GENETICS - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 84
About This Presentation
Title:

GENETICS

Description:

DNA- bunched up as tiny bead-like globules consisting of base pairs wound around ... mRNA is synthesized on DNA and has the info that is encoded in genetic code ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:43
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 85
Provided by: rollingme
Category:
Tags: genetics

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: GENETICS


1
GENETICS
  • Unit 5
  • by Jessie DaPisa, Jessica Huhn, and Jackie Pesenko

2
Nucleus
  • Contains the DNA, chromatin, and chromosomes
  • DNA- bunched up as tiny bead-like globules
    consisting of base pairs wound around proteins
  • Chromatin- DNA combined with proteins which forms
    chromosomes during cell division
  • Chromosome- consists of one long DNA molecule
    wrapped around globules of histones and
    non-histone proteins

3
Chromatin
  • Two types
  • Euchromatin- functional genes that we can map and
    identify
  • Heterochromatin- DNA that hasnt been identified
    as genes

4
DNA
  • Deoxyribonucleic acid
  • All cells need a set of instructions in order to
    survive
  • These instructions are provided in the form of DNA

5
DNA Structure
  • Nitrogen bases
  • Pyrimadines- single ring bases
  • Cytosine thymine
  • Purines- double ring bases
  • Guanine adenine
  • Sugar backbone
  • Phosphate groups

6
Double Helix
  • Always double-stranded
  • Weakly attracted by hydrogen bonds
  • Wind around each other, forming a double helix
    configuration
  • Consists of a sugar-phosphate backbone
  • Anti-parallel strands (backbones in opposite
    directions)

7
Base pairs
  • Adenine bonds with thymine
  • Two hydrogen bonds
  • Guanine bonds with cytosine
  • Three hydrogen bonds

8
Forces that hold DNA together
  • Hydrogen bonding
  • Between base pairs
  • Hydrophobic interactions
  • DNA bases are insoluble in water, so they stick
    together in aqueous solutions
  • Base stacking
  • When the bases lie on top of each other, like a
    stack of pennies

9
Denaturing
  • To denature to unwind
  • Hydrogen bonds may be broken or disrupted
    resulting in denatured DNA in three ways
  • Add a base and raise the pH
  • Bonds will break if pH is raised above 12
  • Add urea and formamide, both are strong hydrogen
    bonding solvents
  • Increase the heat, it disrupts the bonds

10
DNA Replication
  • The process of copying a double-stranded DNA
    molecule
  • Triggered by the expression of all required
    proteins
  • Mechanism of DNA replication
  • DNA synthesis

11
DNA Synthesis
  • Synthesis occurs in a 5 to 3 direction
  • Leading strand- made continuously in the 5-3
    direction
  • Lagging strand- made discontinuously in the
    opposite direction of the replication fork

12
Lagging strand synthesis
  • Helicase unwinds the DNA strands
  • Primase synthesizes a new complementary RNA
    primer
  • DNA polymerase elongates primer in 5-3
    direction until it reaches a neighboring primer
  • This newly synthesized DNA is an Okazaki fragment
  • DNA ligase joins the adjacent Okazaki fragments
  • Gyrase winds the molecule back up

13
DNA Repair
  • DNA polymerase
  • Puts bases down in order while proofreading what
    is has laid down (lagging strand only)
  • If theres a mistake, polymerase will go back and
    fix it
  • However, if it continues two bases past the
    mismatch, chances of it going back are very low

14
DNA Repair (cont.)
  • Photo-reactivating enzyme
  • Activated by the sunlight (U.V. rays) and breaks
    the thymine to thymine dimers
  • Excision repair
  • Responsible for repairing a broad spectrum of DNA
    damage from U.V. damage to bulky lesions

15
Excision Repair
  • Abilities
  • Repair compounds of different structures
  • Make repairs when compounds bind in different
    places
  • Detect damage in DNA
  • Three enzymes
  • Uvr A, Uvr B, Uvr C
  • Requires presence of the complementary strand of
    the double helix

16
Mechanisms ofRepair
  • Recognition
  • Enzymes bind in the vicinity of DNA lesion
  • Incision
  • Two nicks are made on either side of the lesion
  • Displacement and Resynthesis
  • Lesion removed and polymerase resynthesizes the
    DNA
  • Sealing
  • Ligase seals the new DNA

17
RNA
  • Ribonucleic acid
  • Four types
  • rRNA
  • principle component of ribosomes
  • synthesizes amino acids into polypeptides
  • mRNA
  • carries DNA code to ribosome during protein
    synthesis
  • tRNA
  • carries amino acids to ribosome
  • HnRNA
  • pre-edited transcribed RNA found in the nucleus

18
  • RNA
  • Ribose sugar
  • Uracil
  • Single-stranded
  • DNA
  • Deoxyribose sugar
  • Thymine
  • Double-stranded

Vs.
19
Protein Synthesis
  • Prokaryotes
  • Ribosomes can attach directly to the mRNA
    molecule while mRNA is being synthesized
  • Eukaryotes
  • Nuclear membrane separates transcription from
    translation
  • This allows for RNA processing

20
RNA processing
  • Enzymes modify the mRNA before the genetic
    message leaves the nucleus
  • pre-mRNA
  • Capping
  • Splicing
  • Polyadenylation
  • mRNA

21
Mechanisms of RNASplicing
  • Spliceosome cuts the introns at specific points,
    releases them, and joins adjacent exons
  • Functions of introns
  • May control gene activity
  • Regulate the passage of mRNA from nucleus to
    cytoplasm
  • May allow different cells from one organism to
    make different proteins from common genes
  • Proteins are able to change one part of a gene,
    yet keep another part unaltered

22
Protein Synthesis (for RNA)
  • 5 to 3 direction using RNA polymerase
  • Many RNA molecules can be transcribed
    simultaneously from different parts of the same
    DNA molecule
  • Spacer regions- spaces between DNA that are not
    transcribed

23
Ribosome
  • Coded mRNA is decoded in the ribosome by tRNA
  • Two major components
  • Large subunit
  • Small subunit
  • Binding sites
  • P site- peptide binding site
  • A site- amino acid binding site

24
Gene Mutations
25
Mutations
  • Point Mutations- chemical changes in just one
    base pair of a gene
  • Mutagens- a number of physical and chemical
    agents
  • Spontaneous Mutations- errors during DNA
    replication, repair, or recombination

26
Physical Mutagens
  • Physical mutagen includes ultraviolet light
  • Can produce disruptive thymine dimers in DNA

27
Example
  • Hermann Mullers fruit fly experiment in 1920s
  • Exposed fruit flies to X-ray
  • Drosophila could mutate
  • X-rays and other high energy radiation can pose
    hazards to the DNA of people and laboratory
    organisms

28
Chemical Mutagen
  • Chemicals are inserted by themselves into DNA
    double helix
  • Pair incorrectly during DNA replication

29
Example
  • Researchers expose DNA to different chemicals to
    determine which are carcinogens (cancer-causing
    chemicals)
  • Most carcinogens are mutations
  • Most mutations are carcinogens

30
Point Mutations
  • Two types
  • Base pair substitutions
  • Base pair insertions or deletions

31
Substitutions
  • Base-pair substitution- the replacement of one
    nucleotide and its partner in the complementary
    DNA strand with another pair of nucleotides
  • Silent mutations- a change in a base pair may
    transform one codon into another that is
    translated into the same amino acid

32
Example
  • If CCG mutated to CCA, then the mRNA codon that
    used to be GGC would become GGU
  • A glycine would still be inserted at the proper
    location in the protein

33
Missense Mutations
  • Altered codon still codes for an amino acid and
    thus makes sense, although not necessarily the
    right sense
  • A point mutation changes a codon into a stop
    codon, translation will be terminated prematurely
  • Resulting polypeptide will be shorter than the
    poly peptide encoded by the normal gene

