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Active Lecture PowerPoint® Presentation for Essentials of Genetics Seventh Edition Klug, Cummings, Spencer, Palladino Chapter 9 DNA Structure and Analysis Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Outline • Characteristics of genetic material • Central dogma • Is genetic material DNA or proteins? • RNA as genetic material • Structure of DNA & RNA • Physical properties of DNA & RNA Four Characteristics of Genetic Material For a molecule to serve as the genetic material, it must: 1. 2. 3. 4. be able to replicate store information express information allow variation by mutation The Central Dogma Early Research • Friedrick Miescher (1868) – Swiss chemist – Isolated nuclei from WBC found a a phosphorus bearing acid substance – He called the substance nuclein – Nuclein consisted of Deoxyribo nucleic acid (DNA) and proteins – First to isolate DNA from cells http://www.biologie.uni-hamburg.de/bonline/e17/17k.htm00 Early Research • Phoebus A. Levene (1910) – Identified subunits of DNA (nucleotides) – Incorrectly proposed tetranucleotide hypothesis • Erwin Chargaff (1940s) http://www.modares.ac.ir/ elearning/mnaderi/Genetic %20Engineering%20cours e%20II/images/15bbio.gif – Proved tetranucleotide hypothesis incorrect What is the Genetic material? DNA or Proteins? DNA alphabet has 4 letters Protein alphabet has 20 letters Transformation: Early Studies • Frederick Griffith – showed that avirulent strains of Diplococcus pneumoniae could be transformed to virulence (Diplococcus pneumoniae is now designated Streptococcus pneumoniae) – speculated transforming principle could be part of polysaccharide capsule or some compound required for capsule synthesis What is the Transforming Principle? • Avery, MacLeod, and McCarty demonstrated transforming principle was DNA and not protein Smooth cells Mix with live rough cells The Hershey–Chase Experiment Hershey and Chase (1952) • demonstrated DNA, and not protein, enters bacterial cell during bacteriophage infection and directs viral reproduction Hershey-Chase experiment Transfection Experiments • Infection by only the phage DNA, called transfection, produced mature viruses • This further strengthened evidence for DNA as the genetic material Indirect Evidence: Distribution of DNA • DNA is found only where the primary genetic function occurs • Protein is found throughout the cell • This provided indirect evidence for DNA as the genetic material Indirect Evidence: Mutagenesis • UV light: – capable of inducing mutations in genetic material – is most mutagenic at a wavelength of 260 nm • DNA and RNA absorb UV light most strongly at 260 nm • Protein absorbs most strongly at 280 nm, a wavelength at which no significant mutagenic effects are observed • Again, this provides indirect evidence for DNA as the genetic material Direct Evidence: Recombinant DNA Studies • Strongest direct evidence for DNA as the genetic material comes from recombinant DNA technology • Segments of eukaryotic DNA corresponding to specific genes are isolated and spliced into bacterial DNA Direct Evidence: Recombinant DNA Studies • Bacteria containing eukaryotic gene produce the corresponding eukaryotic protein. • This provides direct evidence that this DNA is present and functional in bacterial cell RNA as Genetic Material in Some Viruses • Some viruses have an RNA core rather than a DNA core • This RNA serves as the genetic material for these viruses • Retroviruses are a special group of RNA viruses HIV multiplication The Structure of DNA • Nucleotides are the building blocks of nucleic acids (both DNA & RNA) • Nucleotides consist of: 1. a nitrogenous base 2. a pentose sugar 3. at least one phosphate group DNA and RNA Composition Bases • The nitrogenous bases can be purines or pyrimidines • Purines are adenine (A) and guanine (G) • Pyrimidines are cytosine (C), thymine (T), and uracil (U) Bases Sugars Nucleoside Nucleotide Glycosidic bond Phosphodiester bond DNA is negatively charged Antiparallel Double strands X-Ray Diffraction Photo of Rosalind Franklin The Watson–Crick Model • Watson and Crick proposed (1953): – DNA is a right-handed double helix – the two strands are antiparallel – the bases are stacked on one another – the two strands are connected by A-T and GC base pairing – there are 10 base pairs per helix turn Figure 10-14c Copyright © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall, Inc. Write the base sequence in the complementary DNA strand and label the ends 5’ C T A T G C A A G T C A T T __’ __’ ______________________ __’ Alternative Forms of DNA Exist • Watson-Crick DNA model is of B-DNA, which is believed to be biologically significant form • A-DNA is slightly more compact than B-DNA • C-DNA, D-DNA, and E-DNA also right-handed forms of DNA, are less compact than B-DNA • Z-DNA forms a left-handed double helix Figure Copyright © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall, Inc. Multiple Forms of Double Helices A Form Observed under low humidity Short & broad form. 11 base pairs/turn Base pairs not perpendicular to the helix Right handed helix B Form - Observed under high humidity Most closely matches the structure of DNA in a cell Long & thinner form. 10 base pairs/turn Base pairs perpendicular to the helix Right handed helix Z Form Elongated zigzag form. Left handed helix About RNA… • The sugar ribose is present instead of deoxyribose of DNA; Uracil replaces thymine • Most RNA is single stranded; hence they form secondary structures such as hairpins • All RNAs originate as complementary copies of one of the two strands of DNA. Which one came first? DNA or RNA? • Some RNAs can act as enzymes - Ribozymes About RNA… Three major classes of cellular RNAs: 1. messenger RNA (mRNA) 2. ribosomal RNA (rRNA) 3. transfer RNA (tRNA) More about RNA… Now RNA is recognized as having a major role in controlling gene regulation and expression: 1. Small nuclear RNA (snRNA) 2. Micro RNA (miRNA) 3. Telomerase RNA (involved in DNA replication at the ends of chromosomes) iRNA : RNA interference is a mechanism by which genes can be shut down. Properties of DNA • Denaturation – Separation of the two strands • Reannealing (Reassociation) – Reuniting of the two strands • Hybridization- Reuniting of strands of nucleic acids from two different sources • Electrophoresis –Separation technique of DNA & RNA molecules by the size Denaturation DNA can be denatured by Heat – High pH – Organic solvents – formamide dimethyl sulfoxide Low ionic strength – promotes denaturation (negative charges repel) Tm - Melting Temperature Temperature at which two strands are denatured Tm depends on the GC content. Why? half Reannealing Slow cooling of the separated strands will anneal the two strands Rapid cooling does not – eg: keeping on ice after boiling Annealing temperature is about 25 C below Tm Hybridization • Denatured DNA strands (or RNA strands) from different sources can be renatured to each other • DNA-DNA Hybridization • DNA-RNA Hybridization • RNA-RNA Hybridization • Hybridization provides techniques for analyzing DNA Fluorescent in situ Hybridization Electrophoresis • Nucleic acid electrophoresis separates DNA and RNA fragments by size • Smaller fragments migrate at a faster rate through a gel than large fragments • Agarose gel electrophoresis • Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis