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CHAPTER 16 – THE MOLECULAR BASIS OF INHERITANCE YOU MUST KNOW: The detailed structure of DNA The major steps to replication The difference between replication, transcription, and translation How DNA is packaged into a chromosome I. DNA IS THE GENETIC MATERIAL There are several famous experiments that proved that DNA is responsible for inheritance. A. Bacterial Transformation Experiment (Griffith’s Experiment) Griffith used two strains of the Streptococcus pneumoniae bacterium that causes pneumonia in mammals. One strain was diseases-causing (pathogenic) while the other was a non-pathogenic strain. Griffith could change the harmless strain of the bacterium into a disease causing strain just by mixing dead harmful bacteria with live harmless bacteria. Transformation – 1. A change in genotype and phenotype due to the assimilation of external DNA by a cell. 2. The conversion of a normal animal cell to a cancerous cell. Question remains: What is the factor that is responsible for transformation? B. Avery, McCarty and MacLeod’s Experiments: They purified various molecules (proteins, carbohydrates, lipids and nucleic acids) from heat-killed bacteria and tried to use the purified molecules to transfer pathogenic characteristics into non-pathogenic bacteria. Result: DNA is responsible for inheritance C. Bacteriophage Experiment (Hershey and Chase Experiment) Bacteriophages – viruses that kill bacteria (viruses are mostly composed of DNA or RNA and proteins) In this experiment, T2 phages were used that infect E. coli bacteria Results: Phage proteins remained outside of the bacterial cells while phage DNA entered the cells – radioactive DNA was detected inside of infected bacteria. Conclusion: DNA, not proteins are responsible for inheritance D. Chargaff’s Experiment: He analyzed the base composition of DNA from various organisms. Results: a. DNA composition varies from one species to another – evidence of molecular diversity among species b. In each species, the number of adenine bases approximately equaled the number of thymine bases; the number of cytosine bases equaled the number of guanine bases. (Chargaff’s rule) E. X-ray Crystallography (Franklin): Her X-ray crystallography photograph of DNA lead to the discovery of the structure of DNA. F. Watson and Crick Built the first model of the DNA molecule and described the structure of the molecule. They also described the process of DNA replication II. DNA REPLICATION: A. The Basic Ideas on DNA Replication Base-pairing rules apply when the DNA bases pair up The two strands are complementary, so each strand serves as a template for ordering nucleotides into a new complementary strand The process starts with one double helix and ends up with two DNA molecules, both double stranded and identical to the parent DNA Enzymes link the nucleotides together at their sugar-phosphate groups. The replication is semiconservative because every new DNA molecule contains one new strand and one old strand. http://www.sumanasinc.com/webcontent/animations/content/meselson.ht ml B. A Closer Look at DNA Replication DNA replication is extremely accurate and efficient Although we know more about DNA replication in prokaryotes than in eukaryotes, we also know that the two processes are very similar. Six major steps of replication: a. Origins of replication: The site where DNA replication begins. In prokaryotic cells there is only one origin of replication, in eukaryotic cells there are hundreds or thousands to speed up replication. Helicase enzyme is used to untwist the DNA molecule. b. Initiation proteins recognize the origins of replication and open up the DNA double helix forming a replication bubble. Than replication proceeds in both directions until the entire DNA molecule is copied. Each opened DNA molecule where the replication takes place forms a replication fork. RNA nucleotides (primer) are used to mark the start of replication on each DNA polynucleotide chain. c. Elongating a new strand: Elongation is catalyzed by enzymes called DNA polymerases. d. Individual nucleotides align with complementary nucleotides along a template strand of DNA. DNA polymerase adds them one by one to the growing end of the new DNA molecule. DNA polymerize identifies the starting point by attaching to the prime of the RNA nucleotides In prokaryotes, there are two different DNA polymerases while in eukaryotes there are at least 11. The added nucleotides are actually nucleoside triphosphates (ATP, GTP, TTP, CTP but with deoxyribose sugar not ribose). When the Pi groups are broken down of the nucleotides, energy is released. This energy release fuels DNA replication. e. Antiparallel elongation: Because the two strands of the DNA molecule are antiparallel, so they are oriented in the opposite direction, so the new DNA molecules also have to orient in the same direction. However, DNA polymerase can attach nucleotides only to the 3’ end and grows the chain toward the 5’end of the original chain. The original 3’- 5’ strand is called the leading strand because the DNA polymerase simply attaches new nucleotides by using the template of the old DNA chain and forms a new polynucleotide chain. To elongate the other new strand in the 5’3’ direction, the DNA polymerase works away from the replication fork, backwards. It forms small segments of the new polynucleotide chain that is going to be attached together later. These small segments are called Okazaki fragments. Another enzyme, DNA ligase, attaches the Okazaki fragments together later. f. Only one primer is required to start the 3’ end but each Okazaki fragment requires a primer on the lagging strand. DNA polymerase I replaces the RNA primers with DNA molecular segments. DNA ligase joins the sugar-phosphate backbones of the Okazaki fragments to form a continuous DNA polynucleotide chain. http://www.wiley.com/college/pratt/0471393878/student/animations/dna_repli cation/index.html -- more detailed animation of DNA replication http://highered.mcgrawhill.com/sites/0072437316/student_view0/chapter14/animations.html -- many things on DNA replication and the experiments http://207.207.4.198/pub/flash/24/menu.swf -- DNA replication, also very good http://www.fed.cuhk.edu.hk/~johnson/teaching/genetics/animations/dna_repli cation.htm -- basic DNA replication C. Proofreading and Repairing DNA In general there is only 1 error out of 10 billion nucleotides when the DNA molecule is being assembled. But the initial error rate is higher more about 1:100 000 nucleotides. DNA polymerases proofread the DNA molecule as it is being made and they replace the incorrectly placed nucleotide. Cells also have special repair enzymes to fix incorrectly paired nucleotides later – mismatch repair. Most common factors that can result in the damage of DNA are: chemicals from metabolic reactions of the cell or from the environment, radioactive emissions, X-rays, UV light, spontaneous chemical changes of the DNA molecule. III. Replicating the Ends of DNA Molecules: Because the end of the DNA molecule on the lagging end runs out of 3’ ends, it cannot be copied. As a result, each repeated round of replication produce shorter and shorter DNA molecules. The part of chromosomes that get lost at each DNA replication is called the telomere. Telomeres do not contain genes, they only have multiple repetitions of one short nucleotide segments (TTAGGG in humans). An enzyme called telomerase catalyzes the lengthening of telomeres in eukaryotic germ cells with the help of a short RNA segment.