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Homework for break • Read Chapter 12 in textbook • 2 Webquests • Short Essay for second webquest typed. DNA and RNA • • Genetics • Quest - Friday • • List the conclusions and how each of these scientist got there: – – – Griffith Avery Hershey and Chase Why did Hershey and Chase grow viruses in cultures that contained both radioactive phosphorus and radioactive sulfur? What might have happened if they only used one? How did Watson and Crick’s model explain why there are equal amounts of thymine and adenine in DNA? Frederick Griffith 1928 Transformation - process in which one strain of bacteria is changed by a gene or genes from another strain of bacteria Avery and other scientists discovered thatOswald DNA is the nucleic acid1944 that stores Avery and transmits the genetic information from one generation of an organism to • World knows a molecule carries the the next. genetic information. • Doesn’t know if the molecule is a: protein, lipid, carbohydrate, RNA, or DNA • Avery performs Griffith’s experiment again with a twist. Hershey-Chase Experiment 1952 • Good scientists are naturally skeptical. • Hershey-Chase are testing to see if DNA is the molecule that carries genetic information. • Bacteriophage - virus that infects bacteria Hershey-Chase Experiment DNA Structure • Nucleotide monomer of nucleic acids made up of a 5carbon sugar, a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base Sugar-Phosphate Backbone and Chargaff’s Rule • Simply states: If I have a certain number of Cytosines I will have about the ______ number of Guanines. Same with A’s and T’s. Rosalind Franklin 1950 X-Ray Diffraction • Clues from the X-Ray – Coiled (forming Helix) – Doublestranded – Nitrogeneous bases are in the center Watson & Crick • Francis Crick – British physicist • James Watson – American Biologist – Building a 3D model of DNA – Franklin’s X-Ray opened their eyes to the Double Helix • Watson and Crick’s model of DNA was a double helix, in which two strands were wound around each other. Double Helix Homework StudyGuide 12-1 and 12-2 1. List the conclusions and how each of these scientist got there: – Griffith – Avery – Hershey and Chase 2. How did Watson and Crick’s model explain why there are equal amounts of thymine and adenine in DNA? 3. Why did Hershey and Chase grow viruses in cultures that contained both radioactive phosphorus and radioactive sulfur? What might have happened if they only used one? DNA, DNA replication, and protein synthesis • Homework – study for quest on Friday – Bio 10 Quest Thursday – Homework for break • Complete Protein Synthesis Lab • Complete Bio SAT II diagnostic test – Use any resources available to you!!! Prokaryote DNA • Prokaryotes – No Nucleus – Most have one circular chromosome located in the cytoplasm with some plasmids as well – E.Coli (1.6μm diameter) – 4,639,221 base pairs 1.6mm long – Like packing 300m of rope in your backpack Eukaryotes and DNA • 1000 time more base pairs than bacterial DNA • Smallest human chromosome has 30million base pairs of DNA • How do eukaryotes fit all that DNA in its nucleus? DNA to Chromosomes • Vocab – Chromatin - granular material (uncondensed) within the nucleus; consists of DNA tightly coiled around proteins – Chromosomes – condensed chromatin – Histone - globular protein molecule around which DNA is tightly coiled in chromatin DNA Replication • During DNA replication, the DNA molecule separates into two strands, then produces two new complementary strands following the rules of base pairing. Each strand of the double helix of DNA serves as a template, or model, for the new strand. Read 12-3 • Crossword Puzzle 1. Enzymes unwind DNA 2. Enzymes split “unzip” double helix 3. The enzyme, DNA polymerase, finds and attaches the corresponding Nbase 4. Each “old” stand serves as a template and is matched up with a new stand of DNA 5. New helixes wind back up. DNA Replication A–C–T–T–G–G–A–C T–G–A–A–C–C–T-G Homework 12-3 Studyguide RNA and Protein Synthesis • Codon - three-nucleotide sequence on messenger RNA that codes for a single amino acid • Anticodon - group of three bases on a tRNA molecule that are complementary to an mRNA codon Protein Synthesis Two Main Parts • Transcription – Formation of a single strand of messenger RNA from DNA in the nucleus • Translation – Occurs on ribosomes – Cell uses the information on mRNA to assemble amino acids in the proper order to form specific proteins Transcription 1. Occurs in nucleus 2. Enzymes unwind DNA 3. Enzymes split “unzip” double helix 4. RNA Polymerase binds to promoter sequence on DNA 5. RNA Polymerase transcribes a single strand of mRNA mRNA Editing before going to transcription • Intron - intervening sequence of DNA; does not code for a protein (not used) • Exon - expressed sequence of DNA; codes for a protein (used) Translation Translation Genes and Proteins • Most genes only have instructions for assembling proteins. • If that’s the case what do proteins have to do with eye color, hair color or height? Homework • 12-4 in Guided Reading Workbook Mutations • Mutation - change in a DNA sequence that affects genetic information • Two Main Types: – Gene Mutation • Mutation that causes a change in a single gene – Chromosomal Mutation • Mutation that causes a change in an entire chromosome Gene Mutations • Point Mutation (substitution) – mutation that affects a single nucleotide, usually by substituting one nucleotide for another • Frameshift Mutation (insertion or deletion) – mutation that shifts the “reading” frame of the genetic message by inserting or deleting a nucleotide Chromosomal Mutations • Chromosomal mutations involve changes in whole chromosomes. Gene Regulation Gene Regulation • Prokaryote Gene Regulation – Will often have one OPERATOR (regulatory site) controlling the expression of more than one gene. OPERON • Eukaryote Gene Regulation – Most eukaryotic genes are controlled individually and have regulatory sequences that are much more complex than those of the lac operon Gene Regulation Vocab • Promoter - region of DNA that indicates to RNA polymerase where to bind to make RNA • Operon - group of genes operating together • Operator - region of chromosome in an operon to which the repressor binds when the operon is “turned off” Lac Operon (E. coli) • Operator bound – RNA polymerase can’t transcribe genetic information(not expressed) • Operator free – gene(s) expressed Eukaryote Gene Regulation Genes are regulated in a variety of ways by enhancer sequences DNA region about 30bp long TATATAAA: help to align RNA Polymerase Gene Reg. and Development • hox genes - series of genes that controls the organs and tissues that develop in various parts of an embryo • Mutations affecting the hox genes in the fruit fly, Drosophila, for example, can replace the fly’s antennae with a pair of legs growing right out of its head! 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. What is meant by term base pairing? How is base pairing involved in DNA replication? When a DNA molecule is replicated, how do the new molecules relate to the original molecule? What is the difference between introns and exons? What is a codon?anticodon? How do they relate? Explain why controlling proteins in an organism controls the organism’s traits. Name two major types of mutations. What do they have in common? How are they different? Give an example of each. The word transcribe means “to write out”, and the word translate means “to express in another language.” Review the meanings of transcription and translation in genetics. How do the technical meanings of these words relate to meanings of the words in ordinary language?