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Honors Biology Chapter 8

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Title: Honors Biology Chapter 8


1
Honors Biology Chapter 8
  • From DNA to Proteins

2
Section 8.1 Identifying DNA as the Genetic
Material
  • Three major experiments led to the conclusion
    that DNA is the genetic material in cells.
  • These experiments were performed by Griffith,
    Avery, Hershey, and Chase.

3
Summarize Frederick Griffiths experiment
  • Griffith experimented with two types of bacteria
    S strain with sugar capsule (causes pneumonia and
    victim dies) and R strain without capsule (does
    not cause pneumonia and victim lives)
  • Mice injected with regular S strain died
  • Mice injected with heat-killed S strain lived
  • Mice injected with R strain lived
  • Mice injected with combination of R strain and
    heat-killed S strain died R strain had
    transformed into S strain

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What was the conclusion of his experiment?
  • Conclusion Some material must have been
    transferred from the heat-killed S strain to the
    live R bacteria he called the mystery material
    transforming principle which caused the
    harmless R bacteria to become disease-causing S
    bacteria

6
Summarize Oswald Averys experiment and what was
the conclusion of his experiment?
  • Avery used enzymes to break down proteins, RNA,
    and DNA in transformed R bacteria. He found the
    following
  • R strain bacteria that lacked protein could
    transform into S strain bacteria
  • R strain bacteria that lacked RNA could transform
    into S strain bacteria
  • R strain bacteria that lacked DNA could not
    transform into S strain bacteria
  • Conclusion DNA is the transforming principle

7
What was the significance of Alfred Hershey and
Martha Chases experiments?
  • Alfred Hershey and Martha Chase confirmed Averys
    findings with the use of bacteriophages (viruses
    that infect bacteria)
  • They found that DNA from the bacteriophage
    entered the bacterium and protein did not.
  • This convinced scientists that DNA is genetic
    material.

8
Section 8.2 Structure of DNA
  • DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) contains the
    information of life
  • It holds the blueprints (instructions) for
    making essential proteins that are needed for
    life
  • Proteins form the structural units of cells

9
What type of polymer is DNA? What is the monomer
of DNA?
  • DNA is a very long molecule that is capable of
    holding lots of information
  • It is a nucleic acid (as is RNA) and is composed
    of nucleotides.

10
Draw a nucleotide and label the parts of a
nucleotide.
  • Each nucleotide consists of these 3 parts
  • Sugar (deoxyribose)
  • Phosphate
  • Nitrogen base (guanine, thymine, cytosine, or
    adenine)
  • A nucleic acid is a series of nucleotides.

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What are the four nitrogen bases found in DNA?
How many rings do each contain in their
structural formula?
  • There are two main categories of bases purines
    and pyrimidines.
  • The purines consist of two rings. Guanine and
    adenine are purines.
  • The pyrimidines consist of one ring. Cytosine and
    thymine are pyrimidines (notice all three of
    these words have a y in themuse that to help
    you remember).
  • See page 231Figure 8.4

13
What are Chargaffs rules?
  • Erwin Chargaff found that the amount of adenine
    is always equal to the amount of thymine and the
    amount of cytosine is always equal to the amount
    of guanine

14
Who are the two men credited with the discovery
of DNA structure as a double helix?
  • James Watson and Francis Crickusing research
    collected by Erwin Chargaff, Linus Pauling,
    Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklinproposed
    the double helix structure of DNA in 1953.

15
Whose work did they use to come to their
discovery?
  • Erwin Chargaff
  • Linus Paulingfound that the structure of some
    proteins was a helix or spiral this helped in
    Watson and Cricks hypothesis in the structure of
    DNA
  • Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkinsused X-ray
    crystallography that showed the DNA molecule
    resembled a coiled helix and was composed of two
    chains of nucleotides

16
Rosalind Franklin
17
Define double helix.
  • Two strands of DNA wind around each other like a
    twisted ladder
  • DNA consists of many nucleotides in the form of a
    double helix (spiral).
  • The sugars and phosphates comprise the
    backbone, and the bases pair on the inside.

18
What are the base-pairing rules?
  • Adenine Thymine (just remember the word at)
  • Cytosine Guanine
  • The base pairs are held together by weak hydrogen
    bonds.
  • Adenine forms two hydrogen bonds with thymine,
    while cytosine forms three hydrogen bonds with
    guanine

19
Draw a section of DNA and label the bonds,
nitrogen bases, sugars, and phosphates in your
drawing.
20
DNA Structure Characteristics Recap
  • Nucleotides bond to each other to form one strand
  • Two strands bond to each other (via complementary
    base pairing) to form the double stranded DNA
    molecule
  • Two strands twist to form the double helix
    (visualize a ladder that is twisted)
  • Sides of the ladder are formed by alternating
    sugar and phosphate units which are covalently
    bonded
  • Rungs of the ladder consist of bonded pairs of
    nitrogen bases (they are joined by weak hydrogen
    bonds)
  • Rungs of the ladder are always uniform in length
    because one base is always a purine (2 ring) and
    the other is always a pyrimidine (1 ring) A-T,
    C-G

21
Extra Notes on DNA Structure
  • Complementary strands the arrangement of
    nitrogen bases along one strand is the exact
    complement of the bases on the other strand.
  • Ex if one strand is ATTCGCCA, then the other
    strand is TAAGCGGT.
  • Note that the sequence of DNA is not randomit
    serves as a code for the making of proteins.