34
Nonsense Mutations
  • Alterations that change an amino acid codon to a
    stop signal
  • Nearly all nonsense mutations lead to non
    functional proteins

35
(No Transcript)
36
Non-Scientific Terms
  • Harmful- changes protein so much the protein is
    non-functional
  • Harms the cell organism
  • Harmless- may or may not change protein
  • Beneficial- mutation changes the protein shape,
    but makes protein function more efficient.
  • Makes cell organism better

37
Insertions Deletions
  • Additions or losses of nucleotide pairs in a gene
  • Disastrous effect on the resulting protein more
    often than substitutions

38
Frame-shift
  • Altered reading frame of the genetic material
  • Occurs whenever the number of nucleotides
    inserted or deleted is not a multiple of 3
  • All the nucleotides that are downstream of the
    deletion or insertion will be improperly grouped
    into codons
  • Results are extensive missense probably ending
    sooner or later in nonsense

39
(No Transcript)
40
Ramifications
  • Result from errors in replication
  • Damage that repair enzymes do not correct
  • Spontaneous rearrangements in the DNA molecule

41
T r a n s c r i p t i o nThe synthesis of mRNA
from a DNA molecule
  • Helicase unwinds the DNA molecule
  • RNA polymerase matches down a RNA base with the
    appropriate DNA base
  • Ligase seals the RNA strand
  • mRNA strand leaves the DNA molecule and the
    nucleus
  • Gyrase winds up the DNA strand

42
Nucleotide sequences
  • Promoters start signal for RNA synthesis
  • Initiation site where transcription begins
  • TATA box
  • enriched with T and A nucleotides
  • about 15 nucleotides before initiation site
  • RNA polymerase II cant recognize bind to the
    promoter without transcription

43
T r a n s l a t i o nThe synthesis of a
polypeptide from the mRNA sequence
  • AUG initiator codon is recognized by the smaller
    of the two ribosome units
  • 509 subunit binds with 309 subunit
  • P site has the first mRNA codon and the second
    codon is in the A site
  • tRNA and mRNA bind to each other with hydrogen
    bonds
  • Dehydration reaction

44
Translocation/Elongation
  • The movement of the ribosome on the mRNA strand
  • Ribosome will move 3 base pairs to the right
    tRNA leaves so the A site is open for another
    tRNA
  • Enzyme elongation factor P and energy from GTP
  • Continues translocating until stop codon

45
(No Transcript)
46
The Wobble Effect
  • The reason that 31 tRNA molecules carry 61 codons
  • Anticodon is curved, resulting in different bases
    pairing with each other
  • Polyribosomes- more then one ribosome working on
    a single polypeptide
  • 3 - x3 x2 x1 - 5 Anticodon (tRNA strand)
  • 5 - y3 y2 y1 - 3 Codon (mRNA strand)

47
Polypeptide to functional protein
  • Conformation- peptide begins to fold and coil
    spontaneously to form a protein with a specific
    3D shape
  • May be cleaved or joined to other molecules

48
Proteins
  • Composed of amino acids
  • Made in ribosome
  • DNA sequence determines which proteins are made
  • mRNA delivers info from DNA to ribosome

49
Protein Targeting Ribosomes
  • Free- produce proteins that are found in
    cytoplasm
  • Bound- make membrane proteins and proteins that
    are secreted
  • Synthesis of all proteins start in cytoplasm
  • Polypeptide causes attachment

50
Code
  • mRNA is synthesized on DNA and has the info that
    is encoded in genetic code
  • Every 3 nitrogen bases specify for 1 of 20 amino
    acids
  • Total of 64 codons
  • 3 stop codons (UAA, UAG, UGA)
  • Initiator codons (AUG, GUG)

