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A level Biology
3.4 Genetic information, variation and relationships
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lucy watts
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Cards (105)
What is DNA like in prokaryotes?
are
short
,
circular
and not
associated with
proteins.
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What is DNA like in eukaryotic?
very long,
linear
and associated with proteins, called
histones.
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What does a chromosome consist of?
DNA
molecule
packed
together with proteins
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what sub-cellular organelle also contain DNA?
mitocondria
and
chloroplast
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what is the DNA like in mitochondria and chloroplasts?
hort,
circular
and not associated with
protein.
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What is a gene?
A
base sequence
of
DNA
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What does a gene code for?
the
amino acid sequence
of a
polypeptide
a functional RNA (including
ribosomal
RNA and
tRNAs
).
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what does a gene occupy for?
a fixed position, called a
locus
, on a particular
DNA
molecule.
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what is a
triplet
?
a sequence of
3 DNA bases
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what does a triplet code
for
?
for a
specific amino acid
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what is the genetic code?
universal
, non-overlapping and
degenerate.
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what does universal mean?
The
same
specific base triplets code for the
same amino acids
in all living things
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What does non-overlapping mean?
Each
base
in the sequence is only read
once
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What does
degenerate
mean?
Some
amino acids
are coded for by more than
one base triplet
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in eukaryotic cells what does nuclear DNA not code for?
polypeptides
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What are exons?
coding regions of
DNA
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What are introns?
non-coding regions
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what is the
genome
?
complete set of
genes
in a cell
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What is a
proteome
?
full range of
protein
that a
cell
is able to produce
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How may amino acids are there?
20
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what is the structure of a messenger RNA?
mRNA
is a long, single-stranded molecule consisting of
nucleotides
attached by phosphodiester bonds.
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what is the function of
messenger RNA
?
Carries information
specifying amino acid sequences of proteins from DNA to
ribosomes
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what is the structure of transfer RNA?
tRNA
has an L shaped
3D
structure
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what is the function of transfer RNA?
the transfer RNAtransfers each
amino acid
to the
ribosomeas
it is specified by coded messages in mRNA.
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What does transcription produce?
mRNA
from
DNA
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What is the role of RNA polymerase? (transcription)
joining
mRNA nucleotides
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what results after transcription in eukaryotic?
the production of pre-
mRNA
; this is then spliced to form
mRNA.
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what results after transcription in prokaryotic?
the production of
mRNA
from
DNA.
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what does translation produce?
polypeptides
from the sequence of codons carried by
mRNA.
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What is the role of Ribosomes in Translation?
Ribosomes use the sequence of codons in
mRNA
to assemble amino acids into
polypeptide
chains.
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What is the role of tRNA in translation?
It binds to an
mRNA codon
and carries the corresponding
amino acid.
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what is the role of ATP in
translation
?
ATP breaks into
ADP
provides the energy needed for the bond between the
amino acid
and the tRNA molecule to form
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what is the structure of
ATP
?
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What is splicing?
Removing
introns
from RNA and sealing
exons
together
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what does gene mutations involve?
a change in the
base sequence
of
chromosomes
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how does gene mutations occur?
rise spontaneously during
DNA replication
and include base
deletion
and base substitution
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how does a gene mutation not causes any harm?
Due to the degenerate nature of the genetic code meaning that ot all
base substitutions
cause a change in the sequence of
encoded amino acids
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What are mutagenic agents?
Outside
factors that
increase
basic mutation rate.
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What do mutagenic agents do?
can
increase
the rate of
gene mutation
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what are some examples of
mutagenic
agents?
Ultraviolet
radiation, poor
diet
, occupation, nuclear radiation, smoking, stress, age
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