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Page 1 of 7 KEY CONCEPT DNA and RNA are required to make proteins. BEFORE, you learned NOW, you will learn • Traits pass from parents to offspring in predictable patterns • Traits are passed on through genes • In sexual reproduction, offspring get half their genes from each parent • How the structure of DNA stores information the cell needs • How DNA is copied • How RNA uses the information from DNA to make proteins VOCABULARY EXPLORE Templates replication p. 137 RNA p. 138 How does a template work? PROCEDURE 1 MATERIALS Write a set of rules to describe how the characters in line A relate to the characters in line B. • paper • pencil A B 2 Place a piece of paper just under line C below. Use the rules from step 1 to produce a template—the corresponding pattern that goes with line C. C 3 Give the rules and the template to a classmate to produce a copy of line C. WHAT DO YOU THINK? What is a template and how does it differ from a copy? DNA is the information molecule. SUPPORTING MAIN IDEAS Make a chart of information supporting the main idea: DNA is the information molecule. DNA is a molecule that stores information—that’s all it does. You could compare the information in DNA to the books in your local library. You might find a book describing how to bake a cake, make a model sailboat, or beat your favorite computer game. The books, however, don’t actually do any of those things—you do. The “books” in the DNA “library” carry all the information that a cell needs to function, to grow, and to divide. However, DNA doesn’t do any of those things. Proteins do most of the work of a cell and also make up much of the structure of a cell. Chapter 5: DNA and Modern Genetics 135 Page 2 of 7 RESOURCE CENTER CLASSZONE.COM Learn more about DNA. Proteins and Amino Acids Proteins are large molecules that are made up of chains of amino acids. Twenty different amino acids come together in enough combinations to make up the thousands of different proteins found in the human body. Some proteins are small. For example, lysozyme is a digestive protein that is made up of a sequence of 129 amino acids. Some proteins are large. For example, dystrophin is a huge structural protein that is made up of 3685 amino acids. Check Your Reading What is the relationship between proteins and amino acids? DNA stores the information that enables a cell to put together the right sequences of amino acids needed to produce specific proteins. Scientists describe DNA as containing a code. A code is a set of rules and symbols used to carry information. For example, your computer uses a code of ones and zeroes to store data and then translates the code into the numbers, letters, and graphics you see on a computer screen. To understand how DNA functions as a code, you first need to learn about the structure of the DNA molecule. DNA molecule DNA and the Genetic Code The DNA molecule takes the shape of a double-stranded spiral, which, as you can see from the diagram, looks something like a twisted ladder. In Chapter 2, you read about different subunits that make up the molecules found in cells. Nucleotide subunits make up each of the two strands of the DNA molecule. One part of the nucleotide forms the side rail of the DNA “ladder.” The other part, the nucleotide base, forms the rung. strand Actually, two bases come together to form the rung, as one nucleotide base attaches to another from the opposite strand. You can see how the parts fit together in the diagram to the left. strand nucleotide bases eukaryotic cell DNA Base Pairs Cytosine pairs with guanine. Adenine pairs with thymine. 136 Unit 1: Cells and Heredity nucleus There are four different nucleotides in DNA, identified by their bases: adenine (A), thymine (T), cytosine (C), and guanine (G). Because of differences in size and shape, adenine always pairs with thymine (A-T) and cytosine always pairs with guanine (C-G). The bases fit together like two pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. These bases are often referred to simply by their initials—A, T, C, and G. The phrase “all tigers can growl” may help you remember them. Page 3 of 7 It is the sequence—the order—of bases in a strand of DNA that forms the code for making proteins. Like a list of ingredients in a recipe book, a set of bases specifies the amino acids needed to form a particular protein. The cookbook uses just 4 bases—A, T, G, and C— to code for 20 amino acids. A code of 2 bases to 1 amino acid gives only 16 possible combinations. However, a code of 3 bases to 1 amino acid gives 64 possible combinations. T – C –T (DNA triplet) codes for arginine The genetic code is, in fact, a triplet code. A specific sequence of 3 nucleotide bases codes for 1 amino acid. For example, the triplet T-C-T on a strand of DNA codes for the amino acid arginine. Some amino acids have two different codes. Others have three, and some have four. A gene is the entire sequence of the bases that codes for all the amino acids in a protein. Each gene is made up of a sequence of bases at a particular location on the DNA. Replication When a cell divides into two cells, each daughter cell receives an identical copy of the DNA. Before a cell divides, all of its DNA is copied, a process referred to as replication. Let’s follow the process through for one DNA molecule. First, the two strands of DNA separate, almost like two threads in a string being unwound. Nucleotides in the area around the DNA match up, base by base, with the nucleotides on each DNA strand. C matches up with G, and A matches up with T. When replication is complete, there are two identical DNA molecules. Each molecule has one strand of old DNA and one strand of new DNA. (amino acid) reading tip Replicate includes the root word meaning “to repeat.” Replication Replication produces two identical molecules of DNA. new strand Original DNA molecule original strand New DNA molecule 2 nucleotides 3 Nucleotides match up and join to the open DNA strands. Two identical DNA molecules are formed. 1 The DNA molecule opens up, separating into two strands. original strand new strand New DNA molecule Chapter 5: DNA and Modern Genetics 137 Page 4 of 7 DNA template strand DNA template strand new strand new strand parent DNA molecule DNA template strand DNA template strand 1 The parent DNA molecule is made up of two strands. 2 The two strands separate and are used as templates. 3 Two new identical DNA molecules are formed. During replication, each strand of DNA is used as a template to produce a copy of the other strand. A template is a pattern or shape that produces a matching, or complementary, product. If you’ve ever made a plaster model of your hand, you’ve worked with a template. You press your hand into a soft material that leaves a mold of your hand. You then pour liquid plaster into the mold to produce a copy of your hand. The mold is a template. Its shape allows you to make a complementary shape that matches your hand. reading tip Complementary has a root that means “to complete.” RNA is needed to make proteins. DNA is not used to make proteins directly. Translating the genetic code of DNA involves another type of molecule, RNA. RNA, or ribonucleic acid, carries the information from DNA to a ribosome, where the amino acids are brought together to form a protein. DNA actually codes for RNA. Three different types of RNA are involved in making proteins. They are named for their functions: VOCABULARY Remember to choose strategies from an earlier chapter or some of your own to take notes on the term RNA. messenger RNA (mRNA) • ribosomal RNA (rRNA) • transfer RNA (tRNA) In prokaryotic cells, RNA and proteins are both made in the cytoplasm. In eukaryotic cells, DNA is copied in the nucleus, then RNA moves to the cytoplasm, where the proteins are made. • Transcription The process of transferring information from DNA to RNA is called transcription. The chemical structure of RNA is quite similar to the structure of DNA. Both are made up of four types of nucleotide subunits. Three of the bases that make up RNA are the same as in DNA: guanine (G), cytosine (C), and adenine (A). However, the fourth base is uracil (U), not thymine. 138 Unit 1: Cells and Heredity Page 5 of 7 Transcription Transcription produces a single-stranded molecule of RNA. RNA Base Pairs Cytosine pairs with guanine. Adenine pairs with uracil. 1 The DNA molecule opens up along a gene. nucleotides 2 DNA Nucleotides of RNA match up and join to the open DNA strand. 3 The completed RNA strand is released and moves into the cytoplasm. RNA During transcription, DNA is again used as a template, this time to make a complementary strand of RNA. Only individual genes are transcribed, not a whole DNA molecule. The DNA again opens up, just where the gene is located. As shown in the diagram above, RNA bases match up to complementary bases on the DNA template. Adenine pairs with uracil (A-U) and cytosine pairs with guanine (C-G). reminder DNA base pairs: C-G, A-T RNA base pairs: C-G, A-U Transcription is different from replication in some important ways. Only one strand of DNA is transcribed, which means just a single strand of RNA is produced. When transcription is complete, the RNA is released, it does not stay attached to DNA. This means that many copies of RNA can be made from the same gene in a short period of time. At the end of transcription, the DNA molecule closes. DNA Translation Replication and transcription involve passing along information that is coded in the language of nucleotide bases. To make proteins, cells have to translate this language of nucleotide bases into the language of amino acids. Three specific bases equal one amino acid. The actual assembly of the amino acids in their proper sequence is the translation. Translation takes place in the cytoplasm of a cell. It involves all three types of RNA. Transcription RNA Translation Protein Chapter 5: DNA and Modern Genetics 139 Page 6 of 7 Translation The assembling of amino acids to form a protein occurs in the cytoplasm. 2 amino acid Transfer RNA (tRNA) matches up and and joins to the mRNA strand. 1 A ribosome attaches to an mRNA molecule at the beginning of a coding region. ribosome tRNA with an amino acid attached mRNA molecule 3 As the ribosome moves along the mRNA strand, it attaches one amino acid to another. chain of amino acids 4 The tRNA molecule is released after the amino acid has been attached. chain of amino acids is released 5 Once the ribosome reaches the end of the coding region, the completed chain of amino acids is released. 140 Unit 1: Cells and Heredity Page 7 of 7 Proteins are made on ribosomes, structures that are made up of ribosomal RNA and proteins. If you think of DNA as a cookbook for making different proteins, and mRNA as a recipe for making a protein, then the ribosome is the place where the cooking gets done. In this analogy, tRNA gathers the ingredients, which are amino acids. A tRNA molecule is shaped in such a way that one end of it can attach to a specific amino acid. The other end of tRNA has a triplet of bases that is complementary to a triplet of bases on mRNA. Transfer RNA does the actual translation of bases to amino acid when it matches up with mRNA. The diagram on page 140 shows the whole process. reading tip Refer to the diagram on page 140 as you read the text. The numbers in the text match the numbers in the diagram. 1 Translation begins when a ribosome attaches to the beginning end of an mRNA molecule. 2 A tRNA molecule carrying an amino acid matches up to a complementary triplet on mRNA on the ribosome. 3 The ribosome attaches one amino acid to another as it moves along the mRNA molecule. 4 The tRNA molecules are released after the amino acids they carry are attached to the growing chain of amino acids. 5 The ribosome completes the translation when it reaches the end of the mRNA strand. The newly made protein molecule, in the form of a chain of amino acids, is released. Check Your Reading Describe how the three different types of RNA work together in protein synthesis. VISUALIZATION CLASSZONE.COM The process of making proteins is basically the same in all cells. The flow of information in a cell goes from DNA to RNA to protein. Watch an animation of how proteins are made. KEY CONCEPTS CRITICAL THINKING . 1. Describe the shape of the DNA molecule and how nucleotide bases fit into that structure. 4. Infer What might happen if the wrong amino acid is put on a tRNA molecule? 2. What is a protein and what is it made up of? 5. Apply Copy the following sequence of DNA bases: A-T-C-A-G-G. Write the complementary mRNA and tRNA sequences for this. 6. Synthesize Study the sequences you wrote for question 5. How does the tRNA sequence compare to the original DNA sequence? 3. Identify three types of RNA involved in protein synthesis and briefly describe what they do. CHALLENGE Chapter 5: DNA and Modern Genetics 141