8.2 - DNA & Chromosomes

    Cards (23)

    • where is eukaryotic DNA found?
      in the nucleus
    • what's eukaryotic DNA like?
      long & linear so has to be wound up tightly so it can fit into the nucleus (forms a chromosome)
    • what's eukaryotic DNA associated with?
      proteins called histones that help support DNA and to form chromosomes
    • Where is eukaryotic DNA also found and what is it like ?
      mitochondria and chloroplast but it's more similar to prokaryotic DNA because it'ss circular, shorter & not associated with histones
    • what's prokaryotic DNA like?
      shorter and circular not wound around histones so no chromosomes - it condenses to fit in the cell by supercoiling
    • when are chromosomes visible and what do they look like?
      when all starts to divide
      a sister chromatids joined at the untromere
    • vwwhat's the length of DNA in each human cell?
      2 metres
    • chromosome structure - smallest to largest
      base
      nucleotide
      gene
      DNA
      chromatin
      chromatid
      chromosome
    • how most of DNA is condensed into a chromosome
      double helix is wound around histones to fix it in position
      DNA-his tone complex is coiled then looped and coiled further
    • number of chromosomes in humans
      46
      also called the diploid number
    • number of chromosomes in potato plants
      48
    • number of chromosomes in dogs
      78
    • what are homologous chromosomes?
      pair of chromosomes (one from each parent) that have the same size and carry the same gene but not always the same alleles
    • what's the diploid number?
      total number of homologous pairs
    • what are alleles?
      different forms of the same gene
      code for the same thing but order of bases is different so form different polypeptides
    • how many alleles in genes?
      2 in each gene - one from each parent
      they can be the same or different
    • what are mutations?
      changes in the base sequence which produces a new allele
    • what can mutations lead to?
      different base sequence so codes for a different aminoacid so produces a different polypeptide so a different protein
      polypeptide maybe different, non-functional, dysfunctional or harmful as it may not carry out its job
    • mutations in enzymes
      enzyme may have a different shaped active site so substrate may not fit will so enzyme may not function
    • what can genes code for?
      polypeptides or functional RNA
    • What are introns?
      non- coding regions of DNA
      junk DNA/non-coding repeats
      not present in prokaryotes
    • what are exons?
      coding regions of DNA
    • what's splicing?
      removeing introns
      done in transcription to make mRNA from pre-MRNA
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