Monday, March 24, 2014

Viruses

This week in AP Biology we talked about viruses. Viruses are very tiny and there genomes can be double or single stranded DNA or double or single stranded RNA. Viruses have a capsid which is a protein shell that surrounds the genetic material. Some viruses have viral envelopes that surround the capsid and aid the viruses in infecting their hosts. A type of bacteria we studied the most was bacteriophages or phages. They are viruses that infect bacterial cells. Viruses can only replicate in host cells which means they can infect limited variety of hosts. There are two viral reproductions. One is called the Lytic cycle and the other is the Lysogenic cycle. The lytic cycle ends in the death of the host cell by rupturing. Bacteriophages injects its DNA into a host cell and takes over the host cell's machinery to synthesize new copies of the viral DNA. In the lysogenic cycle the bacteriophage's DNA becomes incorporated into the host cell's DNA and is replicated along with the host cell's genome.

Monday, March 10, 2014

Gene Expressin

This week in AP Biology we talked about gene expression. Gene expression is the process by which information from a gene is used in synthesis of a functional gene product. These products are usually proteins.There are three steps to gene expression. The first step is transcription and it is the synthesis of RNA using DNA as a template and also produces mRNA. The second step is RNA processing. The mRNA that was made in transcription goes to RNA processing to yield the final mRNA. The final step is translation. Translation is the production of a polypeptide chain using using the mRNA transcript.




Sunday, March 2, 2014

DNA Replication

This week in AP Biology we talked about DNA replication. DNA replication is the process by which a DNA molecule is copied, and how cells repair their DNA. DNA replication is a very important process in all living things. The replication of a DNA molecule begins in particular sites called origin of replication. Initiation proteins bind to the the origin of replication and separate the two strands which form a replication bubble. Then the DNA moves in both directions of the DNA strand until it is copied. DNA polymerase adds nucelotides to the growing chain working in a 5` to 3` direction. The replication occurs continuously along the 5` to 3` strand, this is called the leading strand and the strand that runs 3` to 5` is copied in segments and it is called the lagging strand. The lagging strand is synthesized in Okazaki fragments which are sealed together by DNA ligase which then forms a continuous DNA strand.