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DNA’s Structure DNA is composed of nucleotides DNA contains four nitrogen bases: adenine(A) cytosine(C) guanine(G) thymine (T) A & G are purines C & T are pyrimidines DNA’s Structure DNA is a double helix -2 strands of DNA nucleotides joined to form a “twisted ladder” -the strands are held by hydrogen bonds between the nitrogen bases Chargaff’s Rule The nitrogen bases form the “steps” on the DNA ladder by complementary pairing A == T C == G T == A G == C A == T T == A Sugarphosphate backbone A always pairs with T C always pairs with G DNA Replication – What and Why Replication = DNA making copies of itself – – DNA must be copied before a cell can divide Each new cell will have a complete set of DNA 3 Models of Replication 3 Models of Replication: Semi-conservative Replication Each strand in a DNA molecule is used as a template to build a new strand using complementary base pairing Results in new molecule with one original DNA strand and one new strand DNA Replication: Process Step 1: Replication begins when the enzyme DNA helicase opens the DNA forming replication bubbles DNA Replication: Process The nitrogen bases on the original DNA strands are exposed in the replication bubbles. the new DNA strands are built on the exposed nitrogen bases DNA Replication The ends of the replication bubbles known as the replication fork is where replication begins DNA Replication – DNA Polymerase Step 2: The enzyme DNA polymerase brings new nucleotides to the replication fork - it pairs them according to base pairing rules A pairs with T C pairs with G DNA Replication- Orientation 5’ The DNA polymerase reads the original DNA strands from 3’- 5’ - as a result, the new DNA strands are built from 5’-3’ 3’ 3’ 5’ DNA Replication – Leading Strand Leading strand- is built toward the replication fork –the replication of the leading strand is continuous - as helicase opens the molecule, DNA polymerase can continue to add new nucleotides DNA Replication – Lagging Strand Lagging strand- replication begins at the replication fork. - As the new DNA strand elongates, it grows away from the replication fork DNA Replication- The Big Picture Each Bubble has 2 Forks – each fork has a leading and lagging strand DNA Replication The process continues until 2 complete copies of the DNA are produced Each copy of the DNA contains one strand of DNA from the original DNA molecule and one new strand that was produced by replication Replication Animation DNA Replication Step 3 : Termination = DNA polymerase reaches the end of the DNA segment and the replication process stops Step 4 : Repair Process Takes place – Enzymes fix any mistakes in the replication process DNA Replication Reasons For DNA Replication • DNA replication must be done before a cell reproduce. • DNA replication is essential in passing on of genetic material from one generation to the next. • It is essential in cellular reproduction, growth/repair, and adaptation due to genetic mutations. Why Is This Process So Accurate? There are several reasons : 1- One half the DNA serves as a template for DNA to copied from, therefore the copying process is relatively simple. 2- The way the base pairs pair up chemically and the space in which they have to fit in force the nitrogenous base pairs to always be a purine and pyrimidine. 3- The proofreading process fixes most errors in the process and will delete any problems in the DNA sequence. Protein Synthesis From DNA to Protein Protein Synthesis Protein Synthesis is the process that cells use to produce protein. - it involves 2 distinct phases Transcription – occurs in the nucleus involves the creation of mRNA Translation – occurs in the cytoplasm at a ribosome – the protein recipe is “read” and the correct protein is made Function of DNA: controls the function of cells contains recipes for proteins. -Proteins are Enzymes to run chemical reactions Hormones Numerous tissues and structures Proteins are chains of amino acids. amino acid + amino acid + amino acid = protein The order of amino acids determines protein shape Shape determines function DNA recipe consists of the order of amino acids for each protein - the recipes are known as genes DNA contains recipes for all of the proteins in living things -these recipes are called genes Recipe has to get from DNA to the ribosome which builds the protein Transcription: makes a copy of the protein recipe This is necessary because: DNA cannot leave the nucleus!!! Proteins are made on ribosomes in the cytoplasm. mRNA provides the solution Messenger ribonucleic acid mRNA is a copy of the protein recipe that can leave the nucleus mRNA – messenger RNA mRNA is a copy of the recipe for a protein. It is a copy of a gene - it can leave the nucleus - takes the recipe to the ribosome where it is converted to a protein mRNA carries the recipe from DNA to the ribosomes Meet mRNA: RNA has three structural differences from DNA Structure of RNA 1. Sugar is ribose 2. Single strand 3. Uracil replaces thymine as a base pair Transcription: Initiation The Process Begins The enzyme RNA polymerase finds the beginning of a protein recipe called the promotor - promotor = a series of nucleotides that indicate the start of a protein recipe The RNA polymerase opens the DNA molecule at the promotor Transcription: Initiation The RNA polymerase uses one DNA strand as a template to build the mRNA - only one of the DNA strands contains the protein recipe - the strand with the recipe is the template strand - the strand without the recipe is the non-template strand - it is not copied Transcription: Elongation Building the mRNA Molecule RNA polymerase brings RNA nucleotides to the template strand -pairs them with their complements on the original DNA molecule -this follows the base pairing rules except that uracil replaces thymine - Adenine on DNA is paired with Uracil (U) on the new mRNA Transcription: Elongation The RNA polymerase reads the template strand in the 3’ to 5’ direction RNA polymerase builds the mRNA in the 5’ to 3’ direction Transcription: Termination The Process Ends the RNA polymerase continues to add new nucleotides until it reaches the terminator - the terminator is a sequence of nucleotides that indicates the end of the recipe the mRNA drops off the DNA -this is pre-mRNA it needs further processing before it can be translated Processing pre-mRNA Pre-mRNA contains sections of nucleotides called introns -introns are sections of mRNA that don’t contain information needed to build the protein -they are extras and must be removed before the protein can be built Pre-mRNA also contains sections called exons -these contain the protein recipe and are joined to form the finished or mature mRNA Summary 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. DNA contains recipe for protein – can’t leave nucleus RNA polymerase opens DNA molecule at recipe RNA polymerase builds a complementary mRNA copy of the protein recipe pre-mRNA is processed and the introns are removed mRNA takes recipe to ribosome outside nucleus Vocabulary Transcription Gene mRNA Ribose Uracil RNA polymerase Promotor Template Strand Non-Template Strand Terminator intron exon Translation From mRNA to Protein There are twenty different amino acids that build proteins There are 64 different triplets/codons Each amino acid is coded for by more than one triplet/codon The Players mRNA:messenger RNA - carries protein recipe from the nucleus tRNA: transfer RNA -brings amino acids to the ribosome Ribosome: the site of protein synthesis - made of rRNA (ribosomal RNA )and Protein The Process of Translation mRNA takes recipe to the ribosome in cytoplasm ribosome attaches to the mRNA Translation The ribosome moves along the mRNA until it reaches the “Start” codon Start codon = AUG signals the start of the recipe AUG also codes for the amino acid methionine The process of Translation cont. •A molecule of transfer RNA brings the amino acid called for by the mRNA to the ribosome •transfer RNA = tRNA The process of Translation cont. A second tRNA bringsthe second amino acid to the ribosome The amino acids are joined together to begin the protein The process of Translation concluded The ribosome moves over 1 codon and another tRNA molecule brings another amino acid The process continues until the stop codon on the mRNA is reached -the stop codon = the end of the protein recipe Meet tRNA each molecule of tRNA carries a specific type of amino acid - each tRNA molecule can only carry one type of amino acid The tRNA has a group of 3 nucleotides at the base called the anticodon How does tRNA know which amino acid goes where? The anticodon on tRNA is complementary to a mRNA codon the amino acid that a tRNA molecule carries is the amino acid that the complementary mRNA codon codes for Example: mRNA codon = GAC = aspartic acid tRNA anticodon = CUG carries only aspartic acid Vocabulary tRNA Triplet Codon Anticodon Start codon Stop codon THE DNA CODE The Key to Protein Synthesis The Question of DNA DNA stores information to build proteins in sequences of nucleotides - DNA nucleotides contain one of 4 nitrogen bases A T C G - there are 20 different amino acids used to build protein Problem: How to code for 20 amino acids with only 4 nitrogen bases? Solution: Use groups of 3 nucleotides to code for each amino acid Why are 3 nucleotides required? Using one nucleotide can only code for 4 amino acids Using pairs of nucleotides produces 16 combinations – can code for 16 amino acids Using groups of three nucleotides produces 64 different combinations – can code for all 20 amino acids - several different groups can each code for the same amino acid THE DNA CODE The DNA code is: - universal to all living things -the groups of nucleotides code for the same amino acid in all living things 3 DNA nucleotides = Triplet - one triplet = one amino acid Examples – TCA = Serine CTG = Aspartic Acid THE CODE CONTINUED 3 mRNA nucleotides = Codon - codon is the complement of a triplet - codon codes for the same amino acid as the triplet it is complementary to Example: DNA triplet = CTG = Aspartic Acid mRNA codon = GAC = Aspartic Acid Triplet Codon Transcription Amino Acid Translation DNA Triplet mRNA Codon Amino Acid CTG GAC Aspartic Acid CGC GCG Alanine THE CODON CHART – FROM CODON TO AMINO ACID Codon = UGC Cysteine Codon = CAC Histidine Codon = AAA Lysine Codon = GCG Alanine Mutations Hollywood’s images of mutation Mutations Actual Mutations in fruit flies What is a mutation? A mutation is any change in a cell’s DNA A mutation can occur in an individual gene - results in a single changed protein - cystic fibrosis a mutation in the protein that makes a type of ion channels in cell membrane - bacterial resistance to antibiotics is an example of a beneficial gene mutation What is a mutation continued A mutation can occur in a chromosome - a chromosome contains many genes - chromosomal mutations affect many proteins Examples: Down Syndrome Edward’s Syndrome Cri-du-Chat What Causes Mutations? Can be caused by mutagens- a physical or chemical cause of mutation. Examples: UV light, radiation, drugs, and benzene. Mutagens are often also carcinogens – anything that causes cancer Can be natural, random events. - mutations occur in 1/100,000 DNA replications Mutations do not have to be bad (evolution) Point Mutations A single nucleotide is altered. Can change one amino acid in a protein Milk – Mile GGACAATCA GGACCATCA proline -valine-serine proline-glycine-serine Frameshift Mutations A nucleotide is either inserted or deleted from a gene. -all of the triplets from the point of mutation onward will be changed Frameshift Mutations Insertion An insertion occurs when a nucleotide is added to a gene Example: A nucleotide is inserted The fat cat ate the rat The faa tca tat eth era t -the extra nucleotide shifts all of the triplets that follow Frameshift Mutations Deletions A deletion occurs when a nucleotide is removed from a gene. Example: A nucleotide is removed The fat cat ate the rat Thf atc ata tet her at Insertion GGACAATCA proline -valine-serine Deletion GGACAATCA proline -valine-serine GCGACAATCA arginine-cysteine-stop GGAAATCA proline-leucine Vocabulary Mutation Mutagen Carcinogen Point mutation Frameshift mutation - insertion - deletion