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Biology Partnership (A Teacher Quality Grant) DNA History, Components, Function, Replication, & Biotechnology Nancy Dow Jill Hansen Tammy Stundon September 29, 2012 Gulf Coast State College Panhandle Area Educational Consortium 5230 West Highway 98 753 West Boulevard Panama City, Florida 32401 Chipley, Florida 32428 850-769-1551 877-873-7232 www.gulfcoast.edu Pre-test Q and A board What is DNA? How do we use DNA? Does everything have the same DNA? What is alike and what is different about it? Florida Next Generation Sunshine State Standards SC.912.L.16.3 Describe the basic process of DNA replication and how it relates to the transmission and conservation of the genetic information. Also Assesses SC.912.L.16.4 Explain how mutations in the DNA sequence may or may not result in phenotypic change. Explain how mutations in gametes may result in phenotypic changes in offspring. (will begin today but will define phenotype until the genetics session) SC.912.L.16.5 Explain the basic processes of transcription and translation, and how they result in the expression of genes. (next session) SC.912.L.16.9 Explain how and why the genetic code is universal and is common to almost all organisms Florida Next Generation Sunshine State Standards Benchmark Clarifications • Students will describe the process of DNA replication and/or its role in the transmission and conservation of genetic information. • Students will describe gene and chromosomal mutations in the DNA sequence. • Students will explain how gene and chromosomal mutations may or may not result in a phenotypic change. • Students will explain the basic processes of transcription and/or • translation, and their roles in the expression of genes. Florida Next Generation Sunshine State Standards Clarifications • Students will explain that the basic components of DNA are universal in organisms. • Students will explain how similarities in the genetic codes of organisms are due to common ancestry and the process of inheritance. Content Limits Items requiring the analysis of base pairs for gene mutations are meiosis. • Items will not require memorization of specific conditions resulting rom chromosomal mutations. • Items may refer to the process of meiosis in the context of mutations but will not assess meiosis in isolation Florida Next Generation Sunshine State Standards SC.912.L.16.10 Evaluate the impact of biotechnology on the individual, society and the environment, including medical and ethical issues. Clarification • Students will evaluate examples and/or explain the possible impact of biotechnology on the individual, society, and/or the environment. Content Limits • Items may assess current issues but will not require knowledge of specific biotechnologies or specific medical issues. • Items assessing the possible impacts of biotechnology will not assess monetary impacts. Macromolecules 1. Carbohydrates 2. Proteins 3. Nucleic Acids • Functions • Examples What is the easiest bond to break? Carbon molecule needs how many bonds to be stable? Bell Ringer ATGC DNA stands for deoxyribonucleic acid. DNA double helixes are organized into 23 pairs of chromosomes in every cell in your body. This set of chromosomes is the instruction manual to make YOU. Each different instruction is called a gene. The gene instructions are written in a DNA code – the genetic code. New coded copies are made when the DNA double helix unzips down the middle. We have to clearly distinguish for the kids various terms that involve DNA Chromatin Chromatid Sister Chromatid Chromosome DNA into Chromosomes - I show this at least twice (start and end) with no volume Human Onion PLANTS Newt ANIMALS FUNGI Fruit fly DNA HELPS TO SHOW EVOLUTIONARY RELATIONSHIPS OF ORGANISMS PROTISTS BACTERIA ARCHAEA Amoeba Dr. Watson's Funny Story Watson and Crick, on the right determined in the 1950’s that DNA was a “Double Helix’ that was twisted. Watson later led the work on the human genome project. • Watson and Crick’s discovery built on the work of Rosalind Franklin and Erwin Chargaff. – Franklin’s x-ray images suggested that DNA was a double helix of even width. – Chargaff’s rules stated that A=T and C=G. FROM GENOME TO GENE GENOME An organism’s complete set of DNA. In eukaryotes, this information can be found in the nucleus of virtually every cell. Eukaryotic cell Nucleus CHROMOSOME One or more unique pieces of DNA—circular in prokaryotes, linear in eukaryotes—that together make up an organism's genome. Chromosomes vary in length and can consist of hundreds of millions of base pairs. Humans have 23 unique chromosomes and we have two copies of each: one from our mother and one from our father, for a total of 46). Protein production Protein GENE A specific sequence of DNA, on average about 3,000 bases long, that contains the information necessary to produce all or part of a protein molecule. DNA structure • DNA is made up of nucleotides • Nucleotides are made up of: – Phosphate – Sugar – Nitrogenous base – the base can vary 4 Nitrogenous bases Found in DNA -Adenine (A) -Thymine (T) -Cytosine (C) -Guanine (G) Every 3 bases = a code = amino acid! Every living thing has the SAME 4 bases! • The nitrogen containing bases are the only difference in the four nucleotides. DNA structure Complementary Base Pairing (Base Pair Rule) • The two strands are connected by hydrogen bonds between the nitrogen bases • Nitrogen bases combine in a particular way -A combines with T -G combines with C DNA structure Note: chromatids vs sister chromatids • DNA is double stranded. • The two chains or strands of nucleotides twist around one another. Put to test what you