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DNA (Deoxyribonucleic Acid) Scientific History The march to understanding that DNA is the genetic material – T.H. Morgan (1908) – Frederick Griffith (1928) – Avery, McCarty & MacLeod (1944) – Erwin Chargaff (1947) – Hershey & Chase (1952) – Watson & Crick (1953) – Meselson & Stahl (1958) Transformation of Bacteria What carries hereditary information? By the 1940s, scientists knew that chromosomes carried genes. They also knew that chromosomes were made of DNA and protein. They did NOT know which of these molecules actually carried the genes. Since protein has 20 types of amino acids that make it up, and DNA only has 4 types of building blocks, it was a logical conclusion. Most Scientists thought protein carried genes Chromosomes are made of DNA and protein Transformation of Bacteria DNA is the “Transforming Principle” 1944 Avery, McCarty & MacLeod – purified both DNA & proteins separately from Streptococcus pneumonia bacteria • which will transform non-pathogenic bacteria? – injected protein into bacteria • no effect – injected DNA into bacteria • transformed harmless bacteria into virulent bacteria mice die What’s the conclusion? Avery’s Experiment 1. Avery repeated Griffith’s experiments with an additional step to see what type of molecule caused transformation. 3. When Avery added enzymes that destroy DNA, no transformation occurred. So…he knew that DNA carried hereditary information! 2. Avery used enzymes to destroy the sugars and transformation still occurred—Sugar did not cause transformation. Avery used enzymes to destroy lipids, RNA, and protein one by one. Every time transformation still occurred—none of these had anything to do with the transformation. 1944 | ??!! Avery, McCarty & MacLeod Conclusion – first experimental evidence that DNA was the genetic material Oswald Avery Maclyn McCarty Colin MacLeod Hershey-Chase Experiment The experiment involved viruses to see if DNA or protein was injected into the bacteria in order to make new viruses. One group of viruses was infected with radioactive protein and another group with radioactive DNA. Then the viruses attack the bacteria. Radioactive DNA shows up in the bacteria, but no radioactive protein. 1947 Chargaff DNA composition: “Chargaff’s rules” – varies from species to species – all 4 bases not in equal quantity – bases present in characteristic ratio • humans: A = 30.9% T = 29.4% G = 19.9% C = 19.8% interesting! That’s What do you notice? Rules A = T C = G Rosalind Franklin Took X-ray pictures of DNA. The photos revealed the basic helix, spiral shape of DNA. Maurice Wilkins Worked with Rosalind Franklin. Took her x-ray photos and information to Watson and Crick Watson and Crick Used Franklin’s pictures to build a series of large models. Stated that DNA is a double-stranded molecule in the shape of a double helix, or twisted ladder. Won the Nobel Prize for their work in 1962. Semiconservative replication, when a double helix replicates each of the daughter molecules will have one old strand and one newly made strand. Experiments in the late 1950s by Matthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl supported the semiconservative model, proposed by Watson and Crick, over the other two models. (Conservative & dispersive) Double helix structure of DNA “It has not escaped our notice that the specific pairing we have postulated immediately suggests a possible copying mechanism for the genetic material.” Watson & Crick Basic DNA Structure P S A P S C P S T A nucleotide is the monomer of DNA A nucleotide is made of – a sugar called deoxyribose – a phosphate – and a base (ATCG) Directionality of DNA You need to number the carbons! nucleotide PO4 N base – it matters! 5 CH2 This will be IMPORTANT!! O 4 1 ribose 3 OH 2 Deoxyribose Simple sugar molecule like glucose that has 5 carbons The five carbons are numbered clockwise starting from the first one after the oxygen Phosphate The negatively charged phosphate bonds to the 5’ Carbon of the deoxyribose. Bases The base bonds to the 1’ Carbon. Base Bases There are two main types of bases purines and pyrimidines. – Purines have two rings in their structure. • Adenine and guanine are purines. – Pyrimidines only have one ring. • Thymine and Cytosine are pyrimidines. Pyrimidines Purines Basic DNA Structure P S A S C S T P P To form one strand of DNA, the phosphate of one nucleotide covalently bonds to the 3’ Carbon of the deoxyribose from another nucleotide. P S A T S P P S C G S P P S T A S P The two strands of DNA are held together by hydrogen bonds