* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download DNA is the hereditary material that transfers info btwn bacterial cells
Genealogical DNA test wikipedia , lookup
United Kingdom National DNA Database wikipedia , lookup
History of RNA biology wikipedia , lookup
DNA polymerase wikipedia , lookup
Human genome wikipedia , lookup
Minimal genome wikipedia , lookup
Non-coding RNA wikipedia , lookup
Gel electrophoresis of nucleic acids wikipedia , lookup
Epitranscriptome wikipedia , lookup
Oncogenomics wikipedia , lookup
Genome (book) wikipedia , lookup
DNA damage theory of aging wikipedia , lookup
Gene expression profiling wikipedia , lookup
Genomic library wikipedia , lookup
Genome evolution wikipedia , lookup
Polycomb Group Proteins and Cancer wikipedia , lookup
Nucleic acid double helix wikipedia , lookup
No-SCAR (Scarless Cas9 Assisted Recombineering) Genome Editing wikipedia , lookup
Epigenetics of human development wikipedia , lookup
Cell-free fetal DNA wikipedia , lookup
DNA supercoil wikipedia , lookup
Genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup
Epigenomics wikipedia , lookup
DNA vaccination wikipedia , lookup
Cancer epigenetics wikipedia , lookup
Molecular cloning wikipedia , lookup
Nutriepigenomics wikipedia , lookup
Cre-Lox recombination wikipedia , lookup
Extrachromosomal DNA wikipedia , lookup
Site-specific recombinase technology wikipedia , lookup
Genome editing wikipedia , lookup
Nucleic acid analogue wikipedia , lookup
Non-coding DNA wikipedia , lookup
Designer baby wikipedia , lookup
Point mutation wikipedia , lookup
Deoxyribozyme wikipedia , lookup
Microevolution wikipedia , lookup
Vectors in gene therapy wikipedia , lookup
Primary transcript wikipedia , lookup
Helitron (biology) wikipedia , lookup
History of genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup
DNA, RNA and Protein Synthesis= CH 10 Griffith’s Experiments • Showed that hereditary material can pass from one bacterial cell to another • The transfer of genetic material from one cell to another or organism to organism is called transformation • Heat killed virulent bacteria can transfer their disease causing ability to harmless bacteria Griffith’s Experiments Avery’s Experiments • Showed that: DNA is the hereditary material that transfers info btwn bacterial cells • Cells missing RNA and Protein could transform R into S cells • Cells missing DNA could not transform cells Hershey-Chase Experiment • DNA not protein is the genetic material • DNA of viruses enters bacterial cells and this causes the bacterial cell to produce more viruses containing DNA • Protein doesn’t enter cells Discovery Of Structure • 1953: Watson and Crick put together a model of DNA using Franklin’s and Wilkins’s DNA diffraction X-rays Molecular Structure of DNA • DNA is composed of 2 strands made of 4 kinds of nucleotides • Each nucleotide consists of 3 parts: – one 5-carbon sugar (deoxyribose) – one phosphate group, and – one of 4 bases • adenine (A), guanine (G), thymine (T), cytosine (C). Structure of a nucleotide • Sugar & Phosphate are “sides” of ladder and Bases are the “rungs” & attach to sugars 2 categories of DNA bases: Purines vs Pyrimidines PURINES = A, G = SMALL WORD, BIG BASES = 2 RINGS = PuAG PYRIMIDINES = T, C = BIG WORD, SMALL BASES= 1 RING = PyTC Purines vs Pyrimidines • Chargaff showed that – % of A always = % of T – % of G always = % of C • Purines always with pyrimidines – BIG BASE ALWAYS WITH SMALL DNA Structure Complementary base pairing rules • Base pairs are formed by hydrogen bonding of A with T (2 H bonds), and G with C (3 H bonds) DNA Replication DNA Replication = in S phase of cell cycle • An enzyme (helicase) breaks the H bonds between base pairs and unZIPS the strands = replication fork DNA Replication • Another enzyme (DNA polymerase) attaches the complementary base to the original DNA strand DNA Replication • Results in DNA molecules that consist of one "old" strand and one "new" strand • Known as semiconservative replication b/c it conserves the original strand). DNA Errors in Replication • Changes = mutation • Proofreading & repair prevent many errors • Unrepaired mutation can cause cancer Flow of Genetic Material: DNA → RNA → Proteins RNA Structure • RNA differs from DNA – RNA uses ribose as the sugar not deoxyribose. – RNA bases are A, G, C, and uracil (U). • G-C • A-U – Single Stranded – Shorter than DNA – Can Leave the nucleus 3 Types of RNA • rRNA - ribosomal • mRNA - messenger • tRNA - transfer Messenger RNA (mRNA) • Made from DNA in nucleus using RNA Polymerase • Is the “Blueprint" for a protein – Carried to ribosomes in cytoplasm after “stop” is reached • Carries message from nucleus to cytosol Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) • rRNA + protein makes a ribosome • Site where proteins are assembled