Understanding the Sugar-Phosphate Backbone

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AP Biology › Understanding the Sugar-Phosphate Backbone

Questions 1 - 4
1

The most prevalent negative charge on DNA can be found on which of the following molecular components?

Phosphate backbone

Ribose sugar ring

Hydroxyl residues

Phosphodiester linkage

Hydrogen bonds between base pairs

Explanation

The phosphate backbone of DNA is negatively charged due to the bonds created between the phosphorous atoms and the oxygen atoms. Each phosphate group contains one negatively charged oxygen atom, therefore the entire strand of DNA is negatively charged due to repeated phosphate groups.

2

Please complete the analogy.

Nitrogen : Nucleic Acids :: Phosphorous : ______________.

All answer choices

Phospholipids

ATP

ADP

DNA

Explanation

Nitrogen is essential to create all the nucleic acids, and phosphorous is essential to create phospholipids (an obvious choice), ATP and ADP (they are the same class of molecule, and the P stands for phosphate), and DNA (for the phosphate-sugar backbone).

3

A __________ bond between the sugar of one nucleotide and the phosphate of an adjacent nucleotide stabilizes the backbone of the DNA.

covalent

ionic

hydrogen

metallic

weak

Explanation

The bond formed between the sugar of one nucleotide and the phosphate of an adjacent nucleotide is a covalent bond. A covalent bond is the sharing of electrons between atoms. A covalent bond is stronger than a hydrogen bond (hydrogen bonds hold pairs of nucleotides together on opposite strands in DNA). Thus, the covalent bond is crucial to the backbone of the DNA.

4

Which of the following is not true of a DNA molecule?

Adenine and thymine are held together by phosphodiester bonds

A purine or pyrimidine is bound to each sugar-phosphate group

Complementary strands are held together by hydrogen bonds

Uracil is not a component of the molecule

Explanation

DNA is a polymer composed of nucleotide monomers. Each nucleotide is formed from a deoxyribose sugar, a phosphate, and a nitrogenous base. There are two types of nitrogenous bases: purines and pyrimidines. The purines are adenine and guanine, while the pyrimidines are thymine and cytosine (and uracil). Adenine will always bind thymine and cytosine will always bind guanine. Uracil is only found in RNA, and is absent from DNA.

During DNA replication and synthesis, nucleotides align so that the nitrogenous bases are correctly paired. The bases bind to one other via hydrogen bonding to secure the nucleotide to the template strand. The protein DNA ligase then fuses the sugar-phosphate groups of adjacent nucleotides to create the DNA backbone. These bonds are known as phosphodiester bonds.

The only false statement concerns the identity of bonding between nitrogenous bases. Bases are held together by hydrogen bonds, and the DNA backbone is held together by phosphodiester bonds.

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