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UCR BIOL/MCBL 121 MT 2
Lect 9-16
85
Biology
Undergraduate 4
02/13/2009

Additional Biology Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
Plasmids Curing
Definition
loss of plasmid from host cell without selective pressure
Term
DNA Histone-like proteins
Definition

like anchoring proteins keep these loops relatively independent

 

50 loops

Term

Topoisomerases

T1

T2

Definition

Topoisomerasesregulate the supercoilingof DNA

 

•Type I nick the DNA and relieve supercoils

 

•Type II cleave both strands and introduce supercoils–requires ATP

Term
Semiconservative DNA
Definition
Each of the new double helices contains one old and one new strand
Term
replicon
Definition

origin of replication(oriC) and all the DNA that is replicated as a unit from that origin

 

Most prokaryotic chromosomes are single replicons

 

–A plasmid is a replicon

Term
DNA Replication read/write
Definition

reads 3' -> 5'

oh -> phos

 

Writes 5' -> 3'

Term
Primer and DNA
Definition

Helicase recruits primase(RNA polymerase) to begin replication

 

 

Primasessynthesize a small RNA molecule (10-12 nucleotides) that acts as a primer for the start of DNA replication

Term
Polymerase and DNA
Definition

DNA polymerase III synthesizes new DNA strand .must have a primer.

 

Energy for polymerization comes from phosphate groups on added base..

a new base is added to 3'OH. New nucleic acids grow to extend 3'end.

 

DNA polymerase III has proof-reading activity. Exonucleaseactivity to cut off mispairedbases. Effectively corrects errors

Term
Replisome
Definition

Helicase – unwinds the two strands of DNA


•SSBs(single-stranded DNA binding protein) – keep the single strands apart during unwinding and copying


•Primase – RNA primer


•DNA polymerase III(two per replisome) – synthesizes the complementary strand of DNA according to the base-pairing rules, from 5’to 3’

 

•RNaseHremoves the RNA primers
–One primer for each leading strand
–Many primers on the lagging strands –one per Okazaki fragment


•DNA polymerase I fills the gaps in the DNA strand


•DNA ligase seals and completes the lagging strand

Term
Okazaki fragments
Definition

Lagging strand growth

 

strand lags after the fork

1kb piece

Term
Plasmid Replcation
Definition

Rolling Circle

 

Unidirectional replication

 

-starts at nick

 

-Makes new "+" strand removing the old + strand

 

- New + and old - make new plasmid

 

-Old + and new - make new plasmid

Term

Areas of Microbial Genomics

-functional

comparative

metagenomics

Definition

Functional Genomics: Study how genes in a genome operate


•Comparative Genomics: Compare different genomes to understand their function and evolution


•Metagenomics(Environmental genomics): the study of genetic material recovered directly from environmental samples

Term
Functional Genomics
Definition
•Genome-wide screen of genes contributing to a phenotype
•Predict genes and investigate gene functions in sequenced genomes
Term
Metagenomics
Definition

•Shot-gun cloning of DNA directly from environmental samples


•Including genetic material from uncultivableorganisms


•Discovery of significant, abundant, and novel genes

Term
Types of RNA
Definition

•mRNA –messenger RNA

–carry genetic information from DNA toprotein

 

•rRNA–ribosomal RNA

–rRNA is the major structural component of ribosomes

 

•tRNA–transfer RNA

–rRNAand tRNAare non-coding RNA

 

•Other non-coding RNAs

–sRNA–small RNA: Regulate gene expression through transcription and translation

 Can base pair with target mRNA and block or activate translation

 

 

 –Catalytic RNA –enzymatic activity

Term
RNA Polymerase
Definition

Core Enzyme: αωßß’–RNA synthesis

 

•Holoenzyme: core enzyme plus Sigma factor

 

•Sigma factor (σ):–Recognizes promoters by binding to -10(PribnowBox=TATAAT) and -35regions of genes

 

–Guide the core enzyme to initiate transcription

 

once DNA is open sigma factor is released

Term
stem-loop
Definition

Stem loop forms at the stop codon, physically interferes with movement of rna polymerase

 

 The RNA ploymerase binds with the loop but also continues translation of the U. The weak U-A bonds break because the loop bind is stronger, stopping transcription

Term
Prokaryote Tranlation
Definition

 

5->3

 

Ribosomesbind mRNA while mRNA is still being synthesized

 

 Multiple ribosomesbind to each mRNA, proteins are made rapidly

 

Longest peptides are on ribosomesfurthest from the start codonAUG

Term
Ribosome
Definition

Very large rRNA-protein complexes

 

–2 subunits (30s and 50s), 52 proteins, 3 rRNAs
•30s subunit –16s rRNA
•50s subunit –5s and 23s rRNA


•rRNAforms the catalytic center of the ribosome
–Can bind 1 mRNA + 3 tRNAs

Term
Nascent Proteins
Definition
Proteins stemming off ribsomes
Term
tRNA
Definition

tRNAs bind individual amino acids

–tRNAs have clover leaf structure

 

tRNAshave 3-base anticodon

•Base pair to codons in mRNA

–Aminoacyl-

tRNA transferases charge tRNA

Term
degenerate code
Definition
61 codons code for 20 amino acids
Term
Reading Frame
Definition
Each DNA fragment has six possible reading frames
Term
Translation Process
Definition

Initiation
–Ribosome-binding site (RBS codon) on mRNA allows binding to 30s subunit
–Formylmethionine tRNA binds AUG (start) codon the Formyl group will be removed later
–50s subunit (shell) docks to 30s subunit –fMet-tRNA occupies the “P”site

 

•Elongation
–Next charged tRNAbinds to “A”site
–Peptide bond forms

 

•Translocation
–Ribosome moves from one codonto the next and the empty tRNAis released from the “E”site
–Next charged tRNAbinds to empty “A”site


•Process continues until stop codon

 

 

trna binds to codon -> ribosome binds at trna to p site and is added to chain -> trna binds to codon at a site-> ribosome move so p->e and a->p -> E codon ejected and new trna binds a site.  read p site to chain

Term
genetic islands, horizontal gene transfer, vertical gene transfer, Mutations
Definition

genetic islands- Large insertions of sequence

 

 horizontal gene transfer - Transferred from other species

 

vertical gene transfer - from mother cell to daughter cells through cell division

 

 Mutations - slow, but accumulated through time

Term
Horizontal Gene Transfer
Definition

- Natural transformation: free (naked) DNA taken up from the environment and then integrated into genome, Plasmid transformation

 

–Conjugation: cell-cell contact (sex pilus)


–Transduction: DNA transfer is mediated by bacteriophage

Term
Gene Transfer: Transformation competence
Definition

Competent cells - Uptake of DNA directly from the environment

 

Gram Positive -  Bacteria secrete competent factor & Accumulation of competent factors induces the assembly of translocasome located in the cell membrane –quorum sensing

 

 Gram Negative - Stress induced competence via CaCl2 and low temperature(4°C) or driven in through heat shcok @42C best done early in log phase

Term
Gene Transfer: Conjugation
Definition

Type IV secretion system = sex pilus

 

 Pilusproteins encoded on fertility plasmid or F factor and is single stranded DNA

 

F+ = male or donor

 

F- = Female or recipiant

 

Female turns into male after mating

 

Uses rolling circle repilcation to old + into F- the F- minus makes new -  and become F+

 

Hfr- when DNA is integrated into F-'s chromosome instead of become F+

 

-Binds IS3, B gene first then C, then A so i the host chromosome goes A, IS3 F plasmid, IS3, B,C

-occurs during interupted mating

Term

Gene Transfer: Transduction

 

Lytic Life Cycle

Definition

Viruses (phage) inject viral DNA into host cell

 

Bacteria then replicated virus until the burst from the cell with 

-normal phages - DNA that tricks bact. into making more

-Transducing phages - contains combination of bact and virus dna made via lysogeny

 

Trans ducing phage are mistakenly picked up due to excision error by Bact. This causes recombination to form new bact. DNA in transduced cell with cells DNA, virus DNA, and old bact DNA(Transduction)

Term
Types of Genetic Transfer
Definition

Transformation - Fragments of DNA or sent out of Bact cell and picked up by another cell and is "recombination" into new dna in host cell