have learned! CANDY DNA DNA Origami What happens to DNA ? The DNA inside the nucleus controls the production of proteins. Where does protein synthesis occur? - ribosomes in cytoplasm and rough ER How does information from the nucleus get into the cytoplasm so that protein synthesis can occur? - RNA What happens to DNA ? DNA (replication- once in every cell cycle) DNA (TRANSCRIPTION) RNA (TRANSLATION) Proteins What happens to DNA ? DNA replication-- DNA duplicates itself during interphase of cell cycle - S stage of Interphase (in nucleus) - Chromatin Chromatids replication strands (sister chromatids) - “normal functions” of the cell stop - Steps of cell division follow (More info in a session this fall) transcription & translation – Steps of protein synthesis (next session!) DNA Replication • DNA molecule uncoils and unzips (DNA Polymerase) – Nucleotides are fit into place on each of the parent strand – Corrects base pair errors too • Each parent strand is a template to form a complementary strand • Each THREE base pairs is the DNA’s Code DNA Replication DNA Replication Yield: – 2 double stranded DNA molecules identical to each other – Half of each double helix is new (daughter strand) and half is the original (parent strand) DNA Replication DNA replication Mistakes. . . . . • Parent strands act as templates, so mistakes during replication are minimized • Each cell has repair enzymes that repair the damage • An error that persists is a mutation Mistakes. . . . .OOOPS! . . . .estimated that one error is made for 2x109 nucleotides every DNA replication BUT. . . Human cells contains 46 chromosomes consisting of 3 billion base pairs . . . . .that averages to five errors per cell!!!! Damage to the DNA code can cause changes to protein production TYPES OF MUTATIONS Normal DNA mRNA Normal protein BASE-PAIR SUBSTITUTION Normal chromosome Gene 1 POINT MUTATIONS DNA mRNA Mutated protein BASE-PAIR INSERTION DNA mRNA Mutated protein BASE-PAIR DELETION DNA mRNA Mutated protein Insertions and deletions can be much more harmful than substitutions because they can alter the reading frame for the rest of the gene. Some mutations are harmless, some beneficial, others are neutral, others can be detrimental or fatal to the organism. GENE DELETION Gene 2 Gene 3 CHROMOSOMAL ABERRATIONS Gene 1 GENE RELOCATION Gene 2 Gene 3 DELETED Gene 2 Gene 3 Gene 1 RELOCATED to a different chromosome GENE DUPLICATION Gene 1 DUPLICATED Gene 2 Gene 3 In point mutations, one base pair is changed, whereas in chromosomal aberrations, entire sections of a chromosome are altered. Mutations on DNA can be the result of various causes (UV rays, radiation, chemicals like nicotine) or can be spontaneous. DNA Extraction The DNA precipitate! or coffee filter When DNA is a detective ... An introduction into biotechnology … will go into more detail over various techniques in future sessions Biotechnology • Genetic engineering – def: use of technology to alter the genes of viruses, bacteria, and other cells for medical or industrial purposes to better the quality of life – Altering genes of unicellular organisms and plants and animals Genetic engineering? A firefly gene inserted into other organisms. TOBACCO PLANT MICE MUSHROOMS Recombinant DNA (rDNA) Technology Combination of genes from 2 different organisms Ex. Human genes can be spliced into the DNA of bacteria to produce insulin More rDNA: Manipulating the DNA of bacteria • bacteria that eat oil are engineered to do better • recombinant bacteria used to extract copper, uranium, gold from low-grade sources • recombinant bacteria used to extract sulfur from coal before it is burned DNA fingerprinting • DNA extracted from blood and sperm can be cut by restriction enzymes – enzyme cuts at a particular base sequence – since everyone’s DNA is different, different lengths of DNA are created when you use the same restriction enzyme on different DNA Person 1: ACTGTGTGTATGGGATGTGACACACTTCC TCACTGTCATACCCTACACTGTGTGAAGG Person 2: ACTGTGTGATGTGACACACTACGGGTTCC TCACTGTCTACACTGTGTGATGCCCAAGG Manipulating the DNA Bt CORN Bacterium (Bacillus thuringiensis) Bt crystal gene Plant cell 1 Corn plant destroyed by insect pests Corn genome 2 Bacterial gene coding for Bt crystals, which are poisonous to the insect pests, is inserted directly into the corn plant’s DNA. 3 Bt crystals—toxic to insect pests— are now produced by the corn plant itself, reducing the amount of pesticides the farmer must use. Manipulating the DNA Almost 10% of the world’s people suffer from vitamin A deficiencies—leading to 250,00 cases of blindness each year. The addition of betacarotene-producing genes to white rice has increased its vitamin A content almost 25-fold. GOLDEN RICE Genes in the pathway for beta-carotene production are introduced into the white rice genome. Daffodil Bacteria White rice Beta-carotene Golden rice Manipulating the DNA GENETICALLY MODIFIED CROPS IN THE UNITED STATES Corn Cotton 55% 45% Soybeans 24% 76% 15% 85% Proportion of crops that are not genetically modified Proportion of crops that are genetically modified Commonly called GM Foods Other types/examples of Biotechnology rDNA of animals Cloning - produce a copy of a gene Organ Transplant - across species Gene Therapy – insert a missing piece of DNA to cure a person of a disease. HUMAN GENOME PROJECT & DVD Caught by a Kiss! Forensic Science! Ready to use what you know in the ‘real world’? Dr. Watson explaining base pairing National DNA teaching Day DNA interactive DDC Education Center Family portrait interactive Beaded DNA bracelet Origami DNA double Helix The Double Helix Game Mission Biotech virtual gaming Pompe Disease Follow up •Q & A •Post Test