in cytoplasm Transfer RNA (tRNA) • Carries correct AA to ribosome/ mRNA complex Transcription • DNA → RNA – uses RNA Polymerase (binds at “promoter” region) – Process similar to DNA replication – Begins with a START codon and ends with a STOP codon • Makes rRNA, tRNA or mRNA • Message is “transcribed” from DNA code to RNA code Transcription Protein Synthesis: Translation • Making of protein at the rRNA using mRNA and tRNA • Each base triplet in mRNA is called a codon -specifies an amino acid to be included into a polypeptide chain –Uses genetic code to determine amino acid Genetic Code • Universal for all forms of life – 61 triplets specifying amino acids – 3 “stop” codes • Stop codes = UAA, UAG, UGA • Start Codon = AUG = methionine From DNA to Proteins CODON CHART..from mRNA Translation • RNA → PROTEIN • mRNA leaves nucleus goes to ribosome • Begins when ribosome attaches to start codon • tRNA gets specific amino acid (floating free in cytosol), anticodon matches codon of mRNA and A.A. • tRNA brings its AA to ribosome and attaches it to growing chain of AA (protein) • stops at “stop” codon Chapter 11 Gene Expression TURN “ON” GENES to REGULATE PROTEIN AND GENE EXPRESSION Role of Gene Expression • Activation of a gene that results in transcription and production of mRNA • Only a fraction of a cell’s genes are expressed at any one time –You only express genes or make proteins when NEEDED! Gene Expression in Prokaryotes -Studies in 1960’s by French scientists -Started with simple intestinal prokaryotic cell= Escherichia coli = E. coli • Bacteria adapt to changes in their surroundings by using proteins to turn groups of genes on and off in response to various environmental signals • The DNA of Escherichia coli is sufficient to encode about 4000 proteins, but only a fraction of these are made at any one time. E. coli regulates the expression of many of its genes according to the food sources that are available to it • - Scientists discovered how genes in this bacteria metabolize lactose when present • -lactose = disaccharide…needs to be broken down into galactose and glucose Gene Expression in Prokaryotes • When lactose is absent, E. coli will not produce the protein…is repressed • When lactose is present, E. coli will produces the 3 structural enzymes –Meaning this will make the “protein” or go through induction…..so it can break down lactose! Gene Expression in Prokaryotes • http://www.phschool.com/science/biology_place/biocoach/lacoperon/genereg.html • GREAT ANIMATION TO REVIEW AT HOME! Gene Expression in Prokaryotes • Operon: series of genes coding for specific products = “lac” operon • Operon = structural genes + promoter + operator Gene Expression in Prokaryotes • Promoter: segment of DNA recognized by RNA polymerase which then starts transcription • Operator: segment of DNA that acts as “switch” by controlling the access of RNA polymerase to promoter Prokaryotic On & Off switches • Transcription can be turned “on or off” depending on what the cell needs • When turned “off” a repressor protein is bound to DNA in front of the gene • To turn a gene “on” an inducer (lactose) binds to the repressor, causing it to fall off….then gene is expressed Repression Activation Gene Expression in Eukaryotes • Have not found “operons” in eukaryotes • Genomes are larger & more complex • Organized into introns and exons – Through removal of introns from premRNA Controlling Transcription in Eukaryotes Removal of Introns After Transcription Eukaryotic Genes are made of introns and exons • Introns noncoding portions of the gene, removed by enzymes before mRNA leaves the nucleus (pre-mRNA) • Exons portions that will eventually be translated remain in the finished mRNA that leaves the nucleus. Gene Expression in Development • Expressed Genes: have been transcribed & translated • Cell Differentiation: Development of cells w/ different functions • Morphogenesis: development of form in an organism • Homeotic genes (hox): determine where anatomical structures (appendages) will develop & controls differentiation in early development Gene Expression in Development • Homeobox Sequence: – w/in homeotic genes – Sequence of DNA that regulates patterns of development – Homeoboxes of many diff eukaryotic organisms appear to be very similar Gene Expression & Cancer • Oncogene: Gene that causes cancer • Proto-oncogene = normal gene, regulates cell growth. May mutate into oncogene that may lead to cancer • Tumor-supressor gene (3 types): for protein that prevents uncontrolled cell division, mutation may stop this protein production • Viruses may have oncogenes or trigger them in another cell Cancer • Continue to divide indefinitely, even if too tightly packed or detach from other cells • Tumor: uncontrolled, abnormal cell division • benign tumor: does not migrate