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Bio 1010U - Module 1 Cheat Sheet by

Molecules: electronegativity, bonds, polarity Transcription Translation Proteins + Amino Acids

Transc­ription - Key terms

Promoter
regulatory region of DNA, where RNA polymerase other proteins involved in transc­ripton initiation bind
Enhancer sequences
regulatory DNA sequences that bind transc­rip­tions factors and enhance transc­ription of the gene they are associated with
General transc­ription factors
set of proteins, that bind to the promotor of a gene and are involved in initiating transc­ription
Transc­rip­tional activator proteins
proteins that bind to enhancer sequences to begin transc­ription
Enhancer sequences
sequences in the DNA that are bound by transc­ription activator proteins that activate transc­ription

Molecular intera­ctions

Nonpolar covalent bond: Electron pairs are shared equally
Polar covalent bond: Electron pairs shared unequally (elect­ron­ega­tivity)
Hydrogen bond: Weak electrical attraction between a covalently bonded H atom and an electr­one­gative atom
Ionic bond: Electric attraction between opposite charges due to differ­ences in electr­one­gat­ivity

Electr­one­gat­ivity

Electr­one­gat­ivity is the tendency between atoms and their ability to attract electrons
- Hydrop­hobic intera­ctions occur with nonpolar molecules in the presences of polar molecules

Cohesion

Cohesion is the attraction of molecules for other molecules of the same kind
Ex: a molecule of water sharing a hydrogen bond with other water molecules

Amino Acid categories

Hydrop­hilic Amino Acids
Basic
Acidic
Polar
Lysine
Aspartic Acid
Asparagine
Arginine
Glutamic Acid
Glutamine
Histidine
 
Serine + Threonine
Hydrop­hobic Amino Acids
Alanine Valine Leucine Isoleucine Methionine Phenyl­alanine Tryptophan
lots of carbon­-hy­drogens + not many functional groups
Special Amino Acids
Glycine Proline (group is part of a ring) Cysteine
 

Protein structures

Primary Structure
Sequence of amino acids in a protein
Secondary Structure
Hydrogen bonds causes folding of the polype­ptide chain
Tertiary Structure
R groups determines the function and formation
Quartenary Structure
Made up of 2 or more subunits that determine the activity of the protein

RNA Splicing - Introns and Exons

Removal of introns (non-c­oding) and leaving exons (prote­in-­coding intact) - done by Splice­osome
Splice­osome – binds to both the 5’ and 3’ ends (splice sites)
Introns loop on itself then gets broken down into nucleo­tides
Exons join each other and have no interr­uptions from introns
Primary transc­ripts have introns and exons and depending on what's cut off and what exons are joined, protein is made

Key Terms

Phosph­odi­ester Bond
Chemical bond (by conden­sation) between phosphate and hydroxyl groups from sugar groups
Example
The backbone of DNA or RNA molecules
Pyroph­osphate
Group of phosphates released by hydrolysis which creates energy to join bases to the RNA transcript
Example
Adding a uracil to the 3' end of a transcript
 

Transc­ription (brief overview)

Central Dogma : DNA codes for RNA and RNA codes for protein, the flow of inform­ation from DNA to Protein
Transc­rip­tion: mRNA carries instru­ctions for making polype­petides from DNA, DNA serves a template for polypo­ptide synthesis (trans­cribed from DNA to mRNA)
New RNA strand grows in 5' to 3' direction - DNA strand is oriented in the 3'-5'
3 stages: Initia­tion, Elonga­tion, Termin­ation

Initiation

RNA polymerase and associated proteins bind to the DNA duplex at promoter sequences
- When RNA polymerase binds to the promoter region – doesn’t start right away (starts downstream (abt 25 nucleo­tides from the box)) before starting
How the promotor is recogn­ized: Promoter region needs to be identified (TATA box- green box) and bound by GTF;
TAP (activ­ators) bind enhancers to recruit mediator proteins which then recruits RNA polymerase to the promoter region (can cause DNA loop - mediator complex)

Elongation

Polyme­riz­ation Reaction - 3' -OH group attacks the 2 phosphate which get released and turn into pyroph­osp­hates (irrev­ers­ible)

Termin­ation

Once RNA polymerase bumps into the termin­ation sequences, it falls off and the transcript is released
RNA transcript is called the primary transcript (not processed yet) – has to go thru a series of processing steps before it can be called mRNA
RNA tha combines with riobsome to direct protein synthesis : mRNA
 

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