Term
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Definition
MUST contain information, passed on, make copies, have instructions |
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Term
Griffith Experiment- Transforming Principle |
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Definition
2 different bacteria strains (S and R)-S killed mouse and R was fought by immune system-mixed heat killed S strain w/ living R-cells caused mice to die --> Living R bacteria had been transformed into pathogenic S bacteria by an unknown, heritable substance from dead S cells |
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Term
Aver, Macleod, McCarty Experiment- separate extractions |
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Definition
Looked at Carbs, DNA (only extract that was able to transform cells-R cells are unable to grow and become S lethal cells), Proteins- Used DNase, RNase, and Protease to degrade the DNA, RNA, and Proteins--> only DNase destroyed the transformation |
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Term
Hershey and Chase- Blender Experiment |
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Definition
Made radioactive Phage (virus that contains genetic info; infects bacteria and uses it as a host cell)- Labeled protein with 35-S and allowed infection of E. Coli- put in blender and centrifuge (separate virus from bacteria)-supernatant contains the phages--> most 35-S was in supernatant, but only small percentage of radioactive Phosphorus present |
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Term
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Definition
DNA: base, sugar, phosphate
Purines (A and G) vs. Pyrimidines
Bases only connect to sugar
Phosphate connects the sugars to each other; 3' Cconnects to phosphate connecting to 5' C |
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Term
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Definition
Isolated nucleic acidds from different organisms-->
Amount of A was almost always the same as the amount of T; same for G and C
A-T has 2 H bonds; G-C has 3 H bonds
10 bp per turn of DNA
Major Groove and Minor Groove (certain proteins bind)
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Term
Watson and Crick- DNA model |
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Definition
Used chargaff's rule to find that DNA forms a double helix.
Rosalind Franklin- worked in same lab as Maurice Wilkins and used x-ray diffraction to study wet fibers of DNA (diffraction pattern interpreted). |
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Term
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Definition
Know the Distinguishing Features and Draw them! |
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Term
Genome Size- Does it matter? |
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Definition
Genome-sum of all information in the DNA
Simpler organisms have smaller genomes, and more complex organisms have larger genomes (the number of genes might not matter necessarily, but what our bodies do with those genes).
Bacteria have 1 few million bp; Human have 3 billion bp |
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Term
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Definition
RNA/DNA, SS or DS, Linear or Circular, 1000 to 100,000 nucleotides.
Viruses with a simple structure can self assemble; genetic material and capsid proteins spontaneously bind to each other (tobacco mosaic virus) |
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Term
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Definition
Circular DNA; 1000s of genes; structural, intergenic, other functional sequences (genes) |
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Term
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Definition
Nucleoid (fixed into cytoplasm)- not floating
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Term
DNA supercoiling (bacteria I think?) |
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Definition
Loop Domains- compacts chromosome 10-fold
DNA wants to exist at 10 bp per turn- if molecule is wound too tightly or loosely, it will react in a way to restore its balance.
Underwinding and overwinding can induce supercoiling.
Fewer turns is negative supercoiling (underwinding) and more turns is positive supercoiling (overwinding).
Negative Supercoiling induces strand separation for replication at ORI. |
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Term
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Definition
DNA Gyrase + 2 ATP induces 2 negative supercoils (introducing stress requires energy) |
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Term
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Definition
Sequence Complexity- number of times a particular base sequence appears in the genome.
Long, linear DNA; Landmark sequences (ORI), Structural genes, Repetitive regions (telomeres).
Repetitive- unique or non-repetitive (structural genes), moderately repetitive (rRNA genes), highly repetitive (ALU, transposons)
Highly repetitive takes less time than moderately repetitive DNA and unique DNA to reassociate after denaturing.
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Term
How do we fit all that DNA into a nucleus? (eukaryotic) |
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Definition
DNA-Protein complex (chromatin)- DNA is wrapped around histones (nucleosome)-optomer is 8 histone proteins bounded by DNA ("beads on a string")- H1 caps DNA on nucleosome
H1 binds nucleosome where the DNA enters and exits the core; H1 may participate in forming higher order structures |
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Term
Chromatin Has A Dynamic Structure |
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Definition
modification of histone tails loosens or tightens histone association with DNA (amino acids available for chemical modification)-30nm fiber forms in zigzag pattern of nucleosomes-30nm fiber attaches to scaffold, generating loops
Euchromatin- transcriptionally active, loosely packaged (during interphase-DNA replication)
Heterochromatin-transcriptionally inactive, tightly packed (during metaphase) |
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Term
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Definition
Constitutive Heterochromatin-permanently inactive for transcription, always heterochromatin, contain highly repetitive sequences (structural)
Facultative Heterochromatin- regions that can interconvert between euchromatin and heterochromatin.