to other areas, usually harmless • malignant tumor: invade other healthy tissues = cancer • metastasis: breaking away and spreading to other body parts to form new tumors Causes of Cancer • Carcinogen – Chemicals in tobacco smoke, asbestos, UV light from the sun – Mutagen: causes a mutation Kinds of Malignant Tumors • Carcinoma: in skin & tissue lining organs • Sarcoma: in bone & muscle tissue • Lymphoma: in tissues that form blood • Leukemia: uncontrolled production of white blood cells Causes of Cancer • Mutations that change expression of genes coding for growth factor proteins • Usually comes after exposure to carcinogen (tobacco, UV light etc.) • usually need more than 1 mutation to get cancer Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology = Ch 13 DNA Identification/fingerprinting • Gene = segment of DNA bases that code for traits and proteins • Genetic engineering= use of genes to create or modify the genome • DNA fingerprinting = The repeating sequences in noncoding DNA (introns) vary between individuals & thus be used to identify an individual Steps in DNA identification (fingerprinting) • Gel electrophoresis: pieces are separated by size on a gel creating “bands” = fingerprint • Everybody has different number and size of pieces because their DNA sequences are different • PCR = polymerase chain reaction = duplicate DNA – cut “digest” DNA with restriction enzyme to get a bunch of pieces Gel Electrophoresis • DNA fragments placed into “wells” in gel agarose • Electricity pulls on DNA fragments, DNA is “-” and thus goes toward “+” side • Fragments travel at different rates based on size and ability to squeeze through swiss-cheese-like agarose DNA Fingerprinting DNA Fingerprinting Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) • Useful if you only have a little bit of DNA and need to make copies of it • Crime scenes, genetic disorders in embryonic cells, study ancient DNA fragments Restriction Enzymes • Cuts DNA at specific base sequence • Produces sticky ends • Recombinant DNA = Complementary sticky ends can be fused together…is recombined Restriction Enzymes Producing Restriction Fragments • DNA ligase enzyme used to splice together cut plasmids and chromosome fragments Producing & combining restriction fragments Cloning • Making identical copies of cells • Can clone genes or organisms • Cloning a Gene= making large quantities of a desired DNA piece …usually insert into a vector (bacteria) • Transfers gene between organisms • Plasmids: circle of DNA in bacterium replicates independently of the single main chromosome Transplanting Genes • Gene may be used to make bacteria produce specific protein - insulin production Stem Cells • Stem cells have the ability to 1. divide and renew themselves 2. remain undifferentiated in form 3. develop into a variety of specialized cell types Genomic Library • Includes all pieces of genome that come from cutting with a particular restriction enzyme • Can have multiple libraries for the same organism - all cut with different R.E.’s Transgenic Organism • The host that has received the recombinant DNA • Organism produces the new protein unless the gene gets “turned off” • Keep gene “turned on” by splicing it in near a gene that is frequently expressed Human Genome Project • Sequence entire human genome • Began in 1990 - expected completion was 2005, but it was completed in 2000 • Thought humans had 100,000 genes, but its fewer than 30,000 • We have the sequence of genes, but don’t know what they all do yet • Use info for diagnosis, treatment, prevention of genetic disorders Future of Genomics • Bioinformatics: Uses computers to catalog & analyze genomes • Proteomics: studies the identities, interactions, and abundances of an organisms proteins • Microarrays: two-dimensional arrangement of cloned genes, useful to compare specific proteins such as those that cause cancer Medical Applications • Gene Therapy: Used on individuals to insert normal genes (or repair damaged DNA) into body cells to cure disease – Abnormal gene can still be inherited • Used on fertilized zygotes or embryos to insert normal genes for both developing body AND sex cells – Genome changed permanently Uses of DNA Technology • Cloning • Stem Cell Research • Pharmaceutical Products – insulin • Vaccines – work because body recognizes proteins, can produce protein without introducing pathogen Uses of DNA Technology • Agricultural Crops – disease resistance – herbicide resistance – Improve nutrition – require less fertilizer (incorporate nitrogen fixing gene) Concerns of DNA Technology • Plants might produce toxins that could cause allergies in people who consume them Concerns of DNA Technology • What if the plants get into the “wild” forming “superweeds” • Do we really know what we are doing when we mix genes?