Title: DNA
1Chapter 10
210.1 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.
3Page 194
4Averys Experiments (1940s)
- Averys work showed that DNA was the heredity
material that transfers information between
bacterial cells.
5Hershery-Chase Experiment
- Hershey and Chase confirmed that DNA, and not
protein, is the hereditary material. - Page 195
6Structure of DNA
7DNA 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
8DNA 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.
9Deoxyribonucleic acid - DNA
- Monomer nucleotides
- Each nucleotides has
- Deoxyribose sugar
- Phosphate group
- (1 of 4) nitrogen containing base
10The 4 Bases in DNA are
- Thymine (T)
- Cytosine (C)
- Guanine (G)
- Adenine (A)
11Nitrogen Rings
- Purines have double rings of carbon-nitrogen (G,
A) - Pyrimidines have single carbon-nitrogen rings (C,
T)
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13Complementary Base Pairing
- Base Pairing Rules
- 1. C and G
- 2. T and A
14Hydrogen Bonds
- How do the nitrogenous bases stick together?
- Hydrogen bonds
- 3 H bonds hold G C together
- 2 H bonds hold T A together
15DNA 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
16Steps 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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18Semi-conservative replication-Each old strand of
nucleotides serves as a template for each new
strand.
19Another View of Replication
20Protein Synthesis
The Central Dogma the flow of genetic
information from DNA to RNA to Protein
21Protein 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.
22RNA
- Ribonucleic Acid
- 2nd type of nucleic acid
- Monomer nucleotide
- Ribose sugar
- 1 of 4 N bases
- Phosphate group
23N-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)
24How does RNA differ from DNA?
- Different sugars (deoxyribose vs. ribose)
- Different N-bases (thymine vs. uracil)
- Different shapes (double helix vs. single strand)
25Types 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
263 Types of RNA
27How is RNA made?
- Transcription
- The process by which RNA is copied from DNA in
the nucleus
28Steps of Transcription
- RNA polymerase binds to the promoter section of
DNA - DNA unwinds and separates
- RNA polymerase adds nucleotides complimentary to
the DNA template strand - Process ends once RNA polymerase reaches the
termination signal on the DNA
29Definitions
- 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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34Products 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
35Protein 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
36Protein Review
- Monomer amino acids
- 20 different types
- Linked together by peptide bonds
- Sequence of amino acids determines the proteins
structure and function
37The 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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39Types 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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41Circular Genetic Code
42Translation
- The process of assembling polypeptides (proteins)
from nucleotide sequence in mRNA - Translating from one language (nucleotides)
into another language (amino acids)
43Steps 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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50So what is the Central Dogma?
- The flow from DNA to RNA to Protein
51Mutation
- 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.
52Notebook Quiz
- What type of RNA is pictured here? What is its
function? - List the 4 bases in RNA?
- What is the function of mRNA?
- Define translation.
- Where are proteins assembled in the cell?
- Describe the flow of genetic material in the
cell. In other words, how do cells make proteins?