51
(No Transcript)
52
Mendelian Genetics
53
Gregor Johann Mendel
  • 1822-1884
  • Became a monk
  • It was at the monastery where he began breeding
    garden peas
  • Why peas?
  • Available in many different varieties
  • Gave him control over mating
  • Easily see traits (true-breeds)

54
Mendels Generations
  • P Generation (Parent)
  • True-breeding
  • F1 Generation
  • Hybrids
  • F2 Generation
  • Ratio 31

55
Traits and Characters
  • Mendel observed different traits of peas that
    were either dominant or recessive
  • Ex Round seeds (R) v. Wrinkled seeds (r)
  • What is the difference between a trait and a
    character?
  • Character- Heritable feature that varies among
    individuals (I.e. color)
  • Trait- Each variant for a character (I.e. purple,
    white)

56
Genetic Terms
  • Alleles- alternative versions of a gene
  • Phenotypes- trait (outer appearance)
  • Genotypes- genetic make-up

57
Mendels Law of Segregation
  • When alleles separate and then randomly combine
    with each other during fertilization
  • Different alleles account for variations in
    inherited characters
  • For each character, an organism inherits 2
    alleles(1 from each parent)
  • If the 2 alleles differ, then one is
    dominant-fully expressed and the other is
    recessive-no noticeable effect
  • The 2 alleles for each character separate during
    gamete production

58
Punnett Squares
  • Homozygous/Heterozygous
  • Monohybrid/Dihybrid

59
Practice Problem
  • If 2 heterozygous tall pea plants are crossed
    then
  • How many tall plants would be expected?
  • 1
  • How many dwarf plants would be expected?
  • 1
  • How many hybrid plants would be expected?
  • 2

60
Probability
ppyyRr ¼ (probability of PP) X ½ (yy) X
(Rr) 1/16 ppYyrr ¼ X ½ X ½ 1/16 Ppyyrr ½
X ½ X ½ 2/16 Ppyyrr ¼ X ½ X ½ 1/16 Ppyyrr
¼ X ½ X ½ 1/16 Chance of at least two
recessive traits
61
Mendels Law ofIndependent Assortment
  • If 2 characters separate independently, 4 classes
    of gametes will be produced by F1 and F2 will
    have all possible combination traits in a 9331
    ratio
  • Occurs with genes on different chromosomes
    (during Meiosis)

62
Test Cross
  • Is used to tell if a certain organism is
    heterozygous or homozygous and to determine the
    genotype of that organism
  • Typically use a homozygous recessive organism to
    mate with

63
Dominant v. Recessive
  • Incomplete Dominance- When F1 hybrids have an
    appearance somewhere between the phenotypes of 2
    parental varieties (Sharing)
  • Red flowers x White flowersPink flowers
  • Codominance- When 2 alleles affect phenotypes in
    separate, but distinguishable ways (Do not blend)
  • Blood Types AAxBB AB

64
  • Lethal Recessive- Homozygous recessive organisms
    cannot survive
  • Multiple Alleles- When there are more than 2
    alleles possible at a single locus
  • Ex In fruit flies, there are 37 different
    alleles for eye color at on locus.

65
Genetic Interactions
  • Pleiotropy- The ability of a gene to affect an
    organism in many different ways
  • Ex Alleles with sickle cell disease cause
    multiple syndromes
  • Epistasis- When a gene at one locus alters the
    phenotypic expression of a gene at a second locus
  • If you breed brown mice (Ccbb) with white mice
    (ccBB) you can get all black mice (ccBb)

66
  • Polygenic- An additive effect of 2 or more genes
    on a single phenotypic character
  • Ex Skin pigment of humans
  • Incomplete Penetrance- When an organism has an
    abnormal genotype without showing it
  • Polydactyl- expressing an extra digit

67
  • Sex-limited Sex-influenced- When a trait is
    limited to affect only one gender more often than
    the other
  • Ex Sex-limited Uterine cancer because males do
    not have a uterus
  • Variable Age of Onset- Some traits do not appear
    until later in life
  • Huntingtons disease is a neuromuscular disorder
    that doesnt show symptoms until individual is
    about 40 years

