* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Chapter 16.
Zinc finger nuclease wikipedia , lookup
DNA sequencing wikipedia , lookup
DNA repair protein XRCC4 wikipedia , lookup
Eukaryotic DNA replication wikipedia , lookup
Homologous recombination wikipedia , lookup
DNA profiling wikipedia , lookup
DNA nanotechnology wikipedia , lookup
Microsatellite wikipedia , lookup
DNA polymerase wikipedia , lookup
DNA replication wikipedia , lookup
Biology---Yippee! DNA The Genetic Material AP Biology 2008-2009 Scientific History Understanding that DNA is the genetic material T.H. Morgan (1908) Frederick Griffith (1928) Avery, McCarty & MacLeod (1944) Hershey & Chase (1952) Watson & Crick (1953) Meselson & Stahl (1958) 1908 | 1933 Genes are on chromosomes T.H. Morgan working with fruit flies Determined: genes are on chromosomes The question then was: is it the protein or the DNA of the chromosomes that are the genes? through 1940 proteins were thought to be genetic material because their structure is more complex Frederick Griffith was working to find cure for pneumonia (Streptococcus pneumonia bacteria) harmless live bacteria mixed with heat-killed infectious bacteria causes disease in mice substance passed from dead bacteria to live bacteria = “Transforming Factor” 1928 The “Transforming Factor” live pathogenic strain of bacteria A. mice die live non-pathogenic heat-killed strain of bacteria pathogenic bacteria B. C. mice live mice live mix heat-killed pathogenic & non-pathogenic bacteria D. mice die Transformation something in heat-killed bacteria could still transmit disease-causing properties to the harmless bacteria Avery, McCarty & MacLeod 1944 purified both DNA & proteins from Streptococcus pneumonia bacteria to determine which will transform nonpathogenic bacteria? injected protein into bacteria What’s the no effect injected DNA into bacteria transformed harmless bacteria into virulent bacteria Concluded DNA is the transforming factor conclusion? 1952 | 1969 Confirmation of DNA Hershey & Chase classic “blender” experiment worked with bacteriophage viruses that infect bacteria grew phage viruses in 2 media, radioactively labeled with either 35S in their proteins 32P in their DNA infected bacteria with labeled phages Hershey Blender experiment Radioactive phage & bacteria in blender 35S phage radioactive proteins did NOT enter bacteria 32 P phage radioactive DNA did enter bacteria Confirmed DNA is “transforming factor” Taaa-Daaa! Summary Used radioactive labels to identify genetic material Labeled DNA with radioactive phosphorus (32P) Labeled protein coats with radioactive sulfur (35S) Blender Examined newly infected host cells (pellet) and found only radioactive phosphorus label (not sulfur) ***DNA is the genetic material 1952 | 1969 Hershey Hershey & Chase Martha Chase Alfred Hershey Nucleic Acids (review) section 10.2 Examples: RNA (ribonucleic acid) single helix DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) double helix Structure: monomers = nucleotides DNA RNA Nucleotides 3 parts nitrogen base 1. 2. Adenine, guanine, cytosine & thymine pentose sugar (5 Carbon) ribose in RNA deoxyribose in DNA 3. phosphate (PO4) group Nitrogen base I’m the A,T,C,G or U part! Erwin Chargaff 1947 DNA composition: “Chargaff’s rules” varies from species to species Amount of thymine = amount of adenine Amount of cytosine = amount of guanine 1953 | 1962 Structure of DNA Watson & Crick developed double helix model of DNA other scientists working on question: Rosalind Franklin Maurice Wilkins Linus Pauling Franklin Wilkins Pauling Rosalind Franklin (1920-1958) Rosalind Franklin & Maurice Wilkins (1950) 1. used X-ray crystallography to study the structure of DNA. In this technique, X-rays are diffracted as they passed purified DNA. The diffraction pattern can be used to deduce the three-dimensional shape of molecules. 1953 article in Nature Watson and Crick Watson Crick James Watson and Francis Crick 1. Concluded that the structure of DNA is a 2. 3. double helix. (After Watson viewed Franklin’s x-ray diffraction photo) Backbone consists of alternating sugar & phosphate units. Attached to the backbone are four kinds of bases. I. Adenine III. Cytosine II. Guanine IV. Thymine Twist Fig. 16.5 Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Copying DNA Replication of DNA base pairing allows each strand to serve as a template for a new strand Semi-conservative replication 1958 Franklin Stahl Matthew Meselson Meselson & Stahl experiment used radioactive nitrogen to determine that DNA replication is semi-conservative (each of the 2 new DNA molecules is half original or parent DNA and half newly made) DNA Replication AP Biology 2008-2009 DNA Replication DNA used to make DNA Making an exact copy of the DNA before the cell divides original strand serves as a template for the new strand Each resulting double-stranded DNA molecule is made of one original and one new strand ( ½ parent template and ½ new DNA) semi-conservative replication Anti-parallel strands DNA molecule has “direction” complementary strand runs in opposite direction Replication only occurs in the 5’ to 3’ direction 5 3 3 5 Bonding in DNA 5 weak bonds hydrogen bonds 3 covalent phosphodiester bonds strong bonds 3 5 Base pairing in DNA Pairing A:T 2 bonds C:G 3 bonds Replication: 1st step Unwind DNA Helicase enzyme unwinds part of DNA helix stabilized by single-stranded binding proteins helicase single-stranded binding proteins replication fork Replication: 2nd step Build daughter DNA strand DNA Polymerase III add new complementary bases to 3’’ end of growing DNA strand Enzyme DNA polymerase III strand only grows 53 Loss of DNA With each replication, small segments at the end of our chromosomes (called telomeres) are lost This may be part of the aging process When enough DNA is lost the cell can no longer divide An enzyme called telomerase is able to add on to the end of chromosomes – but it is inactivated in most of our cells Cancer cells keep the enzyme active and can divide forever