Anti-parallel strands Nucleotides in DNA backbone are bonded from phosphate to sugar between 3 & 5 carbons 5 3 3 5 – DNA molecule has “direction” – complementary strand runs in opposite direction Base Pairs The nucleotides that bond together by their bases are called base pairs. – Adenine only bonds to Thymine – Guanine only bonds to Cytosine Does each of your cells have the same DNA? YES DNA Replication Before a cell divides, DNA must make a copy of itself so that each new cell has a complete set of DNA. Step 1-Unzip DNA An enzyme called helicase untwists the ladder and breaks the hydrogen bonds between the bases and “unzips” DNA down the middle. Helicase Enzyme Step 2-Prime the DNA An enzyme called DNA primase put a few nucleotides of RNA on the DNA. This is only to create a starting place and these will later be removed. Step 3-Elongation The two strands of the Parent DNA become templates for the new strands. New nucleotides are added by an enzyme called DNA polymerase. Step 3-Elongation DNA polymerase only adds nucleotides in the 5’ to 3’ direction on both strands beginning at the RNA primer. Step 4 – Fine tuning RNA primer is removed and any gaps are sealed by an enzyme called ligase. DNA polymerase proof reads the new copy and fixes any mistakes. Helicase unwinds and unzips DNA P S A T S P P S C G S P P S T A S P DNA Polymerase Adds New Nucleotides P P S A T S S P P S C G S T A P C G S P P S S S P S P T P S P A T A S P Are the two copies of DNA the same? Why would it be important for the two copies of DNA to be the same? Okazaki Leading & Lagging strands Limits of DNA polymerase III can only build onto 3 end of an existing DNA strand 5 3 5 3 5 3 5 5 5 Lagging strand ligase growing 3 replication fork Leading strand 3 Lagging strand 3 Okazaki fragments joined by ligase “spot welder” enzyme 5 3 DNA polymerase III Leading strand continuous synthesis Replication fork / Replication bubble 3 5 5 3 DNA polymerase III leading strand 5 3 3 5 3 5 5 5 3 lagging strand 3 5 3 5 lagging strand 5 5 leading strand growing replication fork 5 3 growing replication fork leading strand 3 lagging strand 5 5 5 5 3 Starting DNA synthesis: RNA primers Limits of DNA polymerase III can only build onto 3 end of an existing DNA strand 5 3 3 5 5 3 5 3 5 growing 3 replication fork DNA polymerase III primase RNA 5 RNA primer built by primase serves as starter sequence for DNA polymerase III 3 Starting DNA synthesis: RNA primers Limits of DNA polymerase III can only build onto 3 end of an existing DNA strand 5 3 3 5 5 3 5 3 5 growing 3 replication fork DNA polymerase III primase RNA 5 RNA primer built by primase serves as starter sequence for DNA polymerase III 3 Replacing RNA primers with DNA DNA polymerase I removes sections of RNA primer and DNA polymerase I replaces with DNA nucleotides 5 3 3 5 5 ligase growing 3 replication fork RNA 5 3 But DNA polymerase I still can only build onto 3 end of an existing DNA strand Houston, we have a problem! Chromosome erosion All DNA polymerases can only add to 3 end of an existing DNA strand DNA polymerase I 5 3 3 5 5 growing 3 replication fork DNA polymerase III RNA Loss of bases at 5 ends in every replication chromosomes get shorter with each replication limit to number of cell divisions? 5 3 Telomeres Repeating, non-coding sequences at the end of chromosomes = protective cap limit to ~50 cell divisions 5 3 3 5 5 growing 3 replication fork telomerase 5 Telomerase enzyme extends telomeres can add DNA bases at 5 end different level of activity in different cells high in stem cells & cancers -- Why? TTAAGGG TTAAGGG 3 Replication fork DNA polymerase III lagging strand DNA polymerase I 5’ 3’ ligase primase Okazaki fragments 5’ 3’ 5’ SSB 3’ helicase DNA polymerase III 5’ 3’ leading strand direction of replication SSB = single-stranded binding proteins Length of DNA The length of the DNA from one cell is – 3 meters "Unravel your DNA and it would stretch from here to the moon" DNA Packing DNA double helix (2-nm diameter Histones “Beads on a string” Nucleosome (10-nm diameter) Tight helical fiber (30-nm diameter) Supercoil (200-nm diameter) 700 nm Metaphase chromosome Nucleosomes “Beads on a string” – 1st level of DNA packing – histone proteins • 8 protein molecules • positively charged amino acids • bind tightly to negatively charged DNA 8 histone molecules DNA packing as gene control Degree of packing of DNA regulates transcription – tightly wrapped around histones • no transcription • genes turned off heterochromatin darker DNA (H) = tightly packed euchromatin lighter DNA (E) = loosely packed H E The End!