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Topic 4.2Biology SL38 flashcards

Protein synthesis

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Card 1 of 384.2.1
4.2.1
Question

What is transcription?

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All Flashcards in Topic 4.2

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4.2.112 cards

Card 1definition
Question

What is transcription?

Answer

The copying of a gene's DNA base sequence into a complementary molecule of **mRNA**. It happens in the **nucleus**.

Card 2concept
Question

Which enzyme carries out transcription?

Answer

**RNA polymerase** — it unwinds the DNA and joins RNA nucleotides into mRNA.

Card 3concept
Question

Where does transcription take place?

Answer

In the **nucleus** (where the DNA is).

Card 4definition
Question

What is mRNA?

Answer

A single-stranded copy of a gene that carries its base sequence **out of the nucleus to a ribosome** to be translated.

Card 5concept
Question

How many DNA strands are copied during transcription?

Answer

**One** — only the **template strand** is read and copied.

Card 6concept
Question

In mRNA, which base pairs with adenine (A) on the DNA template?

Answer

**Uracil (U)** — RNA has no thymine.

Card 7concept
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What are the base-pairing rules in transcription?

Answer

Template **A → U**, template **T → A**, template **C → G**, template **G → C**.

Card 8concept
Question

Why does mRNA use uracil instead of thymine?

Answer

RNA contains **uracil (U)** in place of thymine; so a template adenine is copied as **U**, never T.

Card 9concept
Question

Why is mRNA important in protein synthesis?

Answer

It **carries the gene's code out of the nucleus to a ribosome**, where it is translated into a polypeptide.

Card 10concept
Question

What does RNA polymerase do, step by step?

Answer

Binds the gene, **unwinds** the DNA, reads **one template strand**, pairs and **joins free RNA nucleotides** into mRNA.

Card 11concept
Question

Match the enzymes: which makes mRNA and which copies DNA?

Answer

**RNA polymerase** → transcription (mRNA); **DNA polymerase** → DNA replication.

Card 12concept
Question

A drug blocks RNA polymerase. What happens to protein synthesis?

Answer

**No mRNA is made**, so there is nothing for the ribosome to translate — the protein cannot be built.

4.2.212 cards

Card 13definition
Question

What is a codon?

Answer

A group of **three** consecutive bases on mRNA that codes for **one amino acid** (or a start/stop signal).

Card 14concept
Question

How many bases are read at a time when decoding mRNA?

Answer

**Three** — the genetic code is a **triplet** code, read in non-overlapping groups of three.

Card 15definition
Question

What is the genetic code?

Answer

The set of rules linking each mRNA **codon** to the **amino acid** it specifies; it is nearly the same in all living things.

Card 16concept
Question

How many possible codons are there, and why?

Answer

**64** — there are 4 bases and codons are 3 bases long, so **4 × 4 × 4 = 64**. This covers 20 amino acids plus start/stop.

Card 17concept
Question

What does it mean that the genetic code is universal?

Answer

Almost **all organisms** use the **same codons** for the same amino acids.

Card 18concept
Question

Why does universality make genetic engineering possible?

Answer

Because the code is shared, a gene from one species can be **read correctly** by another (e.g. a human gene placed in bacteria).

Card 19definition
Question

What does it mean that the genetic code is degenerate (redundant)?

Answer

**More than one codon** can code for the **same amino acid** (e.g. UUU and UUC both code for phenylalanine).

Card 20concept
Question

Give an example of degeneracy.

Answer

**UUU and UUC** both code for **phenylalanine**; **UCU and UCC** both code for **serine**.

Card 21definition
Question

What is a silent mutation?

Answer

A base substitution that changes a codon to another codon for the **same amino acid**, so the **protein is unchanged**.

Card 22concept
Question

How does degeneracy allow silent mutations?

Answer

Because several codons code for the same amino acid, a base change can give a different codon that still specifies the **same** amino acid.

Card 23concept
Question

How do you read an mRNA sequence using a codon table?

Answer

**Split it into non-overlapping threes**, look up each codon in turn, and keep the amino acids in **order**.

Card 24concept
Question

What is the difference between 'universal' and 'degenerate'?

Answer

**Universal** = the same code in all organisms (between species); **degenerate** = several codons for one amino acid (within the code).

4.2.314 cards

Card 25definition
Question

What is translation?

Answer

The process where a **ribosome** reads an **mRNA** and builds the matching chain of amino acids (a **polypeptide**).

Card 26concept
Question

Where does translation take place?

Answer

At a **ribosome** (in the cytoplasm).

Card 27definition
Question

What is a codon?

Answer

A group of **three mRNA bases** that codes for **one amino acid** (or a stop signal).

Card 28concept
Question

How many bases are read for each amino acid?

Answer

**Three** — the mRNA is read one **codon** (3 bases) at a time.

Card 29concept
Question

What is the job of a tRNA?

Answer

It **brings the correct amino acid** to the ribosome; its **anticodon** base-pairs with the mRNA codon.

Card 30definition
Question

What is an anticodon?

Answer

The **three bases on a tRNA** that base-pair with a complementary **codon** on the mRNA.

Card 31concept
Question

How is the correct amino acid placed in the right position?

Answer

Each tRNA **anticodon** pairs with the matching **codon**, and each tRNA carries only **one specific amino acid**.

Card 32concept
Question

What bond joins amino acids in the polypeptide?

Answer

A **peptide bond**, formed by the ribosome as each amino acid is added.

Card 33concept
Question

What ends translation?

Answer

A **stop codon** — no tRNA matches it, so no more amino acids are added and the polypeptide is released.

Card 34concept
Question

How do you find the number of mRNA bases from the number of amino acids?

Answer

**Bases = amino acids × 3** (three bases per codon); add 3 more for the stop codon.

Card 35concept
Question

How many mRNA bases code for a 30-amino-acid polypeptide?

Answer

30 × 3 = **90 bases** (93 if the stop codon is counted).

Card 36concept
Question

Why do polypeptides on the same mRNA differ in length?

Answer

They are caught **part-way through synthesis**; ribosomes further along the mRNA have added **more amino acids**, so their chains are longer.

Card 37concept
Question

Which step is translation: transcription or making the polypeptide?

Answer

Translation is **making the polypeptide** at the ribosome. Transcription is making the **mRNA** in the nucleus.

Card 38definition
Question

What is a polypeptide?

Answer

The **chain of amino acids** produced by translation, which folds up to form a **protein**.

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IB Biology SL Topic 4.2 Flashcards | Protein synthesis | Aimnova | Aimnova