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DNA. Instructions for life. What does DNA do?. This very large molecule called D eoxyribo n ucleic a cid contains information. DNA information codes for proteins that make up muscle, enzymes, & the structures of organisms. A gene is a section of DNA coding for a protein. Four Key Features.
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DNA Instructions for life
What does DNA do? • This very large molecule called Deoxyribonucleic acid contains information. • DNA information codes for proteins that make up muscle, enzymes, & the structures of organisms. • A gene is a section of DNA coding for a protein.
Four Key Features • DNA has a uniform diameter (Franklin) • DNA is a double helix (Watson and Crick) • Adenine pairs with Thymine & Guanine pairs with Cytosine (Chargaff) • The two strands are built in opposite directions.
The parts—backbone • Backbone or rails of the ladder: alternating deoxyribose and phosphate. • Deoxyribose: a sugar • Phosphate: a negative ion containing phosphorus • Alternating pattern
The rungs of the ladder • Nitrogenous bases contain nitrogen • Pairs: • A-T • G-C • Pyrimidines: 1 ring • Thymine • Cytosine • Purines: 2 rings • Adenine • Guanine
Join 2 strands • Hydrogen bonds connect A-T or G-C pairs. • H bonds are weak forces between partial positive and negative charges on atoms—works like magnets.
History of DNA’s Discovery • Patterns of Inheritance--1857 • Gregor Mendel studied peas the and passage of traits from one generation to another. • What could carry the information from one individual to another?
Frederick Griffith--1928 • Experiment: mice and 2 types of pneumonia (virulent and non-virulent). • Proved chemical transfer of information.
Erwin Chargaff—1950’s • Chargaff studied the DNA of different species from different kingdoms and different phyla. • The amount of Adenine was close to equal to the amount of Thymine. • The amount of Guanine was close to the amount of Cytosine. • Chargaff’s Rule • http://www.dnalc.org/resources/3d/21-chargaff-ratios.html
Rosalind Franklin—1950’s • Studied the structure of DNA using a technique called X-ray diffraction. • The repeating ‘x’ patterns imply a twisting coiled shape: helix. • The molecule has uniform diameter and uniform repeat to the twist.
Francis Crick and James Watson—1952 • They worked to develop three dimensional model of DNA that would explain properties of the molecule. • Franklin’s work gave them a vital clue. • The molecule was a double helix with the bases making the rungs of a ladder. • One page paper was published April 1953
DNA Replication • To pass information to another organism, the data which is stored in the DNA must be copied. • Process is called DNA Replication • A replica is an exact copy • How does DNA replicate? • How does its structure work to make copies?
Replication • Both strands carry the same information. • 1) Unwind the helix. • 2) Unzip the strands to make two templates to use in making copies. • 3) Build a complementary strand one nucleotide at a time for two identical molecules. Replication Fork
Build a complementary strand • Follow Chargaff’s Rule: A=T and G=C • Find the bases that complement this strand: A T TT GCG TAACCGA TAAA CGCAT T GGCT
Does the new DNA have any of the original molecule in it? • Which model would work?
Helicase • Enzyme that unwinds the double helix. • Name comes from the helix shape of DNA that the enzyme straightens out. Helicase
DNA Polymerase • This protein enzyme that connects the nucleotides together to make the polymer. • It proofreads the sequences. • Most accurate enzyme Polymerase DNA Polymerase
DNA Packaging • DNA is an enormously long molecule. • How do you pack and move DNA? • http://www.dnalc.org/resources/3d/07-how-dna-is-packaged-basic.html
CoilingSupercoiling • Wind DNA around histone core like a spool of thread. • Nucleosome • Wind coiled DNA into second supercoil. • Condensed chromosome
Resources • http://www.dnai.org/timeline/
DNA Transcription
DNA—source of information • The human genome contains about 3.2 billion base pairs. • The information is grouped into genes—estimated total for the number of human genes range from 30,000 to 65,000. • Most genes code for proteins
RNA • DNA is used to make a complementary strand of messenger RNA. • RNA is RiboNucleic Acid. • RNA has 3 differences from DNA: • Uracil substitutes for Thymine • Ribose replaces deoxyribose • Single strand instead of the double strand
Uracil • Uracil is a pyrimidine. • Uracil forms two hydrogen bonds with Adenine.
Uracil bonding with Adenine • Similar geometry to Thymine. • Same pattern of hydrogen bonds.
Ribose • This monosaccharide is very similar to deoxyribose. • Ribose has one more oxygen.
mRNA—single strand • mRNA is the template to construct a protein and needs one strand.
DNA—getting from data to structure • DNA is an information structure • To make something the data needs to be transcribed to a working template. • Transcription is the process of copying DNA to a messenger RNA(mRNA). • In the nucleus • Translation is the process of converting the data sequence in mRNA into amino acids linked together to make a protein. • Out in the cell