68
Examples of Genetic Disorders
  • Recessive Alleles
  • Cystic Fibrosis
  • Most common lethal genetic disease
  • Occurs when chloride channels are absent of
    defective
  • Allows for build up of extracellular chloride
  • Sickle Cell Anemia
  • Most common inherited disease among blacks
  • Caused by substitution of 1 amino acid in the
    hemoglobin protein of red blood cells-take sickle
    shape

69
  • Dominant Alleles
  • Achondroplasia
  • Form of dwarfism
  • Affects heterozygous individuals
  • Huntingtons Disease
  • Degenerative disease of the nervous system
  • Irreversible

70
How to test for thesediseases
  • Amniocentesis
  • Fluid from amniotic cavity that can be tested for
    chemicals by the fetus
  • Cells have to be GROWN for karyotyping
  • Chorionic Villus Sampling
  • Fetal tissue suctioned from chorionic villi of
    placenta but cannot provide amnionic fluid
  • Used for IMMEDIATE karyotyping (cannot test for
    disease)

71
Genetics of Sex
  • Chromosomal Theory of Inheritance
  • Mendelian genes have specific loci on
    chromosomes-which undergo segregation and
    independent assortment
  • Thomas Hunt Morgan
  • Experimented with Drosophilia Melanogaster (Fruit
    Flies)
  • Bred flies and his first mutant was a fly with
    white eyes
  • This made it possible for him to trace a gene for
    eye color to a specific chromosome

72
(No Transcript)
73
Sex Linkages
  • SRY Gene
  • Sex-determining region of Y
  • Without this gene-gonads develop into ovaries
  • Some recessive traits are carried by X chromosome
  • Ex Colorblindness to be affected, a man only
    needs to have 1 recessive gene from his mother
    women must receive it from both parents

74
  • X Inactivation
  • When 1 chromosome remains coiled as a Barr Body
    (genes that are not expressed and do not
    interact)
  • All miotic descendents of that cell have same
    inactive X
  • Recombination
  • Process of crossing over causes ratios of some
    traits to not meet Mendelian predictions
  • of recombination directly relates to distance
    between loci

75
(No Transcript)
76
Chromosomal Alterations
  • Aneuploidy- when the offspring has an abnormal
    chromosome number
  • Polyploidy- The general term for more than 2
    complete chromosome sets
  • Chromosome structure
  • Deletion- removes chromosome segment
  • Duplication- repeats segment
  • Inversion- reverses segment
  • Translocation- moves a segment from 1 chromosome
    to another non-homologous chromosome

77
(No Transcript)
78
Chromosome Anomalies
  • Nondisjunction- When members of a pair of
    homologous chromosomes do not move apart properly
    during Meiosis I or the sister chromatids fail to
    separate during Meiosis II

79
Human disorders as a result of these errors
  • Down Syndrome
  • Trisomy 21
  • Alters individuals phenotype
  • Klinefelters Syndrome
  • Extra X in male
  • Feminine body characteristics
  • Turner Syndrome
  • Only known viable monosomy in humans
  • Phenotypically female but sex organs do not
    mature at adolescence and are sterile

80
Genomic Imprinting
  • A gene on 1 chromosome is somehow silenced while
    its allele on the homologous chromosome is left
    free to be expressed
  • Same alleles may have different effects on
    offspring depending on whether they arrive in the
    zygote via ovum or via sperm (Parental imprinting)

81
(No Transcript)
82
Pedigrees
  • Family Tree showing parents and children
    throughout generations
  • Can trace and possibly predict genetic disorders
    of
  • Recessive inherited disorders
  • Dominant inherited disorders
  • Multifactorials
  • Combination of genes and environment
  • Ex Cleft Lip, Spina Bifida

83
(No Transcript)
84
  • LAB 7
  • Genetics of
  • Organisms
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com