Creado por tanitia.dooley
hace más de 11 años
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Pregunta | Respuesta |
What is the axial rise of DNA? | 3.4A |
What form is the guanine base in B-DNA? | anti |
What form does the sugar adopt in B-DNA? | The C2' endo south form |
What form does the sugar adopt in B-DNA? | The C2' endo south form |
What makes the major and minor grooves equal depth? | Because the base pairs sit directly on the axis |
What form does the glycosidic bond adopt in B-DNA? | anti |
Describe the major and minor grooves in A-DNA? | major-narrow and deep, minor: shallow and wide |
Describe Z-DNA? | left-handed helix, composed of duplexes composed of GCGC. Sugar in C3' endo conformation. Minor groove very deep and narrow |
What is a hairpin? | When a single strand fold back on itself if the two ends are complementary |
What is thermal melting? | When the 2 strands of DNA dissociate to give unstacked seperate strands |
What is hypochromicity and what does it result from?? | The UV absorbance of double stranded DNA is smaller than what would be predicted for the sum of their constitutent bases. This is because of coupling of the transition dipoles between neighbouring stacked bases |
What happens to UV absorbance after denaturing? | it increases by 20-30% |
What is the melting temperature of DNA, how is this obtained? | It is the temperature midpoint for the transition from a helix to single stranded. It is found by observing the UV absorbance whilst increasing the temperature |
What does the melting temperature of a duplex depend on? | Duplex conc, base composition, sequence, chain length, salt conc & pH of solution |
Why does Tm increase with increasing salt concentration? | Because the cations mask the repulsive forces of the negatively charged phosphate backbone |
Why is the Tm of a hairpin independent of duplex conc? | Because the duplex formation is intramolecular |
What small molecules interact with DNA at the minor and major grooves? | Proteins interact with DNA at the major grooves and cresent-shaped polyamides at the minor |
What does intercalation of base pairs occur with? | Planar polycyclic aromatics |
What is the different between (-) and (+) strands in viruses? | (-) strand means it is complementary, (+) means it is identical to mRNA |
How is acyclovir converted from a prodrug into its active form? | via herpes virus thymidine kinase which phosphorylates 5' OH and then GMP human kinase converts it into acyclovir triphosphate |
How does acyclovir triphosphate terminate DNA synthesis? | It is a substrate for herpes virus DNA pol- it is incorporated into DNA and because there is no 3'-OH it acts as a terminator |
Why cant acyclovir triphosphate be used as the drug? | It is too polar to enter cells |
Why is AZT toxic? | Because HIV does not have its own thymidine kinase therefore there is no selective generation of the triphosphate active form. It uses human cellular kinases to produce AZT triphosphate |
How does AZT inhibit DNA synthesis? | It inhibits reverse transcriptase as there is no 3' OH so the chain terminates |
Describe the 5 steps in the mechaism of AZT | Step 1: TrCl & pyridine to protect the OH. Step 2: MeSO2Cl and pyridine Step 3: DIPEA (a base) Step 4. LiN3 and DMF solvent step 5: Acid removes TrO group |
What is a nucleoside? | heterocyclic base and a sugar |
What is the difference between the OH groups in RNA and DNA? Why? | RNA has 2-one at 2' and one at 3'. DNA only has one at 3'. The second OH makes RNA unstable |
What are the purines and what are the pyrimidines? | purines: Adenine & guanine. Pyrimidines: cytosine & uracil |
What replaces uracil in RNA? | thymine |
How is a nucleotide formed from a nucleoside? | Phosphorylation of the nucleoside |
At what position does the phosphate bridge in DNA and RNA? | Between the 3' and 5' position of the sugars |
What is the association of 2 individual strands of DNA stabilised by? | 1. Watson crick base pairing- H bonds between bases 2. Hydrophobic bases on the inside and polar phosphate on the outside where they can be salvated with water to stabilise the negative charge 3. pi electrons- interactions between the bases that stock on top of each other |
What is the helical turn of DNA? | 10.5bp/turn |
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