Cells and Macromolecules
Amino Acids and Proteins
RNA and Transcription
mRNA
Translation
100
The major differences between Eukaryotes and Prokaryotes are?

No structured nucleus (nucleoid)
• DNA is circular
• Lack complex membranous organelles
– No mitochondria
– No chloroplasts
– No endoplasmic reticulum
• Cell walls contain peptidoglycans
– (meshlike polymer of sugars+amino acids
that contribute to the cell wall)



100

What are the main 6 protein functions?

Regulation
Signaling

Enzyme

Structure

Movement

Transport

100

How does the single-stranded shape of RNA aid it?

The single strand allows RNA to take functional shapes, while the double-stranded nature of DNA makes it too stable to change form.

100

What are the 3 modifications of Transcription Elongation

RNA Capping, RNA Splicing, RNA poly-adenylation 

100

What is the anticodon of tRNA

The region of tRNA that contains 3 nucleotides that are complementary to 3 nucleotides on the mRNA, which is called the codon.

200

Eukaryotes are similar to Archaea and Bacteria in what way?

Eukaryotes are most similar to Archaea in their machinery for replication, transcription, and translation, but are often more similar to Bacteria in their apparatus for metabolism.


200

What is the Amino Acid and its sidechain (polar, nonpolar) whose three-letter code is Ile, Asp, and Tyr

Isoleucine is nonpolar

Aspartic acid is negative

Tyrosine is polar

200

What are the 3 steps of Transcription

Initiation

Elongation

Termination

200

What is the difference between Mature and Premature RNA

Premature RNA still has introns, and Mature RNA does not.

200
How do Amino Acids bind to tRNA?

Amino acids get attached to tRNAs by aminoacyl-tRNA- synthetases

300

How did mitochondria and chloroplasts evolve?

Likely originated from aerobic bacterium
that was engulfed by an archaeal anaerobic
cell. They formed a symbiotic relationship

300

What are the differences between alpha helices and beta sheets?

Alpha Helices

Side chains are sticking out, and its in a helical shape

Beta Sheets

Neighboring segments of the polypeptide backbone are aligned in a similar orientation, whether in parallel or antiparallel direction.

300

What are the General Transcription Factors of Initiation

 TFIID, TBP, TFIIH

300

What are the 3 recognition points of splicing 

GU -- A -- AG

300

What would happen to Translation if peptidyl transferase was not present?

A peptide bond is not formed, so the protein is malformed.

400

If the cell was low on Calcium what could help fix this?

Smooth ER

400

What are the 4 structures of protein? Describe them.

Primary, Secondary, Tertiary, Quaternary

Primary is the amino acids

Secondary is the alpha helices or beta sheets

Tertiary is the hydrophobic or hydrophilic shape,

Quaternary is the structure of multiple proteins

400

What are 3 ways that TFIIH aids in transcription

Contains a Helicase Subunit

Phosphorylates the C-terminal domain (CTD),
also called the C-terminal tail.
Phosphorylation of the RNAPII CTD helps RNAPII detach from the transcription initiation complex for the next step: elongation



400

What would happen if SR proteins were missing? 

nothing would bind to exon sequences and help define exons, so splicing would be inaccurate. 

400

If a protein misfolds, what would the cell use to correct it?

Molecular Chaperones

500

What are the 4 major macromolecules and what are their roles?

Protein - Enzymes

Carbohydrates - Energy

Lipids - Form Cell Membrane

Nucleic Acids - Form DNA and RNA

500

What are the bonds in the tertiary structure of proteins

1. ionic bonds
2. H+ bonds in AA side chains
3. Hydrophobic Clustering
4. Disulfide Bonds
5. Metal Ion Coordination Complexes

500

What do the 3 RNA polymerases encode

RNAP I and III transcribe genes encoding tRNA, rRNA, and other small RNAs. RNAP II transcribes most genes, including all that encode proteins



500

How would an RNA polymerase missing PAP affect mRNA

The missing PAP would mean the Mature mRNA would be too short and the poly-A-binding proteins would not bind.

500

A cell has no Ubiquitin. What could be some of the effects of this? Be in Detail

Proteasomes do not bind to misfolded proteins. Misfolded proteins are not destroyed, leading to errors and failed processes.