Metaphase is the most condensed time of chromosomes (no risk of chromosomes getting mixed up during cell division). |
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Term
Messelson and Stahl- Semiconservative Model |
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Definition
Used radioactive Nitrogen (N14 "light" and N15 "heavy)- separated them by size using centrifugation-ended up with mostly light and some half-heavy--> supported semiconservative model |
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Term
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Definition
Circular DNA with one ORI containing an AT-rich region (weaker/less H bonding-easier to separate), DnaA boxes(DnaA protein binds), and GATC |
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Term
DNA Replication (bacteria) |
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Definition
1) Binding of DnaA to AT-rich regions
2) Binding of Helicase (unwinding)
3) Single Stranded Binding Proteins prevent secondary structure (folding on itself)
4) DNA Gyrase (topoisomerase) relieves supercoiling (introduces negative coils to relax overwound region). Breaking and re-linking the DNA backbone in order to eliminate extra turns. (requires energy).
5) Primase makes short RNA primer.
6) DNA Polymerase 3 in 5' to 3' direction( DnaP adds to existing strand)
7) DnaP is a complex of 10 proteins (holoenzyme) makes a "clamp" subunit (efficient and stable)
8) Addition of nucleotides 5' to 3'
Incoming nucleotide (a deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate) comes in and the two phosphate groups break off allowing the phosphate to bind to the 3'C of the sugar at the 3' end (ester bond).
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Term
How does DnaP synthesize DNA on template strand? |
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Definition
Leading strand (continuous replication) and Lagging strand (discontinuous replication-Okazaki fragments). DnaP 1 removes and replaces primers with DNA. DNA ligase stitches DNA fragments together. Forks are moving bidirectionally, but will eventually come together because bacterial chromosomes are circular. |
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Term
Terminating DNA synthesis (bacteria) |
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Definition
TUS proteins bind TER regions which stop helicase
Decatenation of Daughter DNAs (topoisomerase can cut a DNA backbone and unlink two circles) separates the parent and daughter circles of DNA. |
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Term
How do we make sure we don't make any mistakes? |
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Definition
Base Pairs prefer to bind correctly (A-T and G-C is most stable); mismatch causes DnaP to pause, leaving mismatched nucleotide near the 3' end (exonuclease- chew back in the 3' to 5' direction to fix mistake).
Exonuclease: 3' end enters the exonuclease site-strand is digested in the 3' to 5' direction until incorrect nucleotide is removed |
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Term
When does DNA replication occur? Coordinating DNA replication with cell division in Bacteria |
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Definition
DnaA modification (DnaA-ADP has lower affinity for DNA and drops off the oriC and dissociates from DNA-nonactive form; DnaA-ATP is the active form); DnaA "dilution" (after DNA replication, an insufficient amount of DnaA protein is available, and some may be degraded or stuck to the membrane); Methylation of adenine on oriC |
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Term
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Definition
More DNA to copy, tightly packed, highly regulated cell cycle, linear chromosomes.
