The Molecular Nature of Genes - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 41
About This Presentation
Title:

The Molecular Nature of Genes

Description:

The Molecular Nature of Genes Chapter 2 The Nature of Genetic Material Miescher-1869 Isolated nuclein from surgical bandages Phosphorus-bearing substance Mostly ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:481
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 42
Provided by: RandyD4
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Molecular Nature of Genes


1
The Molecular Nature of Genes
  • Chapter 2

2
(No Transcript)
3
The Nature of Genetic Material
  • Miescher-1869
  • Isolated nuclein from surgical bandages
  • Phosphorus-bearing substance
  • Mostly chromatin
  • Complex of DNA and chromosomal proteins

4
The Nature of Genetic Material
  • Transformation in Bacteria
  • Griffith
  • Id DNA as genetic material in 1928
  • Used transformation in Streptococcus pneumoniae
  • Wild type is spherical with a mucus
    capsule-smooth
  • -virulent .if injected caused lethal infections
  • Mutant strain-lost ability to make capsule
  • -avirulent-called rough
  • Key to Griffith studies
  • Heat-killed smooth could transform avirulent
    cells to virulent ones
  • Neither heat-killed OR rough caused disease by
    themselves
  • Together they are deadly

5
The Nature of Genetic Material
  • Transformation in Bacteria
  • Griffith, cont.
  • When together
  • Caused disease
  • Virulent trait passed to the live avirulent ones
  • Capsule making ability passed to avirulent form
    and then conferred to descendants as a heritable
    trait
  • MEANS that the transforming substance in the
    heat-killed bacteria was probably the gene for
    virulence itself
  • What was the substance?

6
(No Transcript)
7
(No Transcript)
8
(No Transcript)
9
(No Transcript)
10
(No Transcript)
11
(No Transcript)
12
The Nature of Genetic Material
  • DNA The Transforming Material-Avery, MacLeod,
    and McCarty
  • Used transformation similar to Griffith
  • Defined chemical nature of transforming substance
    from virulent cells
  • Removed protein
  • Extract still transformed
  • Subjected it to digestion with enzymes
  • Trypsin and chymotrypsin
  • Destroy protein
  • No effect on transformation
  • Neither did ribonuclease-degrades RNA
  • Both ruled out protein and RNA as transforming
    agent
  • Avery found DNase
  • Breaks down DNA
  • Destroyed transforming ability of virulent cell
    extract
  • Suggested that DNA was the transforming substance

13
The Nature of Genetic Material
  • DNA The Transforming Material-Avery, MacLeod,
    and McCarty-analytical tools used
  • 1. Ultracentrifugation
  • Spun transforming substance at very highspeed to
    estimate size
  • Transforming material sedimented rapidly
  • Suggests high molecular mass
  • Characteristic of DNA

14
The Nature of Genetic Material
  • DNA The Transforming Material-Avery, MacLeod,
    and McCarty-analytical tools used
  • 2. Electrophoresis
  • Placed transforming substance in an electric
    field
  • High charge-to-mass ratio caused rapid movement
  • 3. UV Absorption
  • Absorbed strongly at 260nm
  • Protein absorbs at 280nm

15
The Nature of Genetic Material
  • Further proof-Hershey and Chase
  • Used T2 virus
  • Infects E. coli
  • Phage genes enter the host cell
  • Directs synthesis of new phage particles
  • Composed of protein and DNA
  • Question was Do the genes reside in the protein
    or in the DNA?
  • Hershey/Chase showed that
  • On infection, most of the DNA entered the
    bacterium
  • Only a small amount of protein enters cell
  • Along with other evidence from previous
    experiments, it showed unequivocally the DNA is
    transforming substance!

