MICROBIO 310 Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Kinetochore, Transfer Rna, Sister Chromatids

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Protein-encoding genes in eukarya are often split into multiple exons (coding regions) by introns (noncoding regions) both introns and exons are transcribed into primary transcript. Functional mrna is formed by the excision of introns and splicing of exons. During the process of rna splicing, introns are removed and exons join together to form a coding sequence. Once this is done it can be moved from nucleus to cytoplasm. Eukaryotes wind dna around histones to form nucleosomes: nucleosomes: fundamental subunit of chromatin composed of dna wrapped around histones, histones: positively charged proteins. Dna-histone complex is called chromatin highly condensed chromatin is called heterochromatin. Heterochromatin: regions of dna found throughout the chromosomes of eukaryotes formed during eukaryotic cell division. Mitosis: normal form of nuclear division in eukaryotic cells: chromosomes are replicated and partitioned into two nuclei results in two diploid daughter cells, duplicate and then pull apart. Eukaryotic nuclei contain linear dna some viruses contain linear dna.

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