DNA gene & chromosomes

Cards (10)

  • Similarities between DNA in eukaryotic cells with DNA in prokaryotic cells
    ● Nucleotide structure is identical - deoxyribose attached to phosphate and a base
    ● Adjacent nucleotides joined by phosphodiester bonds, complementary bases joined by hydrogen bonds
    ● DNA in mitochondria / chloroplasts have similar structure to DNA in prokaryotes
    ○ Short, circular, not associated with proteins
  • Difference between DNA in eukaryotic cells with DNA in prokaryotic cells
    ● Eukaryotic DNA is longer
    ● Eukaryotic DNA is linear, prokaryotic DNA is circular
    ● Eukaryotic DNA is associated with histone proteins, prokaryotic DNA is not
    ● Eukaryotic DNA contain introns, prokaryotic DNA does not
  • What is a chromosome?
    Long, linear DNA + its associated histone proteins
    ● In the nucleus of eukaryotic cells
  • What is a gene?
    A sequence of DNA bases that codes for:
    ● The amino acid sequence of a polypeptide
    ● Or a functional RNA (eg. ribosomal RNA or tRNA)
  • What is a locus?
    Fixed position a gene occupies on a particular DNA molecule.
  • Describe the nature of the genetic code
    Triplet code = A sequence of 3 DNA bases, called a triplet, codes for a specific amino acid
    Universal = The same base triplets code for the same amino acids in all organisms
    Non-overlapping = Each base is part of only one triplet so each triplet is read as a discrete unit
    Degenerate = An amino acid can be coded for by more than one base triplet
  • What are ‘non-coding base sequences’ and where are they found?
    Non-coding base sequence- DNA that does not code for amino acid sequences / polypeptides:
    1 Between genes - eg. non-coding multiple repeats
    2. Within genes- introns
  • What are introns and exons?
    Exon = Base sequence of a gene coding for amino acid sequences
    Intron = Base sequence of a gene that doesn’t code for amino acids, in eukaryotic cells
  • Define ‘genome’
    The complete set of genes in a cell
  • Define ‘proteome’
    The full range of proteins that a cell can produce