LO1-3
L04-8
L09-12
L12- 13
L14/ bonus
100

What is the pentose sugar in DNA? What about in RNA?

DNA: deoxyribose

RNA: ribose

100

What bond type bonds nucleotides in DNA and RNA?

3',5'- phosphodiester bonds

100

How many base pairs per helical term is B-DNA, A-DNA, and Z-DNA?

B: 10.5

A: 11

Z: 12 (can't be involved in regular DNA)

100

What cleaves DNA from the inside?

endonuclease

100

Many antiviral drugs in HIV treatment are analogs of? Why are they effective?

dNTPs, they lack 3' OH group for addition of next dNTP and thus there is no replication for viral DNA

200

Polymers of repeating subunits are called ____. They provide chemical energy via ___ and ___


BONUS: what 3 parts are they made up of?

Nucleotides (they provide chemical energy via ATP and GTP)


1st: nitrogenous base

2nd: pentose sugar

3rd: phosphate group

200

Why cannot cAMP and cGMP be incorporated in growing chain oligonucleotides?

there is no open phosphate or hydroxyl group for nucleic acids

200

This type of DNA has a 3 stranded DNA structure, and when it is apparent in the gene, leads to diseases

H DNA (triple helix DNA)

200
At what point is half of the double helical structure lost? (general term)

Tm= melting temperature

200

How do nucleoside analogs act as antimetabolites?

Act as natural nucleosides. They transport inside via nucleoside transporters where they are phosphorylated via nucleoside kinase, nucleoside monophosphate kinase, and diphosphate kinase before being incorporated in nucleic acids

300
What are the purines and pyrimidines in nucleic acids?

Purines: Adenine and Guanine

Pyrimidine: Cytosine, Thymine, Uracil

300

Explain strand complementarity and Chargaff's rule

A pairs with T (2H bonds), G pairs with C (3H bonds). The specificity of base pairing gives rise to strand complementarity. Chargaff's rule tell us that DNA from any cell of an organism has A=T and G=C. (n (A+G) = n (T+C)) 

300

Explain the difference between exonuclease and endonuclease

Exonucleases: cleaver phosphodiester bonds at the last nucleotide at either terminus

Endonucleases: cleaves phosphodiester bonds between nucleotides at the interior of a chain

300

Which base pairing has higher Tm?

GC 

300

These are repeated or inverted DNA sequences that may make chromatin unstable and disrupt replication

What is hairpins and cruciform
400

What makes up an ester bond?

1 or more phosphate groups attached to sugar

400

How are DNA bases stabilized?

Hydrophobic bases stack on top of each other. It also causes bending, which causes helical structure of DNA. Stacked bases are located between hydrophilic deoxyribose phosphate backbones of strands
400

What is the difference between denaturation and renaturation?

denaturation: strands of double helix separate when hydrogen bonds between bases are disrupted

renaturation: complimentary strands reform a double helix (aka annealing) after denaturation if treated properly

400

What happens to DNA when pH>11.3 (alkaline)? What about RNA?

DNA denatures but strands stay intact. RNA degrades to nucleotides in alkali solution

400

Define Tm

Temperature at which half of the double helical structure is lost

500

__ consists of a base bound to either ribose or deoxyribose via N-B-glycosyl bond. This bond is formed between __ of sugar and __ of pyrimidines or __ of purines

Nucleosides; C1; N1; N9

500

Where do proteins bind to DNA?

Bonus: why is DNA negative?

on the major groove 

Bonus: Phosphate groups give a net negative charge 

500

What happens to absorbance when DNA is heated?

absorbance increases at 260 nm

500

What is an example of a reaction that increases in alkaline solutions?

trans-esterification (nucleophilic attack by 2-OH of ribose breaks phosphodiester backbone)

500

In an alkali solution, what does RNA do

Degrade to nucleotides