Protein Synth
DNA v. RNA
Transcription
Translation
Mutations
100

What is the central dogma of biology?

DNA --> mRNA --> Protein

100

What base is found in RNA but not DNA?

Uracil

100

Where does transcription take place and why?

Nucleus, because DNA cannot leave the nucleus. DNA it too large and may get damaged if it did leave

100

What organelle is responsible for translation?

Ribosome

100

What are the three major types of gene mutations?

Insertion

Deletion

Substitution

200

What are the building blocks of proteins?

Amino acids

200

How many strands does each molecule have?

DNA --> 2

RNA --> 1

200

What is the goal of transcription?

To use DNA as instructions to make mRNA

200

What RNA molecules play a role in protein synthesis during translation?

All of them; mRNA, tRNA, rRNA

200

Which is more likely to cause a major problem a frameshift or point mutation? Why?

Frameshift, it is more likely to create a large change in the protein

300

What are the steps to protein synthesis?

Transcription & translation

300

What are the 3 types of RNA and what do they do?

mRNA --> carries genetic info out of the nucleus

tRNA --> transports amino acids to ribosome

rRNA --> helps make proteins

300

What is the major enzyme that controls transcription?

RNA polymerase

300

What is the name of a three nucleotide sequence that is used to determine and amino acid and where is it found?

Codon on the mRNA

300

Identify and briefly describe the different types of point mutations.

Silent - when a substitution creates the same amino acid

Missense - when a substitution creates a different amino acid

Nonsense - when a substitution creates a stop codon

400

How do you read a codon wheel?

From the middle reading outwards

400

What are the sugars found in the molecules?

DNA --> deoxyribose

RNA --> ribose

400

What happens to mRNA after it is made?

It leaves the nucleus and enters the cytoplasm

400

What are the three major steps of protein synthesis?

Initiation - starting the protein

Elongation - making the protein

Termination - ending the protein

400

Are all mutations harmful? Explain.

No, many mutations are neutral because a lot of different codons result in the same amino acid

500

Provide at least two examples of what proteins do in the body

enzymes, antibodies, hormones, moving molecules in the body, help with growth, control cell processes, etc.

500

Create a model that compares and contrasts the properties of DNA and RNA. Include similarities and differences.

Image should contain a double helix for DNA and single helix for RNA.

Additional Information:
RNA --> ribose sugar, uracil base

DNA --> deoxyribose sugar, thymine base

Both --> carry genetic information, bases A-C-G, both needed for protein synthesis

500

Briefly summarize transcription in 3-4 steps.

1. RNA polymerase attaches to DNA

2. The polymerase begins to read DNA 

3. The polymerase uses DNA as instructions to build mRNA

4. Transcription stops when a termination signal is reached and mRNA is released

500

Briefly summarize what happens during translation

1. mRNA leaves the nucleus and enters the cytoplasm

2. mRNA binds to rRNA (ribosome)

3. Ribosome reads codons on mRNA

4. tRNA brings amino acids that match the mRNA codon

5. Ribosome attaches amino acids together with peptide bonds until a stop codon is reached

500

Which would be worse: a mutation that happens in the DNA or a mutation that occurs while making mRNA? Why?

DNA. DNA is the template used to make RNA, so if the DNA is changed ALL information coming from the DNA would be mutated. If RNA is changed, it would only impact some of the proteins being made, since RNA is only around for a short period of time.

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