Title: The Molecular Nature of Genes
1The Molecular Nature of Genes
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3The Nature of Genetic Material
- Miescher-1869
- Isolated nuclein from surgical bandages
- Phosphorus-bearing substance
- Mostly chromatin
- Complex of DNA and chromosomal proteins
4The 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
5The 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?
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12The 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
13The 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
14The 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
15The 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!
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19The Nature of Genetic Material
- Short Summary
- Genes are made of nucleic acid
- USUALLY DNA
- Some simple genetic systems have RNA
- Viruses
20The 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
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23The 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.
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26The 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
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28The 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
29Figure 2.12
30The 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
31Figure 2.13
32The 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
33The 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
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37Physical 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
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39Physical 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
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