16
(No Transcript)
17
(No Transcript)
18
(No Transcript)
19
The Nature of Genetic Material
  • Short Summary
  • Genes are made of nucleic acid
  • USUALLY DNA
  • Some simple genetic systems have RNA
  • Viruses

20
The Chemical Nature of Polynucleotides
  • DNA
  • Four nitrogenous bases
  • Purines and Pyrimidines
  • ATGC
  • Phosphoric acid
  • Deoxyribose
  • RNA
  • Four nitrogenous bases
  • Purines and Pyrimidines
  • One different from DNA
  • Phosphoric acid
  • Ribose

21
(No Transcript)
22
(No Transcript)
23
The Chemical Nature of Polynucleotides
  • Connections
  • Bases and sugars
  • Called nucleosides
  • Named from the DNA/RNA and the bases
  • Adenosine (RNA)
  • Deoxyadenosine (DNA)
  • NOTE figures are denoted with chemical
    shorthand-not all of the Hs or Cs are noted for
    simplicity sake.

24
(No Transcript)
25
(No Transcript)
26
The Chemical Nature of Polynucleotides
  • Connections, cont.
  • How nucleotides are connected
  • Nucleotides
  • Nucleosides phosphate
  • Bond from the 5 (5 prime) of one phosphate to
    the 3 (3 prime) position of the next nucleotide
  • Therefore, we say that the strand goes from 5 to
    3

27
(No Transcript)
28
The Chemical Nature of Polynucleotides
  • Summary
  • DNA and RNA
  • Chain-like molecules
  • Made up of nucleotides
  • Base linked to the 1-position of a sugar and
    phosphate group
  • Phosphate joins the sugars in a DNA or RNA chain
    through their 5- and 3-hydroxyl groups by
    phosphodiester bonds

29
Figure 2.12
30
The Double Helix
  • Spacing between adjacent bands in an arm of the X
    is inversely related to the overall repeat
    distance in the helix
  • 34Ã…
  • Spacing from top of X to the bottom inversely
    related to the spacing
  • 3.4Ã…
  • What does this mean?
  • In order for the above to be true AND Chargaffs
    rules to be applied, then this is how the
    structure of DNA is found
  • Sugar-phosphate backbones on outside
  • Bases on the inside
  • Bases must be paired-purine on one side with a
    pyrimidine on the other
  • Eliminates bulges from two large paired purines
  • Eliminates constrictions from two small
    pyrimidines

31
Figure 2.13
32
The Double Helix
  • The Helix itself
  • Likened to a twisted ladder
  • Presented three ways
  • Curving sides of the ladder
  • Sugar-phosphate backbones of the two DNA strands
  • Rungs of the ladder
  • The base pairs
  • Spacing between base pairs
  • 3.4Ã…
  • Helix repeat distance
  • 34Ã…
  • Means that there are about 10bp/turn of the helix
  • B/c of 5 to 3 make-up of the strands
  • Strands are antiparallel

33
The Double Helix
  • Summary
  • DNA is a double helix
  • Sugar-phosphate backbones on outside
  • Base pairs on inside
  • Bases pair in a specific way
  • A with T
  • G with C

34
(No Transcript)
35
(No Transcript)
36
(No Transcript)
37
Physical Chemistry of Nucleic Acids (short
version)
  • Three DNA structures
  • A, B, and Z forms
  • B form
  • Structure proposed by Watson and Crick
  • A form
  • Plane tilts 20o away from horizontal
  • 11bp/turn
  • Each turn occurs in only 25Ã… instead of 34Ã…
  • Hybrid of RNA strand and a DNA strand
  • Double stranded RNA
  • Z form
  • Left handed helix
  • Does exist but function unknown

38
(No Transcript)
39
Physical Chemistry of Nucleic Acids
  • Summary
  • Common form of DNA is the B form
  • Base pairs horizontal
  • Very small is Z form
  • Left-handed helix
  • RNA-DNA hybrid
  • A form
  • Base pairs tilted away from the horizontal
  • Separated DNA strands can be induced to anneal
  • Temperature
  • DNA concentration
  • Time

40
(No Transcript)
41
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com