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molecular I
lecture
97
Biology
Undergraduate 4
09/30/2007

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Term
who coined the term molecular biology? when?
Definition
Warren weaver 1938
Term
when was the double helix structure discovered? who?
Definition
watson and crick 1953
Term
when was dna first isolated? who? what was it called?
Definition
nuclein. F.Miescher 1869
Term
what is the length of the E.coli genome? what form does it take?
Definition
single, circular chromosome. 4000kb
Term
how many genes in E.coli genome?
Definition
~4000
Term
how many genes in the human genome?
Definition
~25,000
Term
what are the 4 stages of bacterial growth?
Definition
lag, log, stationary, death
Term
what causes stationary phase?
Definition
death rate = growth rate
-nutrients being depleted
bacteria waste accumulating
Term
what formula used to determine # of bactteria at certain time?
Definition
# cells = starting # x 2^n
n = number of generations
Term
what is an operon? who discovered?
Definition
genetic control system of a particular gene. jacques monod
Term
how many chromosomes do yeasts have?
Definition
32 (16 haploid)
Term
what is the generation time of S.cerevisiae?
Definition
~90 min.
Term
what was the first eukaryotic org. to have genome completely sequenced? when?
Definition
S. cerevisiae - 1996
Term
what is the diff. between introns and exons?
Definition
exons - code for aa
introns - don't code for aa
Term
ho much of yeast genome is introns?
Definition
~5%
Term
how many genes in yeast genome?
Definition
6000
Term
what does the root of enzyme mean?
Definition
'en - zyme' = 'in yeast', first enzyme studies done with yeasts
Term
what species of nematode is considerd a model genetic organism?
Definition
Caenorhabditis elegans
Term
how is C.elegans capable of producing clones?
Definition
worms are bisexual, can self-fertilize
Term
what is the life cycle of C.elegans? maturity time from egg?
Definition
maturity - 3 days
life cycle - 2-3 weeks
Term
what is unusual about the cellular structure of C.elegans?
Definition
adults have exactly 959 cells
Term
what organism is ideal for studying life span, aging processes, and development?
Definition
C.elegans
Term
what is apoptis? what organism was this first discovered in?
Definition
apoptis - programmed cell death
C. elegans
Term
what is the scientific name for fruit fly?
Definition
Drosophilia melanogaster
Term
how many chromosmes in fruit fly?
Definition
8 (4 haploid)
Term
how many genes in fruit fly?
Definition
16,000
Term
what is the scientific name for zebra fish?
Definition
Daneo rerio
Term
why is D.rerio useful for development studies?
Definition
translucent skin, eggs
Term
how many chromosomes does D.rerio have?
Definition
50 (25 haploid)
Term
how homologous is D.rerio with the human genome?
Definition
75%
Term
what is the scientific name for mouse?
Definition
Mus musculus
Term
what is the lifespan and development time of the mouse?
Definition
lifespan 1-3 yrs
sexually mature i 4 weeks
Term
how many chromosomes does M.musculus have?
Definition
40 (20 haoploid)
Term
how many genes does M.musculus have?
Definition
~25,000
Term
how many introns per gene in fruit fly?
Definition
3
Term
how many introns per gene in mouse?
Definition
7
Term
how homologous to human genome is the mouse?
Definition
99%
Term
what is HeLa?
Definition
human cell line
Term
what is the model genetic organism for plants?
Definition
Arabidopsis thaliana - mouse cress or mustard weed
Term
what is the lifecycle of A.thaliana?
Definition
6-10 weeks
Term
how many chromosomes in A.thaliana?
Definition
10 (5 haploid)
Term
how many genes does A.thaliana have?
Definition
~25,000
Term
what are the subcellular genetic elements?
Definition
virus
viroid
plasmid
transposon
prions
Term
what are the three types of viruses?
Definition
DNA virus
RNA virus
retrovirus
Term
how does a retrovirus work?
Definition
RNA injected, host synthesizes DNA from RNA
Term
what enzyme isolated from retroviruses? how is it used in molecular biology?
Definition
reverse transcriptase enzyme
used to synthesize a gene from RNA
Term
what are the properties of a viroid?
Definition
1.naked (not protein coat)
2.self-replicating
3.circular RNA
4.not associate w/any proteins
Term
why do viroids have a rod shape?
Definition
complementary base pair regions
Term
what is a ribozyme?
Definition
an enzyme made of RNA
Term
what is naked, self-replicating, circular DNA?
Definition
a plasmid
Term
how is a plasmid diff. than a viroid?
Definition
viroid - 1.RNA
2.destroys cells
3.does not encode for any proteins
Term
what is a transposon?
Definition
a transposable segment of DNA that can move as a unit from one location to another
Term
what is a prion?
Definition
a misfolded version of a normal nerve cell protein
Term
what are the main functions of proteins?
