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Topic 1.2Biology SL48 flashcards

Nucleic acids

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1.2.1
Question

What is the monomer of DNA and RNA called?

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1.2.112 cards

Card 1definition
Question

What is the monomer of DNA and RNA called?

Answer

A **nucleotide**.

Card 2definition
Question

Define a nucleotide.

Answer

The monomer of a nucleic acid: a **phosphate group**, a **pentose sugar** and a **nitrogenous base** joined together.

Card 3concept
Question

What are the three parts of a nucleotide?

Answer

A **phosphate group**, a **pentose (5-carbon) sugar**, and a **nitrogenous base**.

Card 4concept
Question

Which sugar is in a DNA nucleotide?

Answer

**Deoxyribose**.

Card 5concept
Question

Which sugar is in an RNA nucleotide?

Answer

**Ribose**.

Card 6concept
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Which base is found in DNA but not RNA?

Answer

**Thymine (T)**.

Card 7concept
Question

Which base is found in RNA but not DNA?

Answer

**Uracil (U)** — it replaces thymine.

Card 8concept
Question

Which bases are found in both DNA and RNA?

Answer

**Adenine (A), cytosine (C) and guanine (G)**.

Card 9concept
Question

How many strands does DNA have? And RNA?

Answer

DNA is **double**-stranded (two); RNA is **single**-stranded (one).

Card 10concept
Question

Name the three structural differences between DNA and RNA.

Answer

**Sugar** (deoxyribose vs ribose), **one base** (thymine vs uracil), and **number of strands** (double vs single).

Card 11definition
Question

What is a nitrogenous base?

Answer

The **information-carrying** part of a nucleotide — A, C, G and either T (DNA) or U (RNA).

Card 12concept
Question

In a nucleotide, what does the sugar join to?

Answer

The sugar sits in the **middle** — joined to the **phosphate** on one side and the **base** on the other.

1.2.212 cards

Card 13concept
Question

What shape is a DNA molecule?

Answer

A **double helix** — two strands twisted around each other.

Card 14definition
Question

Define complementary base pairing.

Answer

The rule that **A pairs only with T**, and **G pairs only with C**, on the two DNA strands.

Card 15concept
Question

Which base pairs with adenine?

Answer

**Thymine (T)**.

Card 16concept
Question

Which base pairs with guanine?

Answer

**Cytosine (C)**.

Card 17definition
Question

What kind of bond holds a base pair together?

Answer

**Hydrogen bonds** (between the two bases).

Card 18concept
Question

How many hydrogen bonds hold an A–T pair? A G–C pair?

Answer

**A–T has 2**; **G–C has 3**.

Card 19concept
Question

Which parts of DNA are joined across the helix — bases or backbones?

Answer

The **bases** (by hydrogen bonds). The sugar–phosphate backbones are not joined to each other.

Card 20definition
Question

What does 'antiparallel' mean for DNA strands?

Answer

The two strands run in **opposite directions** to each other.

Card 21concept
Question

State Chargaff's rule.

Answer

In DNA, **%A = %T** and **%G = %C**.

Card 22concept
Question

If a DNA sample is 22% cytosine, what % is guanine?

Answer

**22%** — because %G = %C.

Card 23concept
Question

If A is 30%, what is the combined % of G and C?

Answer

A = T = 30%, so A+T = 60%, leaving **40%** shared by G and C (20% each).

Card 24concept
Question

Who proposed the double-helix model, and using whose data?

Answer

**Watson and Crick**, using X-ray data from **Rosalind Franklin**.

1.2.312 cards

Card 25concept
Question

Where in DNA is the genetic information stored?

Answer

In the **sequence (order) of the bases** A, T, C and G along the molecule.

Card 26concept
Question

Why can DNA store so much information?

Answer

It is a **long** molecule using a **4-letter** code, so the bases can be ordered in an **enormous** number of ways.

Card 27definition
Question

Define base sequence.

Answer

The **order of the bases** (A, T, C, G) along a DNA strand — this order is the stored information.

Card 28concept
Question

What makes DNA a STABLE information store?

Answer

Its two **complementary strands** back each other up, and the bases sit protected inside the double helix.

Card 29definition
Question

Define a histone.

Answer

A **protein** that **DNA wraps around** to package (condense) it inside eukaryotic cells.

Card 30concept
Question

What do histones do?

Answer

DNA **wraps around** them to **package / condense** the long molecule so it fits inside the cell.

Card 31definition
Question

Define a chromosome.

Answer

A single long **DNA molecule wound around histones** and condensed into a compact, organised structure.

Card 32concept
Question

Why must DNA be packaged?

Answer

The DNA molecule is **very long** (about 2 m per human cell) but the cell is tiny, so it must be **condensed** to fit and be protected.

Card 33concept
Question

Which organisms package DNA with histones?

Answer

**Eukaryotes** (plants, animals, fungi). Most **prokaryotes do not** use histones.

Card 34concept
Question

Is it the number of bases or their order that stores the message?

Answer

The **order (sequence)** — rearranging the bases changes the message, like rearranging letters changes a word.

Card 35concept
Question

How is DNA wound around histones described?

Answer

Like **thread around a spool** — the long thread winds up tightly and condenses.

Card 36concept
Question

Do histones read or copy the DNA?

Answer

**No** — histones only **package** the DNA. Reading and copying are done by other molecules.

1.2.412 cards

Card 37definition
Question

Define a genome.

Answer

**All of the DNA** of an organism — its complete set of genetic instructions.

Card 38definition
Question

What is whole genome sequencing?

Answer

Determining the **full order of bases** (A, T, C, G) across an organism's **entire genome**.

Card 39concept
Question

Genome vs gene — what is the difference?

Answer

A **gene** is one instruction; a **genome** is the **whole instruction book** (all genes + the DNA between).

Card 40concept
Question

Does a bigger genome mean a more complex organism?

Answer

**No** — some plants and amphibians have larger genomes than humans but are not more complex.

Card 41concept
Question

Why does a large genome not mean more complexity?

Answer

Much of the extra DNA is **non-coding** — it does not code for proteins.

Card 42definition
Question

What is the universal genetic code?

Answer

The same DNA bases code for the **same amino acids** in (almost) **every** living thing.

Card 43concept
Question

How does the universal code support common ancestry?

Answer

All life inheriting the **same code** is best explained by descent from a **common ancestor**.

Card 44concept
Question

Which cell could supply a complete copy of the human genome?

Answer

The nucleus of **almost any single body cell** (e.g. a white blood cell).

Card 45concept
Question

Why is a gamete NOT a complete copy of the genome?

Answer

A gamete (egg or sperm) carries only **half** the genome.

Card 46concept
Question

Give two present-day uses of whole genome sequencing.

Answer

**Diagnosing genetic disease / personalising treatment**, and **comparing genomes to map how species are related**.

Card 47concept
Question

Give one ethical concern about genome sequencing.

Answer

Concerns over **privacy** and how a person's **genetic data** is stored and used.

Card 48concept
Question

What does a 'Discuss' answer on sequencing need?

Answer

**Benefits AND a limitation/ethical concern**, then a clear overall **judgement**.

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