Multiple ORI (bacteria have only one) for replication; not believe that there is a specific initiation sequence of DNA (most likely has to do with packing) |
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Term
Eukaryotic DNA Polymerases |
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Definition
Alpha- works with primase to make primer
Epsilon-leading strand synthesis
Delta-lagging strand synthesis
Gamma-mitochondrial
Other- DNA damage/repair |
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Term
Eukaryotic- getting rid of primers |
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Definition
Flap Endonucleases- DnaP (delta) goes a little farther than the primer and flap endonucleases removes the flap. Continues till RNA primer is completely removed. (DNA ligase seals Okazaki fragments together) |
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Term
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Definition
Less than 1 mutation per genome duplication (extremely efficient) |
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Term
Challenges of Replicating DNA (eukaryotic) |
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Definition
Telomeres- repetive sequence at the end of linear chromosome
Telomerase- protein + RNA
TERT- telomerase reverse transcriptase
TERC-telomerase RNA component
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Term
How is Eukaryotic Replication Regulated? |
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Definition
When is DNA replicated? ORC binding, MCM helicases (licensing- says it's "okay" for replication but doesn't mean it is starting), 22 more proteins before replication begins (S phase begins) |
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Term
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Definition
When a terminal RNA primer is removed, the sequence cannot be replaced by DNA polymerase (DnaP cannot start DNA synthesis)- telomerase synthesizes a 6-nucleotide repeat (replaces telomere sequence)
Active Telomerase
Cancer- most human cancer cells reactivate telomerase (inactive in most human somatic cells); Aging-association with the depletion of chromosome ends and aging
Reasearch: If we prevent telomerase gene expression in cancer cells, will it slow cancer cell growth? --> this RNAi specifically binds to telomerase mRNA and prevents translation (slows cancer growth) |
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Term
Starting from "Scratch" (DNA in a tube) |
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Definition
Nucleotides (dNTPs), purified Polymerase, Primers, Template DNA (heat up DNA to separate strands since we don't have helicase), buffer/salt (pH)
In Vitro E. coli Experiment: Template DBA, E. coli extract, labeled dNTPs (to be sure it was actually made in the tube) |
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Term
Types of Transcribed Sequences |
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Definition
Structural Genes- 90%; will be translated into protein
Non-Structural Genes- Will not be translated; RNA will serve function |
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Term
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Definition
DNA: regulatory proteins bind (influence rate of transcription), promoter (recognition site for transcription factors- causes RnaP binding-initiates transcription), terminator (signals end of transcription)
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Term
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Definition
Deoxyribose is missing O at the 2' C
Nucleoside= Sugar and Base
Nucleotide= Sugar, Base, and Phosphate Group |
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Term
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Definition
Bulge Loop, Internal Loop, Multibranched Junction, Stem Loop (secondary structure folds on itself) |
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Term
Conventional Numbering System of Promoters |
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Definition
Upstream<--Regulatory Sequence on mRNA (coding strand) --- -35 sequence starts promoter region --- -10 has TATA box --- +1 starts transcriptional site --> Downstream
Correlation to consensus determines "strength" of promoter
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Term
End of Initiation (RnaP sigma) |
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Definition
sigma factor recognizes promoter and RnaP holoenzyme forms closed complex-an open complex is formed and a short RNA is made- sigma factor is released and the core enzyme is able to proceed down DNA
(RnaP, sigma factor, core enzyme COMPLEX) |
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Term
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Definition
DNA strand known as the Template Strand (non-coding strand) is used to make a complementary copy of RNA as an RNA-DNA hybrid
RnaP moves along template strand in 3' to 5' direction, and RNA is synthesized in 5' to 3' direction using nucleoside triphosphates as precursors. |
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Term
Termination (Rho- RNA helicase) |
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Definition
Rho (p) dependent termination: Rho protein travels along RNA, hairpain forms (Rho recognition site), Rho causes dissociation of RnaP and transcript from DNA (terminator sequence of G-C's)
Rho (p) independent termination: NusA protein holds RnaP in place, stem loop forms (A-U-rich region), transcript and protein disassociaties.
Stem loop forms and allows polymerase to pause. |
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Term
Transcription in Eukaryotes |
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Definition
More complex than prokaryotes (bacteria)--> complex cells, more genes that encode proteins, express genes only in correct cells at proper times |
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Term
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Definition
RnaP 1- rRNA genes (nonstructural genes; components of ribosome)
RnaP 2- mRNA genes (all structural genes)
RnaP 3- tRNA genes (translation-helps bring right amino acid in the right order to build protein) |
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Term
Sequences of Eukaryotic Structural Genes (RnaP 2) |
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Definition
Promoter sequences are more variable and often more complex than bacteria.
Structural genes contain in promoters: regulatory elements, TATA box (specifies where RnaP should start), Transcriptional Start Site
Enhancers (increase trancription rate) and Silencers (decrease transcription rate)- can be close to gene or really far away upstream.
