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DNA

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DNA Chapter 10 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: DNA


1
Chapter 10
  • DNA

2
10.1 Discovery of DNA
  • Griffiths Experiments (1928)
  • Griffiths experiments showed that hereditary
    material can pass from one bacterial cell to
    another.
  • The transfer of genetic material to one cell from
    another cell or from one organism to another
    organism is called transformation.

3
Page 194
4
Averys Experiments (1940s)
  • Averys work showed that DNA was the heredity
    material that transfers information between
    bacterial cells.

5
Hershery-Chase Experiment
  • Hershey and Chase confirmed that DNA, and not
    protein, is the hereditary material.
  • Page 195

6
Structure of DNA
  • 10.2

7
DNA The Blueprint of Life
  • Established by James Watson and Francis Crick
    (1950s)
  • DNA contains the instructions for making proteins
    within the cell.
  • Shape of a double helix
  • Made up of repeating sub-units called nucleotides

8
DNA codes for genes
  • Gene - A segment of DNA that codes for a protein,
    which in turn codes for a trait (skin tone, eye
    coloretc.), a gene is a stretch of DNA.

9
Deoxyribonucleic acid - DNA
  • Monomer nucleotides
  • Each nucleotides has
  • Deoxyribose sugar
  • Phosphate group
  • (1 of 4) nitrogen containing base

10
The 4 Bases in DNA are
  • Thymine (T)
  • Cytosine (C)
  • Guanine (G)
  • Adenine (A)

11
Nitrogen Rings
  • Purines have double rings of carbon-nitrogen (G,
    A)
  • Pyrimidines have single carbon-nitrogen rings (C,
    T)

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Complementary Base Pairing
  • Base Pairing Rules
  • 1. C and G
  • 2. T and A

14
Hydrogen Bonds
  • How do the nitrogenous bases stick together?
  • Hydrogen bonds
  • 3 H bonds hold G C together
  • 2 H bonds hold T A together

15
DNA Replication 10.3
  • Occurs when chromosomes duplicate before mitosis
    meiosis
  • Makes an exact copy of the DNA
  • H bonds between bases break and enzymes unzip
    the molecule

16
Steps of DNA Replication (pg. 201)
  • Enzymes called helicases separate the DNA strand
    breaking the H bonds at the replication fork
  • Enzymes called DNA polymerase add complementary
    nucleotides
  • DNA polymerase falls off when done replicating
    and the result is an
  • identical strand of DNA

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Semi-conservative replication-Each old strand of
nucleotides serves as a template for each new
strand.
19
Another View of Replication
20
Protein Synthesis
  • 10.4

The Central Dogma the flow of genetic
information from DNA to RNA to Protein
21
Protein Synthesis
  • 2 Parts
  • Transcription makes a RNA molecule
    complementary to a portion of DNA.
  • Translation occurs when the sequences of bases
    of mRNA directs the sequence of amino acids in a
    polypeptide.

22
RNA
  • Ribonucleic Acid
  • 2nd type of nucleic acid
  • Monomer nucleotide
  • Ribose sugar
  • 1 of 4 N bases
  • Phosphate group

23
N-bases
  • A, G, C, U
  • Uracil replaces Thymine
  • Base pairing rules A-U, G-C
  • Purpose to transfer genetic material from DNA
    (inside the nucleus) to the site of protein
    synthesis (in the cytoplasm)

24
How does RNA differ from DNA?
  1. Different sugars (deoxyribose vs. ribose)
  2. Different N-bases (thymine vs. uracil)
  3. Different shapes (double helix vs. single strand)

25
Types of RNA
  • Messenger RNA (mRNA)
  • Carries genetic info from the nucleus to the
    cytoplasm
  • Transfer RNA (tRNA)
  • Carries specific amino acids to the ribosome to
    build the protein
  • Ribosomal RNA (rRNA)
  • Major component of the ribosome organelle
  • Site of protein synthesis
  • Most abundant type of RNA

26
3 Types of RNA
27
How is RNA made?
  • Transcription
  • The process by which RNA is copied from DNA in
    the nucleus

28
Steps of Transcription
  1. RNA polymerase binds to the promoter section of
    DNA
  2. DNA unwinds and separates
  3. RNA polymerase adds nucleotides complimentary to
    the DNA template strand
  4. Process ends once RNA polymerase reaches the
    termination signal on the DNA

29
Definitions
  • RNA polymerase enzyme use to make an RNA polymer
    from DNA
  • Promoter Starting point on DNA
  • DNA template Strand of DNA that RNA is
    complementary to (create from)
  • Termination signal Ending point on DNA

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Products of Transcription
  • mRNA, tRNA, rRNA
  • All products move out of the nucleus and go into
    the cytoplasm to be used in protein synthesis

DNA ? RNA
mRNA tRNA rRNA
35
Protein Synthesis
  • The making of proteins at the ribosome
  • The amount and kind of proteins produced in a
    cell determine its structure function
  • Proteins carry out the genetic instruction in DNA

36
Protein Review
  • Monomer amino acids
  • 20 different types
  • Linked together by peptide bonds
  • Sequence of amino acids determines the proteins
    structure and function

37
The Genetic Code
  • The correlation between nucleotide sequence (DNA
    or RNA) and amino acid sequence (protein)
  • Codons combination of 3 mRNA nucleotides that
    code for a specific amino acid

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Types of codons
  • 64 codons code for 20 amino acids
  • Thus more than one codon codes for an AA
  • Start codon (AUG) starts the process of
    translation
  • Stop codons (UAA, UAG, UGA) ends the process of
    translation

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41
Circular Genetic Code
42
Translation
  • The process of assembling polypeptides (proteins)
    from nucleotide sequence in mRNA
  • Translating from one language (nucleotides)
    into another language (amino acids)

43
Steps of Translation
  • During translation, amino acids are assembled
    from information encoded in mRNA
  • As mRNA codons move through the ribosome, tRNAs
    add specific amino acids to the growing
    polypeptide chain.
  • The process continues until a stop codon is
    reached and the newly made protein is released.

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50
So what is the Central Dogma?
  • The flow from DNA to RNA to Protein

51
Mutation
  • A change in the nucleotide sequence of a DNA
    molecule.
  • DNA proofreading and repair prevent many
    replication errors.
  • Unrepaired mutations that affect genes that
    control cell division can cause diseases such as
    cancer.

52
Notebook Quiz
  1. What type of RNA is pictured here? What is its
    function?
  2. List the 4 bases in RNA?
  3. What is the function of mRNA?
  4. Define translation.
  5. Where are proteins assembled in the cell?
  6. Describe the flow of genetic material in the
    cell. In other words, how do cells make proteins?
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