BIOL 130 Lecture 26: Chromosome morphology and Transcription/Translation

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1 Dec 2016
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Eukaryotic chromosomes: contain large amounts of protein in addition to dna, proteins help compact dna into highly organized structure within chromosomes. Chromosome organization: dna double helix, nucleosome that are wrapped in histones, scaffold protein core that the fibers are extending/looping off of. Packing of chromatin influences gene expression: heterochromatin is tightly coiled dna that is unable to be transcribed into. Too coiled tight together, the dna polymerase cannot fit in: euchromatin is less tightly packed dna that contains genes that can be expressed as proteins. Less loose, resulting in the dna polymerase to come in and make mrna: regions of chromosomes can switch from euchromatin to heterochromatin and vice versa. Dna and rna are both made out of nucleic acids/ nucleotides. Proteins are made up of amino acid monomers. Translation amino acids (translating into a different monomer) Transcription/translation in prokaryotes: going to all happen in cytoplasm, translation and transcription can happen at the same time, cannot happen in eukaryotes.

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