Where in the cell is our DNA found?
In the Nucleolus
Which is the main enzyme that drives the addition of nucleotides to a DNA template?
DNA Polymerase
Polymerase
What is Uracil?
It is the base that replaces Thymine in RNA
Where does translation take place?
Ribosomes
What is apoptosis?
When the cell kills itself
What is the difference between DNA and RNA?
DNA uses deoxyribose while RNA used ribose
DNA uses Thymine while RNA replaces it with Uracil
DNA has two strands and RNA is a copy of only one of the strands
Where does replication take place?
In the nucleolus
Where does transcription take place?
Nucleolus
What is tRNA?
Transfer RNA
It brings the amino acids to the ribosome.
Translate the DNA code below into a mRNA code:
TGC AGC
ACG UCG
What does DNA stand for?
Deoxyribonucleic Acid
What is the name of the enzyme that separates the two strands?
Helicase
How does the RNA polymerase know when to begin and when to end?
In the DNA, there are several starting and ending sequences. The polymerase binds to the starting sequence and starts transcription, and then when it reaches the ending sequence, it stops and leaves the nucleolus.
What is a polypeptide?
It is a chain of amino acids.
Protein
How long are the pieces of DNA in each cell in a human body?
2 meters
What does one nucleotide consist of?
One phosphate, one deoxyribose and one base
Which phase of the cell cycle is replication in?
Synthesis (S)
What are the 4 nitrogenous bases?
Adenine, Thymine, Guanine, Cytosine
What does an anticodon do?
The anticodon has the opposite sequence as the codon. It is used to bring the amino acids to the ribosome
An anticodon binds to the amino acids and enters the ribosome during translation. Once the amino acids bind, the anticodon leaves the ribosome, therefore creating a polypeptide chain.
What is the orientation of the lagging and leading strand?
Leading: (3' to 5')
Lagging: (5' to 3')
Which bases are purines and pyrimidines?
Purines: Adenine and Guanine
Pyrimidines: Thymine and Cytosine
What are Okazaki Fragments?
They are fragments caused by replicating the lagging strand.
They are fragments of DNA caused by the orientation of the lagging strand (5' to 3'). The orientation does not allow the polymerase to go in a straight line, but in order to replicate it does so in fragments.
What is the role of the promoter?
It is an initiation sequence which tells the enzyme where to start transcription.
Translate the following mRNA sequence and state the amino acids in the correct order
AUG CCA GGU ACG UGA CAC

tRNA: UAC GGU CCA UGC ACU GUG
Amino Acid: Tyr-Gly-Pro-Cys-Thr-Val
What happens when the DNA has a mutation in terms of Replication, Transcription, and Translation?
When DNA has a mutation, most times the cell will kill itself, however, there is a chance that the defect goes undetected. If it goes undetected then it will replicate and transcribe normally, but when it is translating, the wrong amino acids will be put in place and create a faulty protein. This protein many times will simply not be used, but if it is, it can cause an issue if there is enough of them.