

DNA polymerase

300

What is Chargaff's rule

Same percentage of A and T and same percentage of C and G- Similiar to base pairing rule

300

Two strands of DNA are held together at the center by  what type of bond between the nitrogenous bases.

Hydrogen Bond- Weak so it unzips

300

What is the monomer of DNA?

Nucleotide

300

What is the Sugar call in DNA

Deoxyribose

300

The enzyme that unzips DNA by breaking the Hydrogen Bonds

Helicase

400

What do the letters DNA stand for?

Deoxyribonucleic Acid

400

How many phosphates are present in one nucleotide?

One

400

What are the different components of a nucleotide?

Phosphate Sugar and Nitrogen Base

400

Which enzyme uses complementary base pairing to add nucleotides to the new strand of DNA?

DNA polymerase

400

What enzyme works to seal up Okazaki fragments that occur on the lagging strand during replication?

Ligase

500

Why is it important that we understand the structure of DNA and how it replicates?

(Answers may vary.) Understanding the structure and replication process of DNA allows us to understand how traits are passed down and how mutations arise and what affect they have on an organism.

500

Why is it essential for DNA replication to be extremely accurate?

To make sure the new cells (daughter cells) receive the same genetic instructions as the parent cell.

500

The two strands of DNA run opposite each other. How else would we describe this?

(Answers may vary). DNA is anti-parallel. OR One strand runs from 5' to 3' while the other strand runs from 3' to 5'.

500

DNA replication is semi-conservative. What does this mean in relation to the DNA strands?

(Answers may vary.) One DNA strand is new, while the other is the old strand from the original DNA molecule.

500

_______ are repetitive sequences at the ends of chromosomes that help prevent degradation of information during DNA replication.

Telomeres

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