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Mrs. Williams Freshman Biology Semester Two Discovery  Where does our inheritance come from?  Thought to be either DNA or protein  Several experiments were performed by various scientist  Conclusion: DNA is the molecule that provides heredity  What does DNA look like? Rosalind Franklin (1951) Chargaff Noticed that the percentage of adenine and thymine were similar in DNA samples  Also, the percentages of cytosine and guanine were similar  Watson & Crick (1953)   Won the Nobel Prize for determining the structure of DNA Proposed that it was a double helix with bases pairing in the middle (like a twisted ladder) Nucleic Acid: Basic Structure Nucleotidemonomer of a nucleic acid (polymer)  Three parts  Phosphate Sugar Nitrogen Base  Phosphate Group  Sugar  Nitrogenous Base DNA Nucleotide = Phosphate PURINES = Deoxyribose PYRIMIDINES = Adenine = Thymine = Guanine = Cytosine DNA  Pyrimidine  Single ring structure; C and T  Purine  Double ring structure; A and G  Base pairing  One purine and one pyrimidine A=T G=C A T C DNA Structure  Sugar-Phosphate Backbone  Double stranded  Alternating  Inverted strands  Base attached to sugar  Base Pairing  A pairs with T  C pairs with G  Weak Hydrogen bonds hold them together Nucleic Acids Location of DNA  Prokaryotes  Floating in cytoplasm  Occurs as a ring  Eukaryote  Located in Nucleus  Chromatin- form present during interphase  Chromosomes- form present during mitosis/meiosis Chromatin and Chromosome Structure  Chromatin  DNA is coiled around histone proteins  Looks like a beaded necklace  Provides access to genes during interphase  Chromosome  DNA is super-coiled  Compacts the DNA for more efficient movement  Less chance of damage or mistakes DNA Replication      DNA Formation of a new DNA molecule Occurs in the nucleus during S phase of interphase Goal- to create a copy of every piece of DNA before cell division Semi-conservative  Each original strand serves as a template  Ending DNA molecules have one original strand and one new strand Process of DNA Replication  DNA is unzipped  Done by enzyme (helicase)  Creates replication forks  Many replication forks along length of DNA strand Process of DNA Replication (continued)  Synthesis of new DNA strands  Done by enzyme (DNA polymerase)  Occurs in opposite direction on the two strands  Bases are added according to base pairing rules (A-T and C-G) Process of DNA Replication (continued)  Finishing Touches  Backbone is sealed (done by enzyme: ligase)  Proofread (done by enzyme: DNA polymerase) RNA: The Other Nucleic Acid RNA Found in both the nucleus and the cytoplasm  Also composed of nucleotides  Functions to    Turn DNA instructions into a protein  Regulate gene function  Differences from DNA  Sugar is ribose instead of deoxyribose  Thymine is replaced with uracil  Single strand (backbone) RNA NUCLEOTIDE = Phosphate Purines = Ribose Pyrimidines = Adenine = Uracil = Guanine = Cytosine RNA STRUCTURE •Single-stranded Types of RNA   All are made as copies of the DNA Messenger RNA (mRNA)  Single strand forms a string  Carries DNA instructions for a protein to the ribosome  Transfer RNA (tRNA)  Single strand folds into clover leaf shape  Carries amino acids to build the protein to the ribosome  Ribosomal RNA (rRNA)  Single strand folds into 3D shape  Creates ribosome structure Protein Synthesis DNA RNA Protein Transcription  DNA gene is transcribed (copied) into mRNA  mRNA bases are added by complementary base pairing rules   Occurs in nucleus Done by enzyme (RNA polymerase)  Separates DNA strands  Uses one strand as template to base pair  When finished, mRNA breaks off and DNA binds together again    mRNA is processed Leaves the nucleus through pores Travels to ribosome in cytoplasm Complementary Base Pairing DNA Nitrogen Bases A=U T=A C=G G=C RNA Nitrogen Bases Translation      mRNA is translated (decoded) into a protein molecule at ribosome in cytoplasm mRNA instructions are read three bases at a time- codon Every codon matches with a tRNA anticodon tRNA is attached to a specific amino acid (protein monomer) Amino acids are joined at the ribosome to form a protein Genetic Code      Every codon codes for a specific amino acid This is called the genetic code 64 possible codonsonly 20 amino acids Start codon- AUG Stop codonsUGA, UAA, UAG Mutations Change to the genetic material  Mutations within a gene   Point Mutation- occurs at one point in the DNA ○ Insertion- extra base added to gene ○ Deletion- base removed from gene ○ Substitution- one base is exchanged with another  Frameshift Mutation- moves all remaining bases forward or backward; changes all of the codons after it (insertion and deletion)  Mutations Chromosome Mutation      Change in genetic material that can be seen on a chromosomal level Duplication- part of a chromosome has been repeated Deletion- part of a chromosome has been lost Inversion- part of a chromosome has been flipped Translocation- part of a chromosome has broken off and attached to another chromosome Consequences of Mutations  Most don’t do anything  Genetic change causes no change to protein  Protein change causes no change to function  Some are harmful  Protein change causes loss of function or gain of a new unwanted function  Some are beneficial  Protein change allows protein to work better or gain a new wanted function Gene Regulation All somatic cells of an individual contain the same DNA  Different cell types just use different parts of the DNA library  Since these cells use different proteins, they look and act differently (cell specialization or differentiation)