Professional Documents
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Genetic control
Question no 1
Fig. 1.1 shows part of a DNA molecule.
Fig. 1.1
(a) (i) Name U to X.
U .............................................................................................................................................................................
W ............................................................................................................................................................................
X .........................................................................................................................................................................[3]
(ii) Name the bonds indicated by Z.
........................................................................................................................................................................... [1]
(b) Describe three features of a polypeptide molecule that are different from those found in a DNA molecule.
................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................
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........................................................................................................................................................................... [3]
[Total: 7]
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Question no 2:
Fig. 2.1 shows the replication of one strand of a DNA double helix.
Fig. 2.1
(a) Name W to Y.
W ............................................................................................................................................................................
X .............................................................................................................................................................................
Y ........................................................................................................................................................................ [3]
(b) Explain how the structure of DNA enables it to replicate semi-conservatively.
................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................................................................... [3]
(c) Explain why it is important that an exact copy of DNA is made during replication.
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................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................................................................... [2]
[Total: 8]
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Question no 3;
(a) Complete the table by indicating with a tick ( ) or a cross ( ) whether the statements apply to proteins, DNA,
messenger RNA and cellulose.
You should put a tick or a cross in each box of the table.
During an immune response, B-lymphocytes become plasma cells and begin to make polypeptides that are
assembled into antibodies.
Fig. 3.1 is a diagram showing the formation of a polypeptide at a ribosome in a plasma cell.
Fig. 3.1
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Question no 4:
Lysozyme is an enzyme found in many places within the human body. It consists of a single polypeptide folded
into a complex shape.
Fig. 4.1 shows a ribbon model of lysozyme.
Fig. 4.1
(a) With reference to Fig. 4.1, state the name given to the level of organisation shown,
(i) by the whole polypeptide
........................................................................................................................................................................... [1]
(ii) at region X.
........................................................................................................................................................................... [1]
(b) Name the part of the enzyme where the reaction occurs.
........................................................................................................................................................................... [1]
(c) Table 4.1 shows some mRNA codons and the amino acids for which they code.
Table 4.1
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Fig. 4.2
(i) Use the information in Table 3.1 to complete the nucleotide sequences for the mRNA and the DNA shown in
Fig. 4.2. Write your answer on Fig. 4.2.
[3]
(ii) Explain why the human gene for lysozyme may have a different nucleotide sequence from the answer you
have given in (c)(i).
................................................................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................................................................... [2]
(d) In an investigation of the effects of lysozyme, researchers isolated the enzyme from mice to find how
effective the enzyme was at destroying bacteria. Lysozyme catalyses the hydrolysis of glycosidic bonds in
certain polysaccharides found in the cell walls of some bacteria.
Four different concentrations of lysozyme were made. Two pathogenic bacteria, Escherichia coli and
Staphylococcus aureus, were incubated in each concentration for three hours at 37 C. At the end of the
incubation, the researchers determined the number of bacteria still alive and expressed their results as
percentages of the number of bacteria present at the start of the incubation.
The results are shown in Fig. 4.3.
Fig. 4.3
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(i) Using the information in Fig. 3.3, describe the effect of the different concentrations of lysozyme on E. coli
and S. aureus.
.................................................................................................................................
.................................................................................................................................
.................................................................................................................................
.................................................................................................................................
.................................................................................................................................
.................................................................................................................................
........................................................................................................................................................................... [4]
(ii) Suggest a possible explanation for the different effects of lysozyme on E. coli and S. aureus.
.................................................................................................................................
.................................................................................................................................
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........................................................................................................................................................................... [2]
[Total: 14]
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Nucleotides
Nucleotides
have
three
parts
to
them:
a phosphoric acid
a nitrogenous base. There are five different organic bases, but they all contain the elements carbon,
hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen. They fall into groups, purines (two rings of carbon and nitrogen
atoms) and pyrimidines (a single ring of carbon and nitrogen atoms). The base thymine is found in
DNA only and the base uracil is found in RNA only, so there are only four different bases present at a
time in one nucleic acid molecule.
Base:
Adenine (A)
Cytosine (C)
Guanine (G)
Thymine (T)
Uracil (U)
Nucleotide Polymerisation
Nucleotides can join together by a condensation reaction (results in
the removal of water) between the phosphate group of one
nucleotide and the hydroxyl group on carbon 3 of the sugar of the
other nucleotide. The bonds linking the nucleotides together are
strong, covalentphosphodiester bonds.
The bases do not take part in the polymerisation, so there is a sugarphosphate backbone with the bases extending off it. This means that
the nucleotides can join together in any order along the chain. Many
nucleotides form a polynucleotide.
Each polynucleotide chain has two distinct ends
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and a 5 (five prime) end carbon 5 of the deoxyribose is closest to the end
Structure of DNA
The three-dimensional structure of DNA was discovered in the 1950's by Watson and
Crick. The main features of the structure are:
The two strands are wound round each other to form a double helix.
The two strands are joined together by hydrogen bonds between the bases. The
bases therefore form base pairs, which are like rungs of a ladder.
The base pairs are specific. A only binds to T (and T with A), and C only binds to
G (and G with C). These are called complementary base pairs. This means that
whatever the sequence of bases along one strand, the sequence of bases on the
other strand must be complementary to it. (Incidentally, complementary, which
means matching, is different from complimentary, which means being nice.)
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Function of DNA
DNA is the genetic material, and genes are made of DNA. DNA therefore has two essential
functions: replication and expression.
Replication means that the DNA, with all its genes, must be copied every time a cell divides.
