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DNA Chapter 2 – read principal points Timeline for genetics Deoxyribonucleic acid Functional Properties 1. Replication – DNA is copied prior to cell division why? 2. Storage of information DNA inherited from parent to offspring from cell to cell Gene expression – Genes encode proteins 3. Mutation – DNA changes to allow variation and adaptation, the basis of evolution A six-legged green frog. (Reproduced by permission of JLM Visuals http://www.isogenic.info/assets/images/autogen/a_image16.jpg Neutral, harmful, adaptive? http://3quarksdaily.blogs.com/3quarksdaily/images/wolfe_seal_1.jpg DNA History 1869 Meischer extracted nuclein from pus 1900s – chromosomes discovered The genetic material must have the 3 functional properties microscopy.bio.cmich.edu Griffith finds “transforming factor” 1928 London Streptococcus pneumoniae bacterium pneumonia in mice, deadly to humans sputum with bacteria Smooth strain (IIIS) virulent polysaccharide capsule capsule allows bacteria to evade immune system Fluorescent stain of capsule isolate live IIIS from mouse S pneumococcus kills mouse in 24 hours. But 100 million IIR strain bacterial cells is harmless S R Appearance when grown on an agar plate (Research photographs of Dr. Harriet Ephrussi-Taylor, courtesy of The Rockefeller University.) http://biology.kenyon.edu/courses/biol114/KH_lecture_images/How_DNA_works/how_ DNA-works.html Rough strain IIR is avirulent -> isolate live IIR IIR lacks capsule The experiment: Heat kill IIIS strain mouse ? Heat killed IIIS strain + live strain IIR mouse ? Which strain is isolated? Griffith’s experiment and conclusion A “transforming factor” in killed S strain transformed live R strain into S DNA or protein? 1944 Avery, McCarty, Macleod 1. Heat kill IIIS 2. Remove lipids and sugars – how? FYI iGenetics: DNA as Genetic Material: Avery’s Transformation Experiment 3. Divide into 3 and treat with: protease RNase DNase next, add live R cells to each 1952 Hershey and Chase Used T2 bacteriophage + E. coli A phage is a virus that infects bacteria How phage work 1. phage adsorbs onto bacterial surface 2. Genetic material injected 3. Cell makes progeny phage IS the genetic material DNA, or protein? Experiment S infect E. coli strip phage off cell surface 1. Label phage protein with 35 New phage are not radioactive 2. Label phage DNA with 32 P -> infect E.coli -> blend -> New phage contain 32 P http://osulibrary.orst.edu/specialcollections/coll/pauling/dna/pictures/hersheych ase-experiment.html Hershey and Chase conclusion DNA is responsible for function and reproduction of phage virus = the genetic material Structure of DNA = nucleotide polymers NUCLEOTIDES 1. Nitrogenous base Purines = guanine and adenine G A How big IS a nucleotide? UTAH cell scale Purines attached to 1 carbon of sugar at 9 nitrogen, covalent bond, pyrimidines attached to 1 carbon at 1 nitrogen Pyrimidines Thymine T Cytosine C RNA contains uracil U 2. Deoxyribose sugar RNA (ribose) 2’ OH makes RNA less stable than DNA Sugar + base = nucleoside 3. Phosphate (PO4) Nucleotide = base + sugar + phosphate Phosphate covalently (phosphodietster bond) attached to 5’C of sugar Phosphodiester bond - Covalent bond between phosphate of one nucleotide and 3’ sugar carbon of another 9 N (purine) or 6N (pyrimidine) covalently bonded to 1C of sugar DNA is a polymer of nucleotides polarity 5’carbon to 3’hydroxyl DNA (double helix) Watson and Crick 1953 cavorite-lis n -fGET tg/stores/d communit rate-item cust-rec just-say-no true m/justsay X-ray diffraction data Rosalind Franklin, Maurice Wilkins DNA properties include: Complementary base pairing 1. Hydrogen bonds between complementary bases How many bonds in a G-C pair? A-T? Which is stronger? Complementary base pairs Which are the G-C pairs? 2. antiparallel stands 5’ 3’ and 3’ 5’ 3. Sugar phosphate backbones 4. Base composition DNA 50% purine 50% pyrimidine A=T G=C A/T = 1 C/G = 1 A +T does not equal C+G A+G=C+T Chargaff (1950) 5. DNA can denature and renature Melt hydrogen bonds (chemical or heat) And 5. Right handed helix 6. Complete turn of the helix is 0.34 nm, 10 bases per turn 7. Major and minor grooves Major and minor grooves Forms of DNA B DNA right helix 10 bp/ turn A DNA right helix 10.9 bp/ turn Z DNA left helix 12 bp/turn (role?) Cellular DNA closest to B DNA 10.4 bp/turn Replication of DNA by Complementary Base Pairing HHMI interactive DNA replication advanced Organization of DNA in chromosomes Genome Full amount of genetic material in a single cell Viral chromosome Single or double stranded DNA or RNA Circular or linear Parvovirus ssDNA Influenza ssRNA Bacteriophage ds DNA HIV ssRNA Herpes ds DNA Genetic material in prokaryotes 1 (usually) chromosome Circular (most) chromosome Supercoiled DNA located in nucleoid region Neisseria gonorrhoeae E. coli = 4.6 million bp, circular chromosome 1500 um genome stuffed into a 1 um cell via supercoiling E. Coli cells E. coli DNA map of chromosome Some bacteria contain extra-chromosomal DNA called a plasmid Eukaryotic Chromosomes C value - Amount of DNA varies among species The structure of chromatin DNA + proteins Highly conserved Histones and non-histones Histone proteins basic net + charge interacts with – charged DNA Package DNA Highly conserved Non-histone proteins vary among species http://faculty.jsd.claremont.edu/jarmstrong/images/chromatin.gif What do histones do? 1. pack DNA into chromatin Condense DNA 10,000X (2 meters nanometers) 1. Modifications to histone proteins affect gene expression 5 histone proteins Histone type H1 H2A H2B H3 H4 #amino acids 200-265 129-155 121-155 135 102 content_________________ 27%lysine, 2%arginine 11% lysine, 9% arginine 6% lysine, 6% arginine 10%lysine, 15% arginine 11% lysine, 4% arginine Note: all are lysine/arginine rich, they contain other amino acids, but at small percentages. Basic, + charge Gel electrophoresis epigenetics Modification of histone proteins changes gene expression. Chemical tags can be inherited and are stable in cell division Pbs: A Tale of Two Mice Epigenetics with deGrassi http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/scienceno w/3411/02.html Agouti Mice Epigenetics and gene silencing Mouse and twin studies Diet and the epigenome Methyl group tags Chromosome packaging 1. Nucleosomes “beads on a string” The 10 um chromatin fiber 2(H2A).2(H2B) 2(H3).2(H4) octomer 1 nucleosome Dual role of nucleosomes stable to shelter DNA and compact it labile to allow DNA information to be used 2. The 30 nm chromatin fiber Histone H1 attaches linker DNA to nucleosomes The 30 nm chromatin fiber (11nm string-> 30 nm helical fiber) See Science article 3. Further packaging into loops and scaffolds…… Summary of DNA packaging 30nm chromatin fiber Nucleosomes DNA helix Metaphase chromosome is 10,000 X condensed compared to double helix Condensed scaffold The scaffold with loops Euchromatin and Heterochromatin 1. Heterochromatin Condensed Transcriptionally inactive Ex. centromeres Heterