* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download B2 Topic 1: The building blocks of cells Light microscope Light
DNA supercoil wikipedia , lookup
Polycomb Group Proteins and Cancer wikipedia , lookup
Epigenomics wikipedia , lookup
DNA damage theory of aging wikipedia , lookup
Cell-free fetal DNA wikipedia , lookup
Microevolution wikipedia , lookup
Designer baby wikipedia , lookup
No-SCAR (Scarless Cas9 Assisted Recombineering) Genome Editing wikipedia , lookup
Nucleic acid double helix wikipedia , lookup
Genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup
Molecular cloning wikipedia , lookup
DNA vaccination wikipedia , lookup
Epigenetics in stem-cell differentiation wikipedia , lookup
Extrachromosomal DNA wikipedia , lookup
Helitron (biology) wikipedia , lookup
Primary transcript wikipedia , lookup
Genome editing wikipedia , lookup
Site-specific recombinase technology wikipedia , lookup
Therapeutic gene modulation wikipedia , lookup
Cre-Lox recombination wikipedia , lookup
Nucleic acid analogue wikipedia , lookup
Point mutation wikipedia , lookup
Deoxyribozyme wikipedia , lookup
History of genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup
B2 Topic 1: The building blocks of cells Light microscope o Light microscopes shine light on the specimen (i.e the cell to be studied) o The image is then passed through lensesis magnified (i.e made bigger) o the different parts of a cell can be seen Electron microscope See the cell in more detail Animal cell Plant cell Bacterial cell have two types of DNA: Chromosomal DNA – giant loop of DNA containing most of the genetic material Plasmid DNA –carries extra information have a cell wall: different to the cell wall in plants – not made of cellulose, and it is more flexible provides support and shape for bacterium (some) have flagella on the outside: These are long, whip-like structures that bacteria can use to move themselves along. Tail like structure. DNA Sections of DNA are called genes. 1 gene codes for 1 protein Structure of DNA Double helix – two strands coiled together Two strands linked by weak hydrogen bonds between complementary base pairs. Base Pairs: Adenine Thymine Guanine Cytosine A always matches to T G always matches to C Sugar-phosphate back bone B2 Topic 1: The building blocks of cells DNA discovery o Wilkins and Frankin directing X-ray beams at DNA and creating images. o Watson and Crick building 3D models of DNA using data from other scientists. o Wilkins gave Watson and Crick one of Franklin’s detailed images of DNA. o This led to Watson and Crick building their correct DNA model o When Watson and Crick published their paper Franklin’s role was barely mentioned o Eventually all 4 recognised for work. All but Franklin (she had died) awarded Nobel prize. Genetic engineering Removing gene from one organism and inserting it into DNA of another. How it’s done: 1. Required gene located i.e. insulin gene 2. Restriction enzymes cut this gene out 3. Vector found i.e. plasmid DNA of bacteria 4. Vector cut open using enzymes 5. Required gene inserted and stuck in place using enzymes 6. The genetically engineered organism (bacteria) can reproduce and would produce the protein in question i.e. insulin Producing GM insulin Benefits Drawbacks No longer removed Bacteria produces from pigs/cattle so insulin slightly vegetarians and different – may not vegans can use. suit everyone Large supply can be made quickly and cheaply Producing beta-carotene rice o Beta-carotene needed by humans to make vitamin A o Gene for Beta-carotene inserted into rice, rice produces beta-carotene in grains. Golden rice made. Benefits Drawbacks Humans eating the GM rice could rice will make crossbreed with wild vitamin A. Lack of rice plants and vit.A can cause contaminate wild blindness. DNA Locations where rice Unsure of effects of is easily grown (less eating GM foods – economically could be harmful developed countries) Levels of betahave access to vit.A. carotene not high enough to make difference GMO can be expensive Producing herbicide resistant crops o Herbicides kill weeds Benefits Drawbacks Farmers can spray Cross-pollination can crops once with very take place between strong herbicide to GM crop and weed, kill weeds and their making the weed crops won’t die. resistant too Reduces amount of Reduce biodiversity crop spraying Less shelter for cheaper animals as weeds are dying. B2 Topic 1: The building blocks of cells Mitosis and Meiosis o Processes of cell division. o Both begin with diploid (two copies of each chromosome) cells Divisions Daughter cell number Daughter cells diploid/ haploid Genetically identical to parent? Use? Process Mitosis 1 2 Meiosis 2 4 Diploid Haploid (one copy of each chromosome) Yes No Growth Repair Asexual reproduction Cloning 1. DNA replication 2. Copies of DNA separate and cell divides 3. 2 diploid daughter cells form How to clone mammal: 1. A diploid nucleus is removed from a body cell of the animal that is going to be cloned 2. The diploid nucleus is inserted into an enucleated egg cell (i.e a cell that has had its nucleus removed) 3. The egg cell is stimulated, by electric pulse, to start dividing by mitosis 4. It is then implanted into the uterus (womb) of a surrogate mother where it will develop into a new individual 5. Surrogate will give birth to clone of animal Producing gametes (Sex cells/ sperm/ egg) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. DNA replication Copies of DNA separate and cell divides 2 diploid daughter cells form Cells divide again 4 haploid daughter cells form Fertilisation 2 haploid gametes (sperm and egg) fuse. Their nuclei fuse Diploid cell forms Diploid cell undergoes mitosis to form zygote Clones Clones are genetically identical to parent Example of Asexual reproduction Benefits Risks Keep desirable traits Very few embryos e.g. bulls whose produced during sperm produces high cloning develop quality calves successfully Keep desirable GE Susceptible to traits – cows disease engineered to produce human insulin STEM CELLS Stem cells are unspecialised cells (not yet differentiated). These could be very useful to treat many medical problems. Once a cell has specialised it cannot go back to being a stem cell. TWO TYPES IN HUMANS: o Embryonic stem cell – develop into nearly any type of cell. o Adult stem cell – already slightly differentiated and so can only develop into particular cell types. Problems associated with extracting embryonic stem cells: Use leftover embryos created for couples having fertility treatment… o However, extracting the embryonic stem cells kills the embryo o some people think that because embryos go on to develop into people, destroying embryos is the same as murder Two ways scientists are trying to solve this issue: 1. Use adult stem cells to make cloned embryos the embryonic stem cells could then be extracted from the clones without any natural embryos having to be killed 2. Turn specialised body cells into stem cells by reprogramming them – if this works, it will help to completely avoid the ethical problem of using embryos B2 Topic 1: The building blocks of cells Age quicker Human genome project (HGP) Finding the base pair sequence of human DNA. Involved scientists in 18 countries and took 13 years. Everyone has at least 99.9% DNA in common. BENEFITS: o Improved testing for genetic disorders o Gene therapy – replace faulty genes o Personalised medicines o Looking more closely at evolution DRAWBACKS: o Life insurance could cost more if you had genetic disorder o Stress would increase Protein manufacture/synthesis The order of base in DNA decide the order of amino acids, which make up the protein. Protein synthesis happens in two stages: Transcription Takes place inside the nucleus 1. DNA unzips – weak hydrogen bonds between strands broken by enzymes 2. One stand of DNA acts as a template 3. mRNA bases which are complementary to template are linked, forming a mRNA strand 4. mRNA leaves nucleus 5. DNA zips back up RNA vs DNA: o RNA only has one strand o RNA has a base called uracil (U) instead of thymine (T) in RNA: adenine (A) bases pair with uracil (U) bases in DNA: adenine (A) bases pair with thymine (T) bases Translation Takes place at the ribosome in the cytoplasm At the ribosome there are tRNA molecules which have specific amino acids attached. 1. mRNA goes to ribosome 2. ribosome reads mRNA 3 base pairs at a time (3bp= codon) 3. As the ribosome reads each codon it matches it to a tRNA with a complementary anticodon 4. Each tRNA brings a specific amino acid and releases it 5. The amino acid bonds to a growing chain forming a poly peptide. 6. tRNA free to pick up next amino acid 7. mRNA moves on to next codon. This keeps happening until a stop codon is reached. Mutations A mutation is a change in DNA base sequence. It could be a deletion of a base, swapping a base or addition of a base in the sequence. Each type of protein is made by a different amino acid sequence. If sequence changed this can alter how the protein works. Types of mutation: No effect: Although base sequence alters this does not change the order of amino acids. Beneficial: Change in base sequence means a different amino acid is coded for, the change is beneficial to the protein formed e.g. resistance. Harmful: change in base sequence means a different amino acid is coded for, the change is harmful to the organism e.g. sickle cell anaemia. B2 Topic 1: The building blocks of cells Enzymes Enzymes are proteins Enzymes are biological catalysts Enzymes catalyse the following reactions: o Digestion o DNA replication o Protein synthesis o + many others Enzyme action Enzymes work by binding to molecules called ‘substrates’ – once bound, enzymes catalyse the change of substrate molecules into product molecules. o The enzyme is not changed during the reaction o Substrates bind to the enzyme at the active site. This is where the reaction will occur and be catalysed. o Enzymes only work with a specific substrate, they are highly specific. Explaining using ‘lock and key’ hypothesis: o Substrate binds to enzyme at active site o Active site has specific shape which is complementary to the substrate shape o Each enzyme type has a different active site shape. o Enzyme active site is the lock o Substrate is the key. Factors affecting enzyme action: Temperature Most enzymes optimum temperature is 37°C Below optimum enzymes work slowly as it is too cold for them to catalyse efficiently. Above optimum the active site shape begins to change, this means substrate cannot bind and enzyme is denatured. pH Most enzymes optimum pH is 7. Stomach enzymes (pepsin) optimum pH is 1. Above or below optimum the active site shape begins to change, the substrate cannot bind, this means the enzyme is denatured. Concentration As substrate concentration increases, more molecules can bind to active site so rate of reaction increases. At very high concentrations of substrate, all active sites are occupied so enzymes cannot work any quicker, rate of reaction stabilises. B2 Topic 1: The building blocks of cells