1 / 23

Chapter 12

Chapter 12. DNA and RNA. Discovery of DNA. How do genes work? Several scientists from 1928-1954 began investigating the chemical nature of genes. DNA was determined to be the molecule responsible for coding all genes. What is DNA?.

fergus
Download Presentation

Chapter 12

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 12 DNA and RNA

  2. Discovery of DNA • How do genes work? • Several scientists from 1928-1954 began investigating the chemical nature of genes. • DNA was determined to be the molecule responsible for coding all genes.

  3. What is DNA? • Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) is a long molecule made up of units called nucleotides. • Nucleotides are made up of: • 5-carbon sugar (deoxyribose) • Phosphate group • Nitrogenous base (adenine, guanine, cytosine, or thymine) • All the genetic information for an organism is carried on its DNA.

  4. Nucleotides Form DNA Nucleotide Structure

  5. Structure of DNA • DNA wounds around itself, forming a twisted ladder (double helix) • Discovered in 1950s by Rosalind Franklin using X-ray diffraction. • “Double Helix” term coined by Watson and Crick in the 1950s as well.

  6. Groups of Bases • Purines (larger) • Adenine • Guanine • Pyrimidines (smaller) • Cytosine • Thymine

  7. Structure of DNA Cont’d • Chargaff’s Rules: • The four bases (adenine, guanine, thymine, cytosine) pair up in a certain way • A – T • C – G • The bases are held together by hydrogen bonds (hydrogen bonds are weak bonds)

  8. Storage of DNA • Prokaryotes – DNA is found in the cytoplasm • Most have single circular DNA molecule • Eukaryotes – Much more DNA than in prokaryotes (up to 1000x as much!) • Condensed into chromosomes • Chromosome number varies wildly from one species to the next. (humans have 46)

  9. DNA Replication • Before a cell divides, it must copy its DNA in a process called replication. • During DNA replication, DNA separates into two strands. DNA polymerase makes complimentary strands using base pairing. • Each strand of the original DNA molecule is used as a template for the new DNA.

  10. The area where DNA unwinds is called a replication fork.

  11. RNA • RNA is ribonucleic acid. • Like DNA: • Made up of nucleotides • Codes for proteins • Unlike DNA: • Nucleotides are made of ribose (instead of deoxyribose) • RNA is single-stranded (DNA is double) • The base Thymine is replaced with Uracil in RNA

  12. 3 Types of RNA • Messenger RNA (mRNA) • RNA that carries copies of DNA instructions • Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) • Make up ribosomes (along with proteins) • Transfer RNA (tRNA) • Transfers or carries each amino acid to the ribosomes as coded for by the mRNA

  13. Transcription • RNA molecules are produced by copying part of the nucleotide sequence of DNA into a complementary sequence of RNA • DNA strands are separated, RNA polymerase uses one strand of DNA as a template and assembles RNA • Uses base pairing to assemble RNA • A – U (instead of T) • C - G

  14. Genetic Code • The “language” of mRNA is sometimes called the genetic code. • The genetic code is read 3 letters (or bases) at a time, called codons. • A codon is made up of 3 nucleotides that specify for a single amino acid • Amino acids are strung together to form proteins (polypeptides)

  15. Genetic Code, cont. • Ex: • UCGCACGGU Would be read 3 bases at a time… • UCG-CAC-GGU Using the code → Serine-Histadine-Glycine

  16. Start and Stop Codons • AUG codon codes for the assembly of amino acids to begin. It also codes for methionine • Three codons code for the assembly of amino acids to stop – UAA, UAG, and UGA

  17. Protein Synthesis (Translation) • Proteins are assembled on ribosomes using information from mRNA • Steps: • 1 – mRNA transcribed • 2 – mRNA attaches to ribosome. tRNA matches anticodons to codons and brings in amino acids. • 3 – amino acids are joined together by peptide bonds. Free tRNA molecules float away. • 4 – polypeptide chain grows until stop codon.

  18. 12-4 Mutations • Gene mutations: • Point mutations – involve changes in one or a few nucleotides • Substitutions • Insertions • Deletions • Frameshift mutations – shift the “reading frame” of the genetic message • Ex: AUG UGG CCU UAC → AUG UGG ACC UUA C

  19. DNA: TAC GCA TGG AAT mRNA: AUG CGU ACC UUA Amino Acids: Met-Arg-Thr-Leu SUBSTITUTION DNA: TAC GTA TGG AAT mRNA: AUG CAU ACC UUA Amino Acids: Met-His-Thr-Leu DNA: TAC GCA TGG AAT mRNA: AUG CGU ACC UUA Amino Acids: Met-Arg-Thr-Leu INSERTION DNA: TAT CGC ATG GAA T mRNA: AUA GCG UAC CUU A Amino Acids: Ile-Ala-Tyr-Leu Point Mutations

  20. Chromosomal Mutations • Deletions • Duplications • Inversions • Translocations

More Related