 

Transduction - Virus with some host bact dna and some virus dna inject the combination into new bact cell and "recombination" into new dna in host cell

 

Conjugation - old + DNA from F+ injected into F- and old+ and new - form new DNA

Term
Fate of the injected DNA
Definition

restriction exonucleases - degrade injected most DNA

 

Restriction endonucleases -  cut foreign DNA to pieces at palindromic sequence, host prevent this happening to own dna by adding methyl group at sequences

,

 

- Coexsisting as Extrachormosomal DNA

 

Recombination - Merge into chromosome

 

 

Term

Mutation

 

Transition

 

Transversion

Definition

Transition: purine -> purine via base pair that encodes for purine

 

Transversion: purine -> pyridimine or vice versa

Term
Thymine dimers
Definition

UV and ionizing radiation cause the formation of toxic oxygen radicals, Radicals cause two adjacent pyrimidinebases to dimerize-Thymine dimers, prevents DNA transcription

 

Photoreactivation-split thymine dimersapart in the presence of light

 

Nucleotide excision repair - Operates in dark

–UvrABC protein complex removes the dimeralong with flanking nucleotides

–DNA polymerase I fills the gap and DNA ligaseseals the strand

Term

Chemical Mutagens

-base analogs

-DNA Modifing Agents

-Intercalating Agents

Definition

-base analogs: similar but not exact to base pair but leads to point mutation

  -5-Bromouracil

 

-DNA Modifing Agents: Changes structure of DNA so instead of A-T in G-T

 

-Intercalating Agent: Insert a single nucleotide
Term
Replica Plating for Mutant Isolation
Definition
•Colonies transferred from velveteen (pink) onto two different media
•Selective media (blue): mutants do not grow
•Complete media (yellow): all strains can grow
Term
Ames Test
Definition

Uses bacterial mutant that can not synthesize histidine

–has a mutation in hisG gene

 -can't grow without Histidine

-Reverse Mutation - hisG change to normal histimine gene so bacteria can make own histidine and grow

Term

DNA Repair

Definition

DNA polymerase III proofreads and corrects errors during replication

 

-Methyl mismath indicated error

 

 - DNA polymerase III can't replicate DNA due to thymine dimmer so it leaves a gap in the newer strand

 

-The undamaged strand is copied and placed into gap leaving space at error, the error (thymine dimmer) is removed

 

 Base excision repair - DNA glycosylaseclips the damaged basesfrom the phosphodiesterbackbone

 

DNA Polymerase I fills gap and DNA ligasw seals strand

Term
SOS Response
Definition

LexA represses SOS genes

 

RecA is activated by DNA Damage which deactivates LexA

 

DNA mutases repair DNA rapidly but produce errors

Term
Transposons
Definition

Segments of DNA that can hop from one place in DNA to another –transposition

 

transposases: enzymes promote transposition

 

- in all living organisms

Term
Insertion sequence
Definition

simplest transposable element; encodes transposase flanked by inverted repeats

 

Composite transposon - carry functional genes between two IS elements: e.g. antibiotic resistance genes

Term
Transposase
Definition
Transposasecuts DNA at the inverted repeat sequences and the target sequence of the target DNA, then ligate the transposable element with the target DNA
Term
Nonreplicative Transposition
Definition

Transposable element (Tn) jumps from one site to another

 

EX: A-Tn-B + CD => AB + C-Tn-D

Term
Replicative Transposition
Definition

Transposable element is copied and the copy is inserted into target

 

A-Tn-B + CD => A-Tn-B + C-Tn-D

Term
Regulation of Gene Expression
Definition

Posttranscriptional control –No enzymatic activity

 

Translational control –No protein synthesis

 

Transcriptional control –No mRNA synthesis

Term
Constitutive genes
Definition

expressed continuously

 

housekeeping genes

Term
Inducible genes
Definition

Highly expressed only when needed

 

•Basal level of transcription: occurs in the absence of any specific activation

 

•Protein level rises (~3 vs. 3,000 molecules) in the presence of inducer–

Term
Repressible gene
Definition

Repressible gene: transcription level decreases in the presence of corepressor

 

corepressor - a protein that decreases gene expression by binding to a transcription factor

