Biology Chapter 16

studied byStudied by 12 people
5.0(1)
get a hint
hint

Who performed X-Ray Crystallography of DNA in 1950?

1 / 92

encourage image

There's no tags or description

Looks like no one added any tags here yet for you.

93 Terms

1

Who performed X-Ray Crystallography of DNA in 1950?

Rosalind Franklin.

New cards
2

When did Rosalind Franklin perform X-Ray Crystallography of DNA.

1950.

New cards
3

What kind of pattern did Rosalind Franklin’s work reveal?

One that was regular and repetitive.

New cards
4

What was Edwin Chargaff doing while Rosalind Franklin was performing X-Ray Crystallography?

He was analyzing DNA samples from different species.

New cards
5

What rules hold true for all species?

  1. The amount of adenine equals the amount of thymine.
    A=T

  2. The amount of cytosine equals the amount of guanine.
    C=G

New cards
6

“Purine” is a smaller word, therefore…

It has a bigger structure.

New cards
7

“Pyrimidines” is a bigger word, therefore…

It has a smaller structure.

New cards
8

What kind of structure do Purines have?

Double ring structure.

New cards
9

What kind of structure do Pyrimidines have?

Single ring structure.

New cards
10

What are Purines made of?

Adenine and Guanine.

New cards
11

What are Pyrimidines made of?

Cytosine, Uracil, and Thymine.

New cards
12

What is Nucleotide Pairing?

It refers to the specific and complementary base pairing between the nitrogenous bases of nucleotides in DNA and RNA.

New cards
13

How many hydrogen bonds do Adenine and Thymine have?

They have two hydrogen bonds.

New cards
14

How many hydrogen bonds do Cytosine and Guanine have?

They have three hydrogen bonds.

New cards
15

How might hydrogen bonds aid in DNA replication?

They will allow for the DNA stands to be easily separated during the replication process.

New cards
16

Who created the first 3D model of a double helix DNA strand?

Watson and Crick.

New cards
17

How did Watson and Crick create the first 3D double helix model of DNA?

They combined the findings of Franklin and Chargaff.

New cards
18

What are the two key features of DNA structure?

  1. DNA is a double stranded helix.

  2. DNA strands are antiparallel.

New cards
19

What are the two parts of the double stranded helix of DNA?

The backbone and center.

New cards
20

What is the backbone made of?

Sugar-phosphate.

New cards
21

What is the Center made of?

Nucleotides pairing.

New cards
22

How are DNA strands antiparallel?

One strand runs 5’ to 3’, the other strand runs in the opposite, upside-down direction 3’ to 5’.

New cards
23

What is at the end of a 5’ strand?

Free phosphate group.

New cards
24

What is at the end of a 3’ strand?

Free hydroxyl group.

New cards
25

What is DNA the primary source of?

Heritable information.

New cards
26

How is genetic information stored and passed from one generation to the next?

Through DNA.

New cards
27

When is genetic information not passed down through DNA?

With specific viruses, DNA is not used but RNA is.

New cards
28

How is heritable information passed down in viruses?

Through RNA.

New cards
29

Where is the DNA found in a Eukaryotic Cell?

In the nucleus.

New cards
30

Where is the DNA found in Prokaryotic Cells?

In the nucleoid region.

New cards
31

What shape are the chromosomes in Eukaryotic Cells?

Linear chromosomes.

New cards
32

What shape are the chromosomes in Prokaryotic Cells?

Circular chromosomes.

New cards
33

Where are Plasmids found?

They are found primarily in Prokaryotes but also a few Eukaryotes.

New cards
34

What are Plasmids?

They are small, circular DNA molecules that are separate from the chromosomes.

New cards
35

How do Plasmids replicate?

They replicate independently from the chromosomal DNA.

New cards
36

What do Plasmids contain?

They contain genes that may be useful to the prokaryote when it is in a particular environment, but may not be required for survival.

New cards
37

Where can Plasmids be manipulated?

In laboratories.

New cards
38

How is Recombinant Plasmid DNA created?

Plasmids are removed from bacteria, then a gene of interest is inserted into them.

New cards
39

What will happen when the recombinant plasmid is inserted back into the bacteria?

These gene that was inserted is expressed.

New cards
40

What can bacteria do with genes found on plasmids?

It can exchange them with neighboring bacteria.

New cards
41

What happens when DNA is exchanged between bacteria?

The bacteria will be able to express the genes that they acquired.

New cards
42

What helps with the survival of prokaryotes?

When DNA is exchanged between bacteria.

New cards
43

What are the nucleobases for RNA?

Cytosine, Guanine, Adenine, and Uracil.

New cards
44

What are the nucleobases for DNA?

Cytosine, Guanine, Adenine, and Thymine.

New cards
45

What is the full name for RNA?

Ribonucleic Acid.

New cards
46

What is the full name for DNA?

Deoxyribonucleic Acid.

New cards
47

How many strands does RNA have and what values are the same?

It is single stranded, Adenine = Uracil , Cytosine = Guanine.

New cards
48

How many strands does DNA have and what values are the same?

It is double stranded, Adenine = Thymine , Cytosine = Guanine.

New cards
49

What was Chargaff’s rule?

In any species, the amount of Adenine is equal to the Thymine and the amount of Cytosine is equal to the Guanine in the DNA.

New cards
50

Which Nucleotides are purines?

Adenine and Guanine.

New cards
51

What kind of bond holds together nucleotides?

Hydrogen Bonds.

New cards
52

In what phase of the cell cycle does DNA replicate?

The S phase.

New cards
53

How does DNA replicate?

During DNA replication, the double helix unwinds, its strands separate, and new complementary nucleotides are added, creating two identical DNA molecules.

New cards
54

What are the 3 alternative models for DNA replication?

Conservative, Semi Conservative, and Dispersive.

New cards
55

What is the Conservative Model of DNA replication?

When the parental strands direct synthesis of an entirely new double stranded molecule.

New cards
56

What happens to the Parental Strands in the Conservative Model of DNA replication?

They are fully conserved and they are not used up to make the new ones.

New cards
57

What is the Semi Conservative Model of DNA replication?

This is where the two parental strands each make a copy of itself.

New cards
58

What happens to the Parental Strands in the Semi Conservative Model of DNA replication?

After one round of replication, the two daughter molecules each have one of the parental strands and 1 new strand.

New cards
59

What is the Dispersive Model of DNA replication?

This is where the material in the two parental strands is dispersed randomly between the two daughter molecules.

New cards
60

What happens to the Parental Strands in the Dispersive Model of DNA replication?

After one round of replication, the daughter molecules contain a random mix of parental and new DNA.

New cards
61

Who performed an experiment using bacteria in 1954?

Meselson and Stahl.

New cards
62

What was the first step of the process that Meselson and Stahl used in their experiment?

Bacteria was cultured with a heavy isotope 15N.

New cards
63

What was the second step of the process that Meselson and Stahl used in their experiment?

Bacteria was transferred to a medium with 14N, a light isotope

New cards
64

What was the third step of the process that Meselson and Stahl used in their experiment?

DNA was centrifuged and analyzed after each replication.

New cards
65

Which model was correct in Meselson and Stahl’s experiment?

After analyzing samples of DNA after each generation, they found that it was the Semi Conservative model.

New cards
66

Where does DNA replication begin?

At sites called origins of replication.

New cards
67

How is a Replication Fork formed?

Various proteins attach to the origin of replication and open the DNA.

New cards
68

What unwinds the DNA strands at each replication fork?

Helicase.

New cards
69

How is DNA kept from re-bonding with itself?

Proteins called single strand binding proteins (SSBPs) bind to the DNA to keep it open.

New cards
70

What is Topoisomerase?

It helps prevent strain ahead of the replication fork by relaxing supercoiling.

New cards
71

How does the enzyme “Primase” initiate replication?

By adding short segments of RNA called “primers” to the parental DNA strand.

New cards
72

Where can the enzymes that synthesize DNA attach new DNA nucleotides to?

They can only attach them to an existing strand of nucleotides.

New cards
73

What do primers serve as?

They serve as the foundation for DNA synthesis.

New cards
74

What does DNA polymerase III do in Antiparallel Elongation?

It attaches to each primer on the parental strand and moves in the 3’ to 5’ direction.

New cards
75

What happens as the DNA Polymerase III moves?

It adds nucleotides to the new strand in the 5’ to 3’ direction.

New cards
76

What is the DNAP III that follows helicase known as and how many primers does it require?

It is known as the Leading Strand and it only requires ONE primer.

New cards
77

What is the DNAP III that moves away from helicase known as and how many primers does it require?

It is known as the Lagging Strand and it requires many primers.

New cards
78

How does DNAP III move in the Leading Strand?

3’ to 5’ following helicase.

New cards
79

How does DNAP III move in the Lagging Strand?

3’ to 5’ away from helicase.

New cards
80

How is the Leading Strand synthesized?

In one continuous segment.

New cards
81

How is the Lagging Strand synthesized?

It is synthesized in chunks.

New cards
82

What are Okazaki Fragments?

Segments of the lagging strand.

New cards
83

What happens after DNAP III forms an okazaki fragment?

DNAP I replaces RNA nucleotides with DNA nucleotides.

New cards
84

What does DNA ligase do?

Joins the okazaki fragments forming a continuous DNA strand.

New cards
85

Why is there no way to finish replication on the 5’ end of a lagging strand?

Because DNAP III can only add nucleotides to a 3’ end.

New cards
86

Since DNAP III can only add nucleotides to a 3’ end, what happens over many replications?

The DNA would become shorter and shorter.

New cards
87

How are the genes on DNA protected from becoming shorter and shorter?

Telomeres form a cap at the end of DNA to help postpone erosion.

New cards
88

What is Telomeres?

Repeating units of short nucleotide sequences that do not code for genes.

New cards
89

What does the enzyme telomerase do?

It adds telomeres to DNA.

New cards
90

What proofreads the bases that are added to the new DNA strand?

DNA Polymerase while it is adding nucleotides.

New cards
91

When will Mismatch Repair take place?

When errors still occur.

New cards
92

What do enzymes do in Mismatch Repair?

They remove and replace the incorrectly paired nucleotide.

New cards
93

What can Nuclease do if segments of DNA are damaged?

It can remove segments of nucleotides and DNA polymerase and ligase can replace the segments.

New cards

Explore top notes

note Note
studied byStudied by 39 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 15 people
Updated ... ago
4.5 Stars(2)
note Note
studied byStudied by 51 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 26 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(2)
note Note
studied byStudied by 7 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 19 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 6 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 1480 people
Updated ... ago
4.7 Stars(11)

Explore top flashcards

flashcards Flashcard33 terms
studied byStudied by 6 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard58 terms
studied byStudied by 8 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard127 terms
studied byStudied by 10 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard47 terms
studied byStudied by 7 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard41 terms
studied byStudied by 1 person
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard37 terms
studied byStudied by 25 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard66 terms
studied byStudied by 4 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard83 terms
studied byStudied by 12 people
Updated ... ago
4.0 Stars(1)