DNA Basics
PROKARYOTIC vs EUKARYOTIC DNA
DNA Rep - Step 1
DNA Rep - Step 2
Telomeres & Aging
100

The complete set of hereditary information in an organism.

Genome

100

This structure is a small circular DNA molecule found in bacteria.

plasmid

100

This enzyme unwinds and separates DNA strands.

Helicase

100

DNA polymerase can only add nucleotides in this direction

5' to 3' 

100

These are repeating DNA sequences at chromosome ends

Telomeres

200

Different versions of the same gene that result in different traits.

Alleles

200

This process helps reduce the volume of prokaryotic DNA by twisting it.

supercoiling

200

The region where DNA strands separate during replication

Replication Fork

200

What is RNA primer?

Provides the starting point for DNA synthesis

200

This term describes the limit to how many times a cell can divide

The Hayflick limit


300

A scientist artificially increases the number of histones in a cell. Predict how this would affect gene expression and explain why.

Gene expression would likely decrease because more DNA would be tightly wrapped, making it less accessible for transcription.

300

Key difference in replication origins between prokaryotes and eukaryotes

One origin (prokaryotes) vs multiple origins (eukaryotes).


300

What is Topoisomerase?

An enzyme that relieves tension caused by DNA unwinding

300

The strand that is synthesized continuously

Leading Strand

300

Compare how telomere length would differ between skin cells and germ line cells, and explain why.

Skin cells shorten over time; germ cells maintain length due to telomerase.

400

Explain how histones contribute to DNA organization

They act as proteins DNA wraps around to compact and organize it.


400

Why do eukaryotic cells require multiple origins of replication?

Because their DNA is larger and more complex, so replication must occur faster.


400

What role do single-strand binding proteins (SSBs) play?

They prevent DNA strands from re-annealing.


400

What are Okazaki fragments?

These fragments are formed on the lagging strand

400

Explain why telomeres shorten during replication

The last RNA primer cannot be replaced, leaving a gap


500

A mutation affects how DNA wraps around histones. Predict one possible consequence.

Altered gene expression because DNA may be more or less accessible for transcription.

500

Predict what would happen if a eukaryotic chromosome had only one origin of replication

Replication would be too slow, possibly preventing proper cell division

500

What would happen if topoisomerase did not function properly during replication?

DNA would become overly twisted and tangled, stopping replication

500

A drug blocks RNA primase activity in rapidly dividing cells. Predict how this would affect DNA replication and explain why this might be useful in cancer treatment.




Replication would stop because DNA polymerase cannot start without primers. This could slow or stop cancer cell division. 

500

Why are telomerase levels high in cancer cells?

To maintain telomeres and allow unlimited cell division

M
e
n
u