a
b
c
d
e
100

What are the 3 kinds of RNA?

  • mRNA: a complementary copy of a gene

  • rRNA: part of the ribosome

  • tRNA: carries amino acids for polypeptide assembly

100

Where does initiation of transcription occur?

at the promoter,  a sequence of DNA that indicates where a gene begins and which strand is the template, at the initiation site

100

What is the wobble effect?

For many AA, the 3rd base of the codon can vary (degeneracy or wobble)

These codons are recognized by the same codon

100

What is the cell division process found in prokaryotes?

binary fission

100

What is the central dogma of biology? include the processes used 

DNA -> transc -> RNA -> transl -> protein

200

What is the difference between monosomi and trisomi?

Monosomic: one version of chromosomes in a diploid zygote

Trisomic: three versions of a chromosome in a diploid zygote

200

What are the 2 processes involved in expressing a gene to form a polypeptide & what happens?

Transcription: copies information from gene (DNA) to a sequence of DNA; “rewrite in the same language”

Translation: converts RNA sequence into amino acid sequences of a polypeptide; “rewrite in a different language”

200

What does it mean for DNA to be complementary, antiparallel, and a double helix?

1) complementary = A-T & C-G

2) antiparallel = 5-3 & 3-5

3) double helix = 2 strands make 1 molecule 

200

What is the difference between somatic and gamete cells?

Somatic cells: body cells, diploid (2n), Have 2 versions of each chromosome

Gametes: eggs and sperm; haploid (1n), Have 1 version of each chromosome


N means number of chromosomes

Egg (1n) + sperm (1n) = human (2n)

200

Both transcription and translation have the same 3 steps involved, just with different ways they go about them.

What are these 3 steps?

initiation, elongation, termination

300

What is the difference between prokaryotic and eukaryotic chromosomes?

I can think of 4!

1. circular vs linear

2. continuous vs. beginning and ends

3. DNA + binding proteins vs chromatin (DNA+histones)

4. in nucleoid vs nucleus.

300

What are the products of mitosis and meiosis?

mitosis: 2 diploid somatic cells that are genetically identical 

meiosis: 4 haploid gamete cells that are genetically diverse

300

In meiosis, what separate during M1 and M2? How similar or different are these to mitosis?

meiosis I: separate homologs (unique to meiosis)

meiosis II: separate sister chromatids (very similar to mitosis)

300

given the DNA molecule,

3'-GCC-5'

5'-CGG-3'

What is the template strand? what is the lagging strand?

template strand: 3'-GCC-5'
mrna strand : 5'-CGG-3'

300

What are 3 DNA repair methods and when do they take place?

  • Proofreading: DNA poly corrects errors during replication (during rep)

  • Mismatch repair: proteins remove the incorrect base and replace with the correct base (after rep)

  • Nucleotide excision repair: corrects damaged bases (after rep)

400

Starting at nucleotides, name the order of structures leading to creating a chromosome

I'm thinking of 7 things!

nucleotides < gene < DNA < nucleosome < chromatin < chromatid < chromosome


400

What are telomeres and telomerase? How are they connected?

telomeres are the ends of a chromosome that get shorter with each subsequent cell division.

telomerase is an enzyme found in stem cells that rebuilds the lost telomere sections during replication.

400

In eukaryotes, what are the 3 mRNA processing methods used before translation can occur? What do these modifications do?

  • Step 1: splice out introns, put exons together

    • Introns = non coding sequences; exons = coding sequences

    • Introns must be spliced/cut out of the pre-mRNA

  • Step 2: ends of pre-mRNA are modified

    • 5’ end: a modified guanine (5’ cap) is added

      • Helps mRNA bind to ribosome

      • Protects mRNA from being digested outside of the nucleus

    • 3’ end: a poly-A tail (100-300 adenines in a row) is added

      • Assists mRNA in leaving the nucleus

      • Protects mRNA from degradation

400

What are 2 methods used in meiosis to increase genetic variation? When do they occur?

Crossing over (P1) - chromosomes with genes from both parents

Independent assortment (M1)- randoms way that chromosomes line up

400

In translation, how do tRNAs move through a ribosome? what happens at each site?

  • Large subunit has three tRNA binding sites

    • A site: Anticodon of charged tRNA binds

    • P site: tRNA binds its amino acid to polypeptide chain

    • E site: tRNA exits ribosome

A > P > E; Bind > attach > leave 

(happens right to left)

500

compare and contrast initiation, elongation, and termination in transcription and translation

transcription vs. translation

initiation: RNA poly binds to promoter region on DNA vs. SSR attaches to mRNA start codon

elongation: RNA poly unwinds DNA + mRNA built 5'-3' vs. tRNA binds to codons + builds polypeptide

termination: RNA poly releases at the terminator sequence vs. protein release factor binds to stop codon

500

Give the contributions made by each scientist to DNA structure.

1. Rosalind Franklin

2. Erwin Chargaff

3. Linus Pauling

4. James Watson

5. Francis Crick

  • Rosalind Franklin = X-ray crystallography of pure, crystalized DNA showed a very unique pattern

  • Erwin chargaff = #A = #T ; #C = #G

  • Linus Pauling = 3D model of molecules

  • James Watson and Francis Crick = integrated everyone’s work to determine the structure of DNA

500

In a DNA molecule,

5'-ATCG......-3'        (helicase)

3'-TAGC......-5'

Which strand is the template for the leading strand? for the lagging strand? explain.

3'-TAGC......-5' is the template to the leading strand

5'-ATCG......-3'  is the template for the lagging strand

This is because of the orientation of the strands in relation to helicase. Because nucleotides are synthesized in the 5'-3' direction, a lagging strand will be produced on the strand in the 5'-3' direction.

500

Explain the cell cycle

Gap 1 (G1): The cell increases in size

Synthesis (S): The cell copies its DNA

Gap 2 (G2): The cell prepares to divide

Mitosis (M): The cell divides 

G1 + G2 + S = interphase



500

Functions of:

1. Helicase

2. Primase

3. DNA pol III

4. DNA pol I

5. Ligase

  • Helicase: Unwinds DNA

  • Primase: Builds a short RNA primer that is complementary to the template
  • DNA polymerase 3: Builds DNA off of the 3’ end of the prime. Builds in the 5-3’ direction
  • DNA polymerase 1: Replaces RNA primer with DNA
  • Ligase: Binds all of the fragments of the new strand together