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Published byShinta Widjaja Modified over 6 years ago
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Gene Expression Gene: contains the recipe for a protein
1. is a specific region of DNA on a chromosome 2. codes for a specific mRNA
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mRNA: exits the nucleus and associates with ribosomes
1. carries the code for a specific protein to the cytoplasm 2. primary structure of a protein is encoded by the mRNA base sequences 3. sequence of mRNA bases is encoded by DNA (genes)
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Two processes involved:
1. transcription - mRNA synthesis (copy the code) 2. translation - protein synthesis (translate the code)
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DNA Structure A. Rosalind Franklin X-ray crystallography DNA exists as a helix
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B. Watson and Crick 1. DNA is a double helix 2. two complementary strands
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Nucleic Acids A. Building blocks are nucleotides 1. 5-carbon sugar (ribose or deoxyribose) 2. phosphate group 3. nitrogenous/organic base (varies)
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B. DNA is a polymer made using 4 different nucleotides
- the four nucleotides differ only in their bases
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D. Nucleotides are bonded via their phosphate groups
1. phosphate binds to a sugar of another nucleotide 2. sugars and phosphates form a “backbone” 3. bases project from backbone (forming side chains)
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4. H bonds form between bases of opposing side chains
a. DNA is double stranded b. forms a double helix
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Double helix:
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E. Law of complementary base-pairing (Chargaff’s rules)
1. adenine to thymine 2. guanine to cytosine
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The sequence of bases in one chain (strand) determines the sequence of bases in the other chain.
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F. RNA structure (3 major differences with DNA)
1. sugar is ribose 2. uracil instead of thymine 3. single-stranded
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G. Classes of RNA 1. mRNA: carries coded info to the ribosomes
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G. Classes of RNA 1. mRNA: carries coded info to the ribosomes 2. rRNA: structural molecule of ribosomes
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G. Classes of RNA 1. mRNA: carries coded info to the ribosomes 2. rRNA: structural molecule of ribosomes 3. tRNA: brings amino acids to ribosomes for protein synthesis
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All three types of RNA necessary for protein synthesis.
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DNA Replication A. Copying of DNA done before mitosis (S phase)
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DNA Replication B. Process 1. unzip the double helix
2. each strand used as a template 3. complementary strands constructed 4. new DNA molecules identical to the original 5. enzyme (DNA polymerase) also “proofreads”
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DNA Replication B. Process 1. unzip the double helix
2. each strand used as a template 3. complementary strands constructed 4. new DNA molecule identical to the original 5. enzyme (DNA polymerase) also “proofreads”
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Transcription Only a few genes usually active at any one time in a cell. If a gene is active, then coded info in gene must be copied onto an mRNA molecule. Transcription = DNA-directed RNA synthesis.
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A. Transcription occurs in the nucleus
B. RNA polymerase 1. unzips DNA double helix 2. only at area to be transcribed
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3. H bonds between strands are broken
4. mRNA is built using one DNA strand as template
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C. Formed mRNA detaches from template DNA (gene)
D. Can make many copies quickly if needed
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E. Post-transcriptional modifications
1. removal of introns 2. exons spliced together
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