Expression means that the genes on DNA must control characteristics. A gene was traditionally defined
as a factor that controls a particular characteristic (such as flower colour), but a much more precise
definition is that a gene is a section of DNA that codes for a particular protein. Characteristics are controlled
by genes through the proteins they code for, like this:
Expression can be split into two parts: transcription (making RNA) and translation (making proteins). These
two functions are summarised in this diagram (called the central dogma of genetics).
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No one knows exactly how many genes we humans have to control all our characteristics, the latest estimates
are 60-80,000. The sum total of all the genes in an organism is called thegenome.
The table shows the estimated number of genes in different organisms:
Species
Common name
Phage
Escherichia coli
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Drosophila melanogaster
Homo sapiens
virus
Bacterium
Yeast
fruit fly
Human
no of genes
48
4 639
13 500
165 000
3 150 000
60
7 000
6 000
~10 000
~70 000
form genes and doesnt seem to do anything. The purpose of this junk DNAremains a mystery!
RNA
RNA is a nucleic acid like DNA, but with 4 differences:
RNA has the sugar ribose instead of deoxyribose
RNA has the base uracil instead of thymine
RNA is usually single stranded
RNA is usually shorter than DNA
nucleotide
sequence called
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the anticodon. There are 64 different tRNA molecules, each with a different anticodon sequence
complementary to the 64 different codons. The amino acids are attached to their tRNA molecule by specific
enzymes. These are highly specific, so that each amino acid is attached to a tRNA adapter with the
appropriate anticodon.
1. Replication starts at a specific sequence on the DNA molecule called the replication origin.
2. An enzyme unwinds and unzips DNA, breaking the hydrogen bonds that join the base pairs, and
forming two separate strands.
3. The new DNA is built up from the four nucleotides (A, C, G and T) that are abundant in the
nucleoplasm.
4. These nucleotides attach themselves to the bases on the old strands by complementary base
pairing. Where there is a T base, only an A nucleotide will bind, and so on.
5. The enzyme DNA polymerase joins the new nucleotides to each other by strong covalent bonds,
forming the sugar-phosphate backbone.
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Grow bacteria on
medium with
14
normal NH4
2.
3.
4.
Return
to 14NH4medium
for 20 minutes
(one generation)
Grow
14
on NH4medium
for 40 mins (two
generations)
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SECOND BASE
U
UUU
I
and only 4 different bases, so the bases are
read in groups of 3. This gives 43 or 64
CUU
triplet code:
The
code
CUA
CUG
S
It is a linear code i.e. the code is
CUC
AUU
UUA
UUG
UUC
AUC
C
Phe
Leu
Leu
Leu
Ile
AUA Ile
UCU
UCC
UCA
UCG
CCU
CCC
CCA
CCG
ACU
ACC
ACA
Val
GUA
GUG
GCU
GCC
A
Ser
Ser
Pro
Pro
Thr
Thr
Ala
GCA
Val
GCG
UAU
UAC
UAA
UAG
CAU
CAC
CAA
CAG
AAU
AAC
AAA
AAG
GAU
GAC
Tyr
Stop
His
Gln
Asn
Lys
Asp
GAG
UGU
UGC
Cys
Glu
UGA Stop
UGG Trp
CGU
CGC
CGA
CGG
AGU
AGC
AGA
AGG
GGU
GGC
Arg
Arg
Ser
Arg
Gly
GGG
A
G
U
C
G
U
GGA
GAA
Ala
Gly
is degenerate i.e.
G (3'end)
there is often more than one codon for *** Note that this table represents bases in mRNA. There are some tables
an amino acid i.e. there are more base
combinations than there are amino acids. This means that several base sequences may code for the
same amino acid. E.g. CCA, CCC, CCG and CCT all code for the same amino acid: proline. The first
two bases of the code are more important than the third base in specifying a particular amino acid
The code is non-overlapping, i.e. each triplet in DNA specifies one amino acid. Each base is
part of only one triplet, and is therefore involved in specifying only one amino acid.
At the start and end of a sequence there are punctuation codes i.e. there is a start signal given
by AUG (codes for methionine) and there are three stop signals (UUA, UAG and UGA). The three
stop signals do not code for an amino acid.
It is a universal code i.e. the same base sequence always codes for the same amino acid,
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The RNA molecule is built up from the four ribose nucleotides (A, C, G and U) in the nucleoplasm. The
nucleotides attach themselves to the bases on the DNA by complementary base pairing, just as in DNA
replication. However, only one strand of RNA is made. The DNA stand that is copied is called
the template or sense strand because it contains the sequence of bases that codes for a protein. The
other strand is just a complementary copy, and is called the non-template or antisense strand.
The new nucleotides are joined to each other by strong covalent bonds by the enzyme RNA
polymerase.
Only about 8 base pairs remain attached at a time, since the mRNA molecule peels off from the DNA
as it is made. A winding enzyme rewinds the DNA.
The initial mRNA, or primary transcript, contains many regions that are not needed as part of the
protein code. These are called introns (for interruption sequences), while the parts that are needed are
called exons (for expressed sequences). All eukaryotic genes have introns, and they are usually longer
than the exons.
The introns are cut out and the exons are spliced together by enzymes
The result is a shorter mature RNA containing only exons. The introns are broken down.
The mRNA diffuses out of the nucleus through a nuclear pore into the cytoplasm.
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by complementary base
pairing.
4. The bond between the amino acid and the tRNA is cut
and a peptide bond is formed between the two amino
acids.
A single piece of mRNA can be translated by many ribosomes simultaneously, so many protein molecules can
be made from one mRNA molecule. A group of ribosomes all attached to one piece of mRNA is called
a polysome.
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Post-Translational Modification
In eukaryotes, proteins often need to be ltered before they become fully functional. Modifications are carried
out by other enzymes and include: chain cutting, adding methyl or phosphate groups to amino acids, or adding
sugars (to make glycoproteins) or lipids (to make lipoporteins).
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