Definition
1.enzymes
2.structural
3.transporters
4.receptors
5.make up soem hormones
Term
how does COOH affect pH?
Definition
COOH + H20 = COO- + H+
Term
how does NH2 affect pH?
Definition
NH2 + H20 = NH3+ + OH
Term
how does a peptide bond form?
Definition
COOH (aa1) + NH2 (aa2) = C-N + H20
Term
what is a polypeptide?
Definition
chain of aa with 15+ peptide bonds
Term
how does a peptide bond affect the 3D shape of a protein?
Definition
has 'double bond' character. cannot rotate freely
Term
what is the size of a typical protein?
Definition
135-635 aa
Term
what is the molecular weight of a typical protein?
Definition
15-70,000
Term
what is the moliecular weight of an average nucleic acid?
Definition
10 billion
Term
what is the length of an average polypeptide chain unfolded? folded?
Definition
0.1-0.5 microns
0.004-0.008 microns
Term
what type of proteins are water soluble? water insoluble?
Definition
soluble - globular proteins
insoluble - fibrous
Term
what are some examples of fibrous proteins?
Definition
silk, keratin, collagen, fibrinogen
Term
what is the primary structure of a protein?
Definition
the linear sequence of aa
Term
what is responsible for the secondary structure of proteins?
Definition
hydrogen bonds and repeating conformations (alpha-helices and beta-sheets)
Term
explain the hydrogen bonding in the secondary structure of proteins.
Definition
the O in the carbonyl (C=O) bond of one peptied bond bonds with the H in the amide (N-H) of another peptide bond. occurs between every 4th peptide bond
Term
what direction is an alpha helix rotated? where are the side chains?
Definition
right handed helix
side chains facing out
Term
which aa prevents formation of the alpha helix conformation? why?
Definition
proline
- ring causes steric interference. amide is part of ring, no H available for hydrogen bonding (the one H would be used in peptide bond)
Term
which aa destabilizes the alpha helix conformation? why?
Definition
Glycine. b/c sidechain (H) freely rotates, very unconstrained
Term
what aas are considered good alpha helix formers?
Definition
(MEAL) - methionine, glutamic acid, alanine, leucine
Term
why would an arginine - lysine bond disrupt an alpha helix?
Definition
consecutive like charges cause repulsion greater than strength of H-bond
Term
explain why a chain of glutamic acid would only form an alpha helix at low pH?
Definition
high pH - high OH - OH would pull H off of carboxlic acid (on both ends of glutaic acid), leaving COO-. consecutive negative charges would repel helix formation
Term
what is a zwitterion?
Definition
a molecule that has both + and - formal charges but is neutral overall
Term
what is the name for stable, flexible, non-repetitive regions of polypeptide chains?
Definition
random coils
Term
what aa often form random coils?
Definition
Gly and Pro
Term
how are side chains positioned in a beta-sheet?
Definition
alternating sticking out
Term
how many strands make up a beta sheet?
Definition
2-15
Term
which is more stable, parallel or antiparallel beta sheet?
Definition
antiparallel
Term
what are the three beta sheet conformations?
Definition
1. flat rectangular
2.Twisted sheet
3.beta-barrel
Term
what is the tertiary structure?
Definition
the overall folding of the polypeptide in condensed shape
Term
what causes tertiary structure?
Definition
interactions between side chains
Term
what often causes quaternary structure?
Definition
hydrophobic interactions
Term
what is the diff. between fibrous and globular proteins in regards to secondary structure?
Definition
globular - short, interspersed helices and sheets
fibrous - long, uninterrupted helices and sheets
Term
what structure do most proteins exhibit?
Definition
quaternary
Term
what is an example of a protein that only has tertiary structure?
Definition
myoglobin
Term
what is a oligomer?
Definition
a multi-subunit protein
Term
what is a protomer?
Definition
a subunit in a quaternary structure
Term
what is a homo-tetramer?
Definition
an oligomer with 4 identical protomers
Term
why do most gobular proteins have quaternary structure?
Definition
1.mores stable
2.active sites often formed by 2 diff.polypeptides
3.smaller chains have less chance for error in synthesis
4.allows for changes in shape when proteins bind with other molecules
Term
what is a ligand?
Definition
a molecule that binds with a protein
Term
what is a domain?
Definition
a region of a single polypeptide chain that folds up independantly
Term
what 6 forces may stabilize the 3-D structure of a protein?
Definition
1.hydrophobic bonds
2.hydrophobic clusters
3.ionic bonds
4. disulfide bonds
5.hydrogen bonds
6.van der waals forces
Term
what aas likely to result in ionic bonding?
Definition
acid-base (NH3+ - COO-)
Term
what causes van der waals attraction?
Definition
close proximity of 2 atoms
Term
what aa can form disulfide bonds?
Definition
cysteine
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