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Molecular Genetics

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Title: Molecular Genetics


1
Molecular Genetics
2
DNA Review!
  • Has shape of helix or corkscrew
  • Is about 2 nm in diameter
  • 2m of it in a nucleus!!
  • Makes a complete helical turn ever 3.4 nm
  • An awesome interactive review...
  • http//learn.genetics.utah.edu/content/begin/tour/

3
Three main components
  • deoxyribose sugar
  • a phosphate group
  • nitrogenous base
  • adenine
  • guanine
  • thymine
  • cytosine

4
Turn up the Base(s)!
5
  • DNA is composed of many nucleotides held together
    by phosphodiester bonds (therefore it is a
    polymer)
  • Sugar Phosphate Sugar - Phosphate

6
Structure of deoxyribose
7
The Double Helix
  • DNA consists of two antiparallel strands of
    nucleotides
  • Bases of one strand are paired with bases in the
    other strand
  • Nitrogenous base pairs are arranged above each
    other, perpendicular to the axis of the molecule
  • A Purine always bonded to a pyrimidine
  • Adenine with Thymine
  • Guanine with Cytosine
  • Termed complimentary base pairing
  • Fundamental to the storage and transfer of
    genetic information

8
  • Purines A G
  • Pyrimidines T C (also U in RNA)
  • bases are bonded together by hydrogen bonds
  • right-handed helix (clockwise turn) makes
    complete turn every 10 nucleotides

9
Two strands of DNA run antiparallel
  • One strand runs in the 5 to 3 direction while
    the other strand runs in the 3 to 5.
  • The 3 end terminates with the hydroxyl group of
    the deoxyribose sugar.
  • The 5 end terminates with a phosphate group

10
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11
Finding the code...
  • 5 - ATGCCGTTA - 3
  • 3 - TACGGCAAT - 5
  • By convention, only the 5 to 3 strand is
    written since the complementary strand can easily
    be deduced ...
  • Try this one...
  • 5 - TGGACGCTT - 3
  • 3 - ACCTGCGAA - 5

12
Homework...
  • Page 216 1-3, 5, 6

13
DNA Replication
  • During cell division in eukaryotic cells,
    replicated genetic material in nucleus divided
    equally between two daughter nuclei via mitosis
  • Followed by cytokinesis in which cell is split
    into two new cells
  • Mitotic cell division essential for growth of
    tissues during embryonic development and
    childhood, tissue regeneration, repair of damaged
    tissue, growth

14
  • Hydrogen bonds between complimentary bases can
    break, allowing DNA helix to unzip
  • Each strand then acts as a template to build the
    complimentary strand
  • Results in two identical DNA molecules (one for
    each daughter cell)

15
The Details...
  • DNA cannot be simply pulled apart due to hydrogen
    bonding
  • Two parent DNA strands must be unravelled and
    kept separate.
  • Specific enzymes work together to expose the DNA
    template strands.
  • DNA helicase breaks hydrogen bonds between
    complementary base pairs, resulting in
    unwinding
  • DNA Gyrase enzyme relieves tension of unwinding
    helix.
  • Two individual strands are kept apart by
    single-stranded binding proteins (SSBs)
  • SSBs bind to exposed DNA single strands and block
    hydrogen bonding. (Prevent Annealing)

16
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17
  • Replication begins in two directions from
    origin(s) as a region of DNA is unwound
  • Complimentary strands are built as soon as an
    area of DNA has been unwound
  • As two strands of DNA are disrupted, junction
    where they are still joined is called replication
    fork
  • DNA replication proceeds toward direction of
    replication fork on one strand and away from the
    fork on the other strand
  • When two replication forks are quite near each
    other, a replication bubble forms

18
Building the Complementary Strands
  • In prokaryotes
  • DNA polymerase I, II, III are the three enzymes
    known to function in replication and repair
  • In eukaryotes
  • Several different types of DNA polymerase are at
    work
  • enzyme that builds the complementary strand using
    the template strand as a guide in prokaryotes is
    DNA polymerase III

19
DNA polymerase III adds complementary nucleotides
in the 5 to 3 direction, using RNA primers as
starting points
20
The Leading StrandDNA polymerase
III...
  • Functions only under certain conditions
  • It synthesizes DNA in the 5 to 3 direction,
    therefore adding free deoxyribonucleoside
    triphosphates to a 3 end of an elongating strand
  • Requires an initial starting 3 end to commence
    elongation
  • An RNA primer of 10 60 base pairs of DNA are
    annealed to the template strand since DNA
    polymerase III cannot initiate a new
    complementary strand by itself
  • Primer is synthesized by enzyme primase

21
  • RNA primer marks initiation sequence
  • DNA polymerase III can start elongation by adding
    free deoxyribonucleotide triphosphates to the
    growing complementary strand
  • Free bases in nucleoplasm used by DNA polymerase
    III to build complementary strands
  • DNA polymerase III uses energy derived from
    breaking the bond between the first and second
    phosphate to drive dehydration synthesis
    (condensation rxn) that adds complementary
    nucleotide to elongating strand
  • Extra two phosphates recycled by cell

22
  • Since DNA always synthesized in 5 to 3
    direction, and the templates strands run
    antiparallel, only one strand is able to be built
    continuously.
  • This is the strand which uses the 3 to 5
    template strand and is called the leading strand
    and is build towards the replication fork.

23
The Lagging Strand
  • The other strand is synthesized discontinually in
    short fragments and is called the lagging strand
  • Okazaki fragments are short fragments of DNA that
    are a result of the synthesis of the lagging
    strand during DNA replication (eukaryotes 100-200
    nucleotides in length, 1000-2000 in prokaryotic)
  • DNA ligase joins the Okazaki fragments into one
    strand by the creation of a phosphodiester bond
  • The two double stranded DNA molecules are
    produced and twist into a helix automatically

24
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25
Ensuring Quality Control of New DNA Strands DNA
Repair
  • As complentary strands are built, DNA polymerase
    III and DNA polymerase I proofread newly
    synthesized strands
  • When mistakes occur, either enzyme can function
    as exonuclease which backtracks past the
    nucleotide on the end of the strand that is
    incorrectly paired to a nucleotide, excises it,
    and continues adding nucleotides to the
    complimentary strand
  •  

26
Summary Page 222...
27
Watch these!
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vteV62zrm2P0feature
    related
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v4jtmOZaIvS0feature
    related

28
Homework...
  • Page 223 1,2
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