BIOL 243 Final: Biology 243 Laboratory Manual 2012 Notes for Final Lab Exam

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The chains of dna are made up of building blocks known as deoxyribonucleotides: Five-carbon sugar (deoxyribose), whose carbons are numbered 1" to 5". The prime symbol differentiates the carbon atoms in the sugar from those in the nitrogenous base. One of four nitrogenous bases (adenine, guanine, thymine or cytosine) attached to carbon 1" of deoxyribose. At least one phosphate group attached to carbon 5" of deoxyribose (there can be as many as three phosphate groups) Dna synthesis proceeds in a 5" to 3" direction: new deoxyribonucleotides are added to the 3" end. Phosphodiester backbone provides spine-like support for arranging the bases in a linear, sequential order. Dna polymerase takes single nucleotides, match the base against the base of the nucleotide at the 3" end of the template strand, and start connecting nucleotides to each other. The four bases form hydrogen bonds: a and t; g and c. Each base can rotate around the 1" position of the deoxyribose.

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