Utilisateur
DNA is replicated into DNA, DNA is transcribed into RNA, and RNA is translated into protein.
DNA can also encode structural RNAs, non-coding RNAs, and regulatory sequences.
mRNA, tRNA, rRNA, and ncRNA.
mRNA carries the sequence that will be translated into protein.
tRNA brings amino acids to the ribosome and matches its anticodon to the mRNA codon.
rRNA is a structural and functional part of the ribosome.
A nucleoside is a sugar plus a base.
A nucleotide is a sugar, a base, and a phosphate.
DNA has deoxyribose, while RNA has ribose with a 2' hydroxyl group.
A, T, G, and C.
A, U, G, and C.
RNA uses uracil instead of thymine.
Cytosine, thymine, and uracil.
Adenine and guanine.
Two.
Three.
Because G-C has three hydrogen bonds instead of two.
The two strands run in opposite directions, one 5' to 3' and the other 3' to 5'.
Always from 5' to 3'.
The two strands are opposite in direction and complementary in base sequence.
DNA gyrase introduces negative supercoils into DNA.
A topoisomerase.
It helps compact DNA and manage DNA twisting during processes like replication.
Each new DNA molecule contains one parental strand and one newly synthesized daughter strand.
It synthesizes a complementary DNA strand.
Always 5' to 3'.
Because it needs a free 3' hydroxyl group to add the next nucleotide.
A template, a primer, and dNTPs.
It can elongate an existing strand but cannot start synthesis from nothing.
Deoxynucleotide triphosphates used as building blocks for DNA synthesis.
From hydrolysis of the phosphate bonds in the incoming dNTPs.
oriC.
It starts at a single origin and proceeds bidirectionally.
The site where DNA is unwound and new strands are being synthesized.
The intermediate replication shape formed during bidirectional replication of circular DNA.
DnaA binds oriC and causes bending and separation of DNA strands to initiate replication.
It separates the DNA strands.
DnaB is the helicase that unwinds DNA at the replication fork.
They stabilize separated DNA strands and keep them from reannealing.
It synthesizes RNA primers.
The strand synthesized continuously toward the replication fork.
The strand synthesized discontinuously away from the replication fork in short fragments.
Short DNA fragments synthesized on the lagging strand.
Because DNA can only be synthesized 5' to 3', but the two template strands run in opposite directions.
Usually one to start continuous synthesis.
A new primer is needed for each Okazaki fragment.
DNA polymerase III.
It removes RNA primers and fills the gaps with DNA.
It seals the remaining nicks and joins DNA fragments together.
The proofreading subunit of DNA polymerase III, often described as DnaQ.
It removes mismatched newly added bases.
Exonuclease activity.
Termination proteins stop further replication and topoisomerases help separate the chromosomes.
Because most bacterial chromosomes are circular.
The synthesis of RNA from a DNA template.
RNA polymerase.
The catalytic part of RNA polymerase that synthesizes RNA but needs sigma factor to initiate at the right promoter.
A specificity factor that helps RNA polymerase recognize the correct promoter.
No, they do not have catalytic activity.
The core enzyme plus a sigma factor.
Only the holoenzyme can properly initiate transcription at a promoter.
A DNA region where RNA polymerase binds to begin transcription.
No, the promoter itself is not transcribed.
The bacterial -10 promoter element recognized during transcription initiation.
Another promoter element upstream of the Pribnow box that helps RNA polymerase bind.
The template strand.
The coding strand.
It is complementary to the template strand.
It has the same sequence as the coding strand except U replaces T.
5' to 3'.
No, RNA polymerase can start RNA synthesis without a primer.
It unwinds the DNA and forms a transcription bubble.
The region of locally unwound DNA where RNA is being synthesized.
An RNA-DNA hybrid.
G pairs with C, C pairs with G, A pairs with U in RNA, and T in DNA pairs with A in RNA.
The process where RNA polymerase stops RNA synthesis and dissociates from DNA.
A DNA sequence that signals the end of transcription.
No, some require rho factor and some do not.
A protein that helps terminate transcription in some cases.
Bacterial mRNA usually has no 5' cap, no long poly-A tail, and little or no processing.
A linear nucleic acid sequence with a fixed start and endpoint that encodes a polypeptide or functional RNA.
The region between transcription start and translation start.
The region after the stop codon that is still transcribed before transcription terminates.
A ribosome-binding site in the mRNA upstream of the start codon.
In the leader region of the mRNA.
Usually about 6 to 7 bases upstream.
AUG.
N-formylmethionine.
UAA, UAG, and UGA.
No, they signal termination of translation.
A three-nucleotide sequence in mRNA that specifies an amino acid or stop signal.
A three-nucleotide sequence on tRNA that is complementary to an mRNA codon.
The 61 codons that specify amino acids.
Because multiple codons can specify the same amino acid.
Some synonymous codons are used more often than others, often because matching tRNAs are more available.
The third nucleotide of a codon is often less strict in pairing, allowing one tRNA to recognize more than one codon.
It determines how nucleotides are grouped into codons, which changes the amino acid sequence.
The start codon sets the reading frame.
Find an AUG with an upstream Shine-Dalgarno-like sequence.
N-formylmethionine.
