IB Biology Topic 7.2 DNA Replication (HL)

Description

Biology (Topic 7 Nucleic Acid & Protein (HL)) Flashcards on IB Biology Topic 7.2 DNA Replication (HL), created by robertospacey on 23/03/2015.
robertospacey
Flashcards by robertospacey, updated more than 1 year ago
robertospacey
Created by robertospacey over 9 years ago
234
12

Resource summary

Question Answer
7.2.1 State that DNA replication occurs in a 5' - 3' direction DNA replication is semi-conservative, meaning that a new strand is synthesised from an original template strand DNA replication occurs in a 5' - 3' direction, in that new nucleotides are added to the C3 hydroxyl group such that the strand grows from the 3' end This means that the DNA polymerase enzyme responsible for adding new nucleotides moves along the original template strand in a 3' - 5' direction
7.2.2 Name the 5 enzymes involved in DNA Replication Helicase, RNA primase, DNA polymerase III, DNA plymerase I, DNA ligase
7.2.2 When and how does DNA replication occur? DNA replication is semi-conservative and occurs during the S phase of interphase
7.2.2 Explain the role of Helicase, RNA primase and DNA polymerase III in DNA replication. Helicase unwinds and separates the double stranded DNA by breaking the hydrogen bonds between base pairs This occurs at specific regions (replication origins), creating a replication fork of two polynucleotide strands in antiparallel directions RNA primase synthesises a short RNA primer on each template strand to provide an attachment and initiation point for DNA polymerase III DNA polymerase III adds deoxynucleoside triphosphates (dNTPs) to the 3' end of the polynucleotide chain, synthesising in a 5' - 3' direction The dNTPs pair up opposite their complementary base partner (adenine pairs with thymine ; guanine pairs with cytosine) As the dNTPs join with the DNA chain, two phosphates are broken off, releasing the energy needed to form a phosphodiester bond Synthesis is continuous on the strand moving towards the replication fork (leading strand) Synthesis is discontinuous on the strand moving away from the replication fork (lagging strand) leading to the formation of Okazaki fragments
7.2.2 Explain the role of DNA polymerase I and DNA ligase DNA polymerase I removes the RNA primers and replaces them with DNA DNA ligase joins the Okazaki fragments together to create a continuous strand
7.2.2 Draw a diagram that overviews DNA Replication
7.2.3 State that DNA replication is initiated at many points in eukaryotic chromosomes Because eukaryotic genomes are (typically) much larger than prokaryotic genomes, DNA replication is initiated at many points simultaneously in order to limit the time required for DNA replication to occur The specific sites at which DNA unwinding and initiation of replication occurs are called origins of replication and form replication bubbles As replication bubbles expand in both directions, they eventually fuse together, two generate two separate semi-conservative double strands of DNA
Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

BIOLOGY HL DEFINITIONS IB
Luisa Mandacaru
IB Biology Topic 4 Genetics (SL)
R S
GCSE Biology AQA
isabellabeaumont
GCSE Biology B2 (OCR)
Usman Rauf
Biology Unit 2 - DNA, meiosis, mitosis, cell cycle
DauntlessAlpha
Biological Molecules Definitions
siobhan.quirk
Cell Structure
megan.radcliffe16
GCSE Biology - Homeostasis and Classification Flashcards
Beth Coiley
Exchange surfaces and breathing
megan.radcliffe16
Key Biology Definitions/Terms
courtneypitt4119
Biology B1.1 - Genes
raffia.khalid99