Cis-acting elements: DNA sequences that exert their effect only over a particular gene (TATA box, enhancers/silencers)
Trans-acting elements: Regulatory proteins that bind to such DNA sequences (protein could be made on entirely different DNA sequence, but binds to a particular gene- act on the upstream elements). |
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Term
RnaP 2 and its Transcription Factors |
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Definition
3 proteins required for basal (normal) transcription to occur at promoter: RnaP 2, Five different GTFs (general transcription factors, and a protein complex called mediator
GTFs bound by activators (increase transcription) and repressors (decrease transcription). |
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Term
Initiation Complex- GTFs help RnaP get on promoter |
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Definition
TF2D binds to the TATA box- inculde TATA-binding proteins (TBP) and several TBP-associated factors (closed complex).
TF2H: contains helicase (open complex-allows unwinding to occur).
After open complex is formed, other GTFs are released. |
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Term
Mediator- b/w regulatory TF and RnaP |
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Definition
phosphorylates CTD domain of RnaP and it may regulate the ability of TF2H to phosphorylate the CTD- RNA can now proceed to elongation
(promotes more activation of polymerase or less) |
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Term
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Definition
RnaP transcribes a gene past the polyA signal sequence- RNA is cleaved just past the polyA signal sequence
Allosteric model (change shape due to binding): RnaP2 is destabilized due to the release of elongation factors or the binding of termination factors.
Torpedo Model: An exonuclease binds to the 5' end of the RNA that is still being transcribed and degreades it in a 5' to 3' direction (exonuclease catches up to RnaP 2 and causes termination).
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Term
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Definition
mRNA have a string of Adenine nucleotides at their 3' ends; not encoded in the gene sequence- added enzymatically after the gene is completely transcribed
Polyadenylation signal sequence (consensus sequence in higher eukaryotes)- endonuclease cleave occurs about 20 nucleotides downstream from the AAUAAA sequence and PolyA-polymerase adds adenine nucleotides to the 3' end |
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Term
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Definition
adding 7-methylguanosine to 5' end of mRNA-recognized by cap-binding proteins (proteins will recognize the cap-binding proteins and help transfer it from the nucleus to the cytoplasm where it will be translated- protects RNA)
RNA 5'-triphosphates removes a phosphate and Guanylyltransferase hydrolyzes GTP and the GMP is attached to the 5' end and PPi is released (added right away during elongation)- methyltransferase attaches a methyl group |
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Term
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Definition
Transcription produces entire gene product: introns are removed later and exons are spliced or connected together.
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Term
Experiment 12A: Identification of introns via microscopy |
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Definition
mix together denatured DNA and mature mRNA- the mature mRNA binds to template DNA strand, which causes the intron DNA (which has been spliced out of the mRNA) to loop out and mRNA cannot hybridize-->beta-globin gene contains introns
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Term
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Definition
Group 1: Free guanosine bound to site IN intron breaks the bond between exon 1 and intron and becomes attached to 5' end of intron-->results in exon 1 and 2 covalently joined and free
Group 2: 2' hydroxyl from adenin WITHIN intron breaks bond between exon 1 and intron--> results in Exon 1 and 2 linkage and intron as lariat ( |
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Term
Splicesome (eukaryotic transcription-make mature mRNA) |
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Definition
snRNPs (small nuclear RNA and a set of proteins) bind to an intron sequence and precisely recognize intron/exon boundaries-Hold the pre-mRNA in the correct configuration-Catalyze the chemical reactions that remove introns and covalently link exons (phosphodiester linkage)
snRNPs bind to each consensus region and loop out the introns so thta the exons come together (introns loop out, are cut, and exons are connected) |
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Term
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Definition
Alternative splicing- pre-mRNA with multiple introns can be spliced in different ways (generates mature mRNAs with different combinations of exons-> variety of genes) |
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Term
Why all the fuss of mRNA modification? |
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Definition
export of mRNA from nucleus, protects mRNA from degradation, helps ribosomes attach for translation |
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Term
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Definition
Transfer RNA- cleaved at both the 5' and 3' ends to produced mature, function tRNAs (exonucleases-RNaseD- cleaves a covalent bond b/w 2 nucleotides at one end of a strand and endonucleases-RNaseP- cleaves bond within a strand)
RNase P is a ribozyme (RNA + protein)
processing of rRNA occurs in nucleolus and produces multiple mature rRNA transcripts (key in ribosome structure) |
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Term
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Definition
UT ID, Unique Section #, #2 Pencil, Pen |
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