Term
Two-component Regulatory System
Definition

Sensor kinase - membrane spanning protein

•Binds to signal

-phosorylates Histidine

which then phosphorylates aspartic acid on Response regulator

 

- RR Binds DNA to regulate gene transcription

Term
Regulation of Transcription: Initiation
Definition
•Activator (A):binds activator proteinto promote transcription
•Promoter(P): binds sigma factor to turn on transcription
•Operator(O): binds repressorproteinto inhibit transcription
•Regulator: An open reading frame encodes a proteinwhich binds to operator or activator to control gene expression
–Sometimes requires binding of ligands to bind activator or operator –inducer or corepressor
Term
derepression
Definition
Repressor Protein binds with DNA, Ligand inducer binds with the Repressor inactivating it allowing activity of operator gene
Term
repression
Definition
Repressor Protein binds to operator gene, if ligand corepressor binds the repressor protein tightly to operator gene and slows transcription
Term
induction
Definition
Activator Protein is activated by lingand inducer which then binds to the operator gene and transcription occurs to make a morphological change in organism via structural protein or enzyme
Term
Regulatory Decision conditions which enzyme gets made
Definition

Biosynthetic Enzymes - If end product not present enzymes get made

 

Catabolic Enzymes - if substrate is present and prefered energy source is not enzymes are made

Term
Catabolite repression:
Definition
expression of genes to metabolize other sugars are repressed in the presence of glucose
Term
Diauxic Growth
Definition

biphasic growth curve

 

    _/

/

 

 

grows fast until glucose is exhausted, lag during gene expression switch, slow growth using lactose instead of glucose

Term
inducible system-
Definition

Transcription of lac operon occurs only when glucose levels are low AND lactose is present

 

Repressor: LacI

 

Activator: cAMP Receptor Protein (CRP)-cAMP

Term
lactose permease
Definition

lactose permease(LacY) - Lactose needs transporter to pass through cell membrane, driven by PMF

 

 

Term
Beta-galactosidase(LacZ)
Definition
converts lactose to glucose
Term
Lactose _________ lacOperon
Definition
De-represses
Term
cAMP _____________ lac operon
Definition

Induces

 

 CRP-cAMPis the activator protein–Binds to activator, promotes transcription of lac and other operons

 

CRP acts as activator only when bound to cAMP–inducer and if LacI is not present

 

LacI turns off operon

Term
Glucose & cAMPProduction
Definition

Phosphotransferase system - Glucose is transported though the membrane

 

Glucose is supposed to become Glucose-6-P but if it doesn't it inhibits Adenylate Cyclase  which is the catayse for cAMP

Term
lac Regulation
Definition

High expression - low glucose, available lactose

 

Low Expression - high gluctose, lactose avail.

 

No Exp: High (no cAMP) or Low glucose, Lactose unavailable (no lacI)

 

 lacL-CAP-P-O-lacZ-lacY-lacA

 

lacY brings lactose into cell and derepresses lac operon, CRP binds to Camp both bind to CAP, If no lacI, RNA polymerase binds and translates, lactose converted to glucose by lacZ, 

Term
E. Coli araOperon
Definition

–Responsible for arabinose catabolism

–Activated by cAMP-CRP

 

-Repressed by AraC

–With arabinose: activator
– Without arabinose: repressor

 

w/o= folded at araC binding araO2 and araL1 via araC unit (two tables onto top of on another)

with- AraC is bound with Arabinose causing conformation change to straight genome, AraC comound now binds AraL1/2

 

araO2-araC-araO1-cAMP-CRP binding site-araL1-araL2-araB

 

 

Term
Transcription Attenuation
Definition

- only in prokaryotes

 

- Mechanism to terminate transcription

 

 –Attenuation is important when end product is low, not a repressor

 

- Trp in E.coli when attenuated produced 15% of  capability, cut off early

Term
trp operon regulation in Ecoli
Definition

Concentration of tryptophan is:

 

high: TrpR a repressor is activated preventing tryp from being made 3-4 loop

 

Low: TrpR not Active but TrpL is, attenuation, only 15% is made 2-3 loop

 