22
  • Even though DNA is composed of only four
    different nucleotides, millions of different
    combinations and sequences can be made.
  • Two Primary Activities of DNA
  • Segments of DNA called genes store information
    for making proteins
  • It can copy itself exactly for new cells

23
Section 8.3 DNA Replication
  • Occurs in the nucleus
  • When the two complementary strands of DNA are
    separated, each strand can serve as a pattern to
    make a new complementary strand.
  • Enzymes and other proteins do the actual work of
    replication not DNA.

24
Replication Process (pages 236-237)
  • An enzyme, DNA helicase, unwinds the two
    complementary strands of DNA and breaks the
    hydrogen bonds between nitrogen bases that hold
    the strands together Unzipping the DNA
  • Nucleotide bases floating free in the nucleus
    bond with unpaired bases that are now exposed on
    each strand
  • The complementary bases bond via hydrogen bonds
    by DNA polymerase
  • Two new DNA molecules are formed that are exact
    replicas of the original DNA

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  • When DNA is unzipped, replication proceeds on
    both strands in opposite directions.

27
Replication Mistakes
  • DNA is copied many sections at a time, so it goes
    quickly. DNA is copied very accurately because of
    proofreading mechanism in DNA polymerase.
  • If a mistake is made, this enzyme can backtrack
    and replace the wrong nitrogen base.

28
Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Replication
  • Because prokaryotic DNA is a single loop,
    replication begins at one place along the loop
  • Replication occurs in opposite directions until
    both replication forks meet
  • Eukaryotic DNA is linear and replication occurs
    at many sites along a chromosome
  • This allows faster replication than prokaryotic
    replication
  • Replication bubbles are formed along the
    chromosome (Figure 8.9 on page 238)
  • Replication of an entire human chromosome occurs
    in about eight hours

29
Section 8.4 Transcription
  • Francis Crick defined the Central dogma of
    molecular biology stating that information goes
    from DNA to RNA to proteins
  • The central dogma involves three processes
  • Replicationmaking copies of DNA from DNA
  • Transcriptionmaking copies of DNA in the form of
    RNA
  • Translationtaking RNA to make a chain of amino
    acids or protein

30
RNA
  • DNA stores and transmits the information needed
    to make proteins but it does not actually use
    that information to make proteins.
  • That is the function of RNA, ribonucleic acid.

31
RNA vs. DNA
RNA DNA
Long chain molecule made of nucleotide subunits Long chain molecule made of nucleotide subunits
Single strand of nucleotides Double strand of nucleotides
Ribose as 5 carbon sugar Deoxyribose as 5 carbon sugar
Composed of G, C, A, U (uracil) Composed of G, C, A, T (thymine)
32
Three types of RNA
  • mRNA (messenger)
  • carries genetic information from DNA to the
    cytoplasm (site of translation)
  • serves as a pattern for assembly of amino acids
  • tRNA (transfer)
  • brings amino acids from the cytoplasm to a
    ribosome to make growing protein
  • each tRNA bonds to a specific amino acid
  • rRNA (ribosomal)
  • part of ribosomes
  • site of protein synthesis

33
Transcription
  • Transcription is similar to DNA replication in
    that a strand of DNA is used a template to make
    copies.
  • One strand of DNA is the sense strandthis is
    the strand used for coding the mRNA sequence.
  • The other is the antisense (on nonsense) strand
    and is not used for the mRNA.

34
Summary of Transcription
  • 1. RNA polymerase binds to DNA and unzips it
  • 2. RNA polymerase will add and link RNA
    nucleotides to the DNA template as it reads the
    gene
  • Hydrogen bonds form between bases of unzipped
    DNA and RNA nucleotides
  • 3. When the stop signal is reached, RNA is
    released from DNA strand

35
Triplet Code
  • A codon is a three-nucleotide sequence on mRNA
    that codes for an amino acid
  • Each codon codes for an amino acid, stop codon,
    or start codon (methionine)
  • See page 244 in your textbook for the Genetic
    Code of mRNA codons.

36
Codon Chart on page 244
  • You must know how to use this chart also!

37
Codon Wheel
  • Remember, the codon on the mRNA corresponds to
    the amino acid!

38
Translation
  • After transcription, RNA moves from the nucleus
    to the cytoplasm to make proteins. The
    translation occurs on ribosomes.
  • start codon signals ribosome to start reading
    the mRNA strand
  • (start AUG )
  • stop codon signals the ribosome to stop reading
    mRNA (stop UGA, UAA, UAG)

39
tRNA
  • One region of tRNA bonds to a specific amino
    acid, the opposite loop contains a sequence of
    three bases called an anticodon
  • tRNA anticodon bonds with the complementary mRNA
    codon

40
tRNA Structure
41
  • Ribosome attaches to AUG start codon on mRNA
  • AUG pairs with UAC on tRNA (UAC tRNA carries
    methionine)
  • Ribosome moves along mRNA
  • Codon paired with its anticodon (tRNA)
  • Amino acid then added to the chain
  • Continues until ribosome reaches a stop codon
  • Several ribosomes translating same mRNA at same
    time
  • mRNA is released, piece of protein is released

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