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Unit 4: DNA: Our Genetic Material Notes Date_______________________ I. Discovering DNA is hereditary material: A. Griffith and Transformation 1. Griffith set up four individual experiments and in the final experiment: Experiment 4: Griffith mixed his heat-killed, disease-causing bacteria with live, harmless bacteria and injected the mixture into the mice. (1) The mice developed pneumonia and _________?? Griffith concluded that the heat-killed bacteria passed their diseasecausing ability to the harmless strain. 3. Transformation a. Griffith called this process transformation because one strain of bacteria (the harmless strain) had changed permanently into another (the diseasecausing strain). b. Griffith hypothesized that a factor must contain information that could change harmless bacteria into disease-causing ones B. Avery and DNA 1. Avery and his colleagues made: an extract from the heat-killed bacteria thymes. a. The enzymes destroyed: ncluding the nucleic acid RNA. b. Transformation:ill occurred. c. When DNA was destroyed, transformation did not occur. e. Avery and other scientists discovered that the nucleic acid DNA the next. C. The Hershey-Chase Experiment 1. Bacteriophage viruses are composed of a: DNA or RNA core and a protein coat. 2. To determine whether or not the molecule injected by viruses to cause transformation was _____________ or _________--Scientists grew viruses in Unit 4: DNA: Our Genetic Material Notes Date_______________________ cultures containing radioactive isotopes of phosphorus-32 (32P) and sulfur-35 (35S). a. Nearly all the radioactivity in the bacteria after viral transformation was from_____________from phosphorus (32P). d. Hershey and Chase concluded that : FUNCTION of DNA: DNA contains the ______________, or instructions for building an organism and ____________that ensure that organisms function correctly. It is necessary for the formation of proteins/protein synthesis. II. Structure of DNA A. DNA is a very long polymer. 1. The basic shape is like a twisted ladder or zipper also called a double helix. 2. Contains two strands (backbones) composed of deoxyribose sugar and a phosphate group. 3. The ___________, ________________“rungs” of the ladder are composed of nitrogenous bases B. The Components and Structure of DNA 1. DNA is made up of monomers called ___________. Finish diagraming figure to the right and label the parts: a. Deoxyribose – 5-carbon Sugar b. Phosphate Group c. Nitrogenous Base (1) There are four kinds of bases in DNA: ymine C. Chargaff's Rules Unit 4: DNA: Our Genetic Material Notes Date_______________________ 1. Chargaff discovered that the percentages of guanine [G] and cytosine [C] bases are almost equal in any sample of DNA and the percentages of adenine [A] and thymine [T] are almost equal in any sample of DNA. Therefore the _____________ rule must be: 2. Two types of nitrogenous bases: a. Purines (double ringed bases) b. Pyrimidines (single ringed bases). 3. Watson and Crick discovered that h a. Adenine and thymine form two hydrogen bonds between each other b. Guanine and Cytosine form three hydrogen bonds between each other. c. This principle is called __________ __________ . The ________ _________ rule *circle and label one monomer of DNA on the molecule pictured below and the right: D. X-Ray Evidence 1. Rosalind Franklin used X-ray diffraction to get information about the structure of DNA. 2. She aimed an X-ray beam at concentrated DNA samples and recorded the scattering pattern of the X-rays on film. 3. Using clues from Franklin’s pattern, James Watson and Francis Crick built a model that explained how DNA carried information and could be copied. 4. Watson and Crick's model of DNA was a double helix, in which two stra other. E. Arrangement of the DNA strands. 1. The two strands making up DNA are antiparallel. a. The DNA strand end that ends with a phosphate groups is called the 5’ end. Unit 4: DNA: Our Genetic Material Notes Date_______________________ b. The DNA stand end that ends with a sugar is called the 3’ e billion meters) III. DNA Replication A. Before a cell divides, during __ phase of the cell _____________ DNA is ____________or _______________to ensure f DNA. B. Each strand of the DNA double helix has all the information needed to reconstruct the other half by the mechanism of base pairing. C. In most prokaryotes, DNA replication begins at a single point and continues in two directions. D. In eukaryotes, DNA replication occurs at hundreds of places. Replication proceeds in both directions until each chromosome is completely copied. 1. A series of enzymes play a major role in DNA replication 2. Step 1: DNA Helicase opens the double helix by breaking the hydrogen bonds that link the nitrogen bases between two strands a. Creating a replication fork _________________________________________________________. Now draw the picture of the replication fork: rea where the double helix separates. 3. Step 2: At the replication fork, enzyme known as DNA polymerase moves along each of the DNA strands and adds nucleotides to the exposed bases. a. Nucleotides are added in a 5’ to 3’ direction only. b. Nucleotides are added on both strands of the “parent” DNA molecule. c. While the “new” DNA molecules is being assembled theb 4. Step 3: DNA polymerase proofreads the replication. a. Reduces errors in replication to about 1 error per billion nucleotides. Unit 4: DNA: Our Genetic Material Notes Date_______________________ 5. Replication is considered to be: _______________________________________because:emi-conservative. a. Each “parent” strand is complementary paired with a “daughter” strand Place the following terms in the correct place on the above figure: DNA Polymerase (shown twice) and Helicase. Then identify the original “parent strand of each new DNA molecule.