Starvation: TrpR and TrpL deactivated, Tryp is made at max rate

 

TrpL is nonfunctional leader peptide upstream of the structural genes

Term
trp Operon Attenuation
Definition

 

–The mRNA of TrpL has 2 adjacent tryptophan codons

Ribosome binds to mRNA after transcription starts

•Translates leader peptide

•Ribosome stalls if level of tryptophan is VERY low because of the two adjacent trpcodons–Stalled ribosome prevents mRNA from forming a transcription terminator

Term
Riboswitch
Definition

Small effector molecules may bind to leader mRNA and change its folding pattern to regulate translation

 

In the presence of the ligand, ribosome binding site forms a stem-loop with the leader mRNA and ribosome binding is blocked

Term
E. coli fur Regulon
Definition

Under low iron conditions, iron acquisition gene (ent) and rhyBare expressed.

 

 rhyB produces a sRNA, which suppresses the translation of sucCDAB, which is involved in iron storage

 

 Under high iron conditions, Fur acts as a repressor protein for ent and rhyB, sucCDAB is transcribed and translated to promote iron storage

Term
Operons
Definition
multiple genes with their own ribosome binding site but transcribed from one promoter.
Term
Regulons
Definition
multiple genes regulated by the same regulatory protein (sigma factor, repressor or activator protein). A regulonmay contain operonsor individual genes with similar promoters.
Term
Global Regulation-
Definition
one regulator may activate other transcriptional regulators –regulation cascade
Term
Quorum Sensing
Definition

Individual cells assess population density

 

Cells work together at high cell density

 

Diffusible signaling molecule: acetyl homoserinelactone(AHL) aka AUTOINDUCER

 -species specfic

-accumulates in high cell densities

 

lux = lumensense operons

luxL- encodes AHL synthase

luxR activates AHL which activates lux->light

Term
Gene Cloning
Definition

Restriction enzymes - Cut DNA at the specific restriction sites

 

 DNA ligase: only matching ends can be ligated

5'---G AATTC---3'

3'---CTTAA G---5'

Sticky ends

 

5'---CCC GGG---3'

3'---GGG CCC---5'

Blunt ends

 

put DNA in new host

Term
Cloning Vector
Definition

1.Origin of Replication

2.Antibiotic Resistance gene

3.Multiple Cloning Site (MCS)

 

-blue cells = recombinants

Term
Transposon Mutagenesis
Definition

Cells with transposons grow with antibiotics present

 

 Create insertion mutations that knocks out gene function

 

-identify

Term
DNA Electrophoresis
Definition

negatively charged dna migrates from anode to cathode

 

migration rate is determined by size and conformationof the DNA

Term
Southern blot
Definition

DNA-DNA hybridization

 

For identifying a particular sequence of DNA in a complex mixture of DNA fragments

 

Labeled DNA probe will form a “hybrid”with its complementary sequencesand be detected

Term
Northern blot
Definition
mRNA-DNA hybridization
Term
Western blot
Definition
protein-antibody interaction
Term
Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)
Definition

Amplificationof millions of copies of a specific DNA fragment

 

DNA polymerase: Taqpolymerase

•No proofreading activity

Term
Transcriptome
Definition

all of the cell’s mRNA molecules under a given growth condition

 

-unique to each condition

Term
Proteome
Definition

all of the cell’s proteins under a given growth condition

 

unique to each condition

Term
Transcriptomics
Definition

•Complementary DNA (cDNA) is produced by reverse transcription(RT) from mRNA and the hybridized

 

Green: Expression only in control

 

Red: Expression only in expirimental

 

Yellow: Expressed in both

Term
Rho-independant Termination
Definition

PolyU downstream of pause site


•DNA-mRNA U-A base pairs are instable


–Even less stable when RNA polymerase is stalled at the pause site


•mRNA breaks off from DNA, polymerase is released

Term
Rho-dependant termination
Definition

Rhoprotein binds to the mRNA at GC rich sequences


•Physically interacts with RNA polymerase when it stalls at the pause site


•ATP-dependent helicase activity of Rho releases the mRNA from DNA


•RNA polymerase is released

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