Molecular Genetics!

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3 Nucleotide Components

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3 Nucleotide Components

  1. 5-carbon sugar - DNA - Deoxyribose sugar or RNA - Ribose Sugar

  2. Phosphate Group

  3. Nitrogen Base

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Nitrogen Bases

Encodes the genetic information.

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Purines

Double ring

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Complementary Base Pairing

Adenine (A) and Guanine (G) Cytosine (C) and Thymine (T)

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Pyrimidines

Single ring

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Double Helix

Consists of two strands connected in a helical fashion (think spiral staircase).

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Semi-conservative Replication

Base pairing allows each strand to serve as a template for a new strand.

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DNA Helicase

Unzips the double helix by breaking the hydrogen bonds between the nitrogen bases that connect the two strands together.

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DNA Polymerase

Reads the template strand and adds nucleotides to form the complementary DNA strand.

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Genome

Consists of all of the genetic material of an organism.

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Gene

A short segment of DNA found on a chromosome that contains the instructions for building a protein.

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Allele

Variation of a gene.

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Locus

Location of a gene on a chromosome.

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Genotype

Genetic makeup, seq. of DNA.

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Phenotype

The organism’s physical traits.

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Gene Expression

Refers to the production of the protein the gene codes for.

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RNA (Ribonucleic Acid)

A polymer of a nucleic acid that is found in all living cells and plays a role in protein synthesis.

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Messenger RNA (mRNA)

Produced from a DNA template, and carries the information for protein production to the ribosome (where proteins are made).

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Transfer RNA (tRNA)

Functions as a translator between nucleic acid and protein languages by carrying specific amino acids to the ribosome, where they recognize the appropriate codons in the mRNA.

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Ribosomal RNA (rRNA)

Molecules together with proteins makeup ribosomes.

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Transcription

Makes a mRNA copy of the DNA gene.

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Introns

Noncoding regions (do not code for the polypeptide).

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Exons

Code for the polypeptide.

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Alternative Splicing

Genes can code for multiple proteins depending how the mRNA is spliced.

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Translation

The synthesis of a protein using the genetic information encoded in an mRNA molecule.

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Codon

Three consecutive nucleotides on mRNA that code for a specific amino acid.

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Genetic Code

The set of codons and the amino acids they code for.

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Anticodon

Sequence on the tRNA that is complementary to the codon.

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Mutation

A permanent change in the DNA sequence of a gene.

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Point Mutations

Affects one nucleotide.

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Chromosomal Mutations

Affects many nucleotides.

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Substitution

Change a nucleotide

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Insertion

Add a nucleotide

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Deletion

Remove a nucleotide

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Frameshift Mutation

Mutation that shifts the “reading” frame of the genetic message by inserting or deleting a nucleotide caused by insertion or deletion point mutations.

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Chromosomal Mutations

Involves many nucleotides; ex. deletion, duplication, inversion, translocation.

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Methyl groups

Tighten chromatin, DNA is not accessible for transcription. Genes are “off” (no gene expression).

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Acetyl groups

Loosen chromatin, DNA is accessible for transcription. Genes are “on” (genes are expressed).

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Differentiation

The process in which cells become specialized in structure and function.

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