Term
who was the discovere of nucleic acid? |
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Definition
friedrich miescher (1844-1895)
he took pus from bandages and seperated the nuclei form the white blood cells. he found a substance rich in phosphorus and nitrogen. he called the acid phosphorus rich part nucleic acid |
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Term
t/f
chromsomes contain DNA and protein? |
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Definition
true - the genetic material is in the DNA |
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Term
what did griffith's transformation experiments in 1928 with lethal/non-lethal forms of streptococcus pneumoniae discover? |
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Definition
the transforming principle - mixing dead virulent forms of s.pneumoniae with live harmless versions gave rise to a live disease causing version |
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Term
in Griffith's transformation experiments what was the physiological different between the S (virulent ) and the R (harmless) version of S. pneumoniae? |
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Definition
the virulent (S) version had a polysaccharide coat which prevented detection from the hosts immune system.
the R (harmless) version lacked this coat thus was recognised and eliminated by host defence system |
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Term
what did Avery, McLeod and MacCarty do in 1944? |
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Definition
they established the chemical properties of the transforming principle - it was resistant to proteases, lipases, ribonucleases so not them.
ethanol insoluble - so not carbohydrate
high Mr like DNA and positive reaction to dische test for DNA |
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Term
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Definition
bases in DNA are not 1:1:1:1 ratio. they obey a strict rule
30.9% A ~ 29.4% T
19.8% C ~ 19.9% G
roughly the same percentages of the base pairs |
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Term
when was the hershey-chase experiment and what did it show? |
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Definition
in 1952. it showed that bacteriophage injects DNA (not protein) into bacterial cell. they labelles B'phage protein and DNA seperately and fused with E.coli. when they centrifuged them. DNA tags were in the cells (pellet) and protein tags were in the supernatant |
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Term
in Hershey-Chase experiement (1952) what did they tag protein and DNA with? |
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Definition
protein - 35S sulphur
DNA - 32P phosphorus |
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Term
when a bacteriophage infects a bacterium does its protein coat insert into the host of is it left outside? |
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Definition
left outside only viral DNA is injected into host bacterium |
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Term
Watson and Crick 1953 what did they do? |
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Definition
solve the structure of DNA and build a double helix with help from Rosalind Franklin |
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Term
whats so special about Rosalind Franklin? |
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Definition
she deduced that the sugar phosphate back bone of the double helix would be on the outside and the nitrogenous bases would be on the inside |
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Term
3 building blocks of DNA? |
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Definition
pentose sugar, nitrogenous base (4 types) and a phosphate group |
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Term
on DNA which carbon is the phosphate group attached to? |
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Definition
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Term
Purines consist of how many rings? and which bases are purines? |
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Definition
2 rings
Guanine and Adenine are purine |
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Term
Pyramidines consist of how many rings and which bases are pyramidines? |
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Definition
1 ring
Cytosine and Thymine are pyramidines |
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Term
which direction does DNA follow? |
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Definition
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Term
watson and crick used trial and error in developing their model for the double helix. what happened when they pair 2 pyramidines then 2 purines? |
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Definition
2 pyramidines were too narrow
2 purines were too wide
purine and pyramdine width was consistent with the x-ray data |
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Term
in the base pairing of A=T AND G=C which base pair is stronger and why? |
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Definition
G=C is stronger because it has 3 hydrogen bonds compared to A=T which has 2 hydrogen bonds |
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Term
how do the 2 strands of DNA run? |
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Definition
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Term
what did watson and crick suggest about the copying mechanism of dna? |
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Definition
they suggested one strand acted as a template for a complementary strand |
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Term
is DNA replication conservative or semi-conservative? |
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Definition
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Term
DNA replication is catalysed by which enzyme? |
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Definition
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Term
on which end of the DNA/RNA can DNA Polymerase add nucleotides to? |
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Definition
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Term
how does DNA replication begin? |
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Definition
as a bubble that turns into a replication fork |
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Term
in which direction are daughter strands synthesised? |
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Definition
5 >3 (because they are complimentary to the 3>5 strand) |
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Term
what do okazaki fragments do? |
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Definition
they show direction of growth of daughter strand for DNA Polymerase |
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Term
in dna replication what is the name of the strand that isnt leading? |
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Definition
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Term
on which strand lead or lagging, would you find the formation of okazaki fragments? |
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Definition
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Term
which enzyme synthesises new primers in the lagging strand? |
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Definition
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Term
describe the steps in the lagging strand to form a daughter strand |
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Definition
new RNAprimers synthesised by Primase are made, DNA polymerase III extends the dna template until one primer joins another primer. DNA polymerase I removes the RNA primer and DNA ligase joins the gaps up...ta da the daughter strand is complete! |
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Term
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Definition
unwinds the dna helix - opens it up |
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Term
what do single stranded binding proteins do? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
synthesises the RNA primers needed for initiation of DNA synthesis |
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Term
what does DNA Polymerase III do? |
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Definition
extends the DNA/RNA strand from the 3' end, copying the template |
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Term
what does DNA Polymerase I do? |
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Definition
removes RNA primer and fills in gaps between okazaki fragments |
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Term
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Definition
seals the gaps between okazaki fragments |
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Term
how accurate is DNA replication? |
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Definition
mistakes can occur 1 in 10,000 bases
but errors in completed dna are 1 in a billion |
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Term
why are mistakes so rare in dna? |
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Definition
due to the ability of DNA Polymerase to proof read |
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Term
what does DNA Polymerase do when it spots an incorrect match? |
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Definition
it uses its 3'>5' exonuclease activity to excise the incorrect nucleotide |
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Term
what happens when an error does occur in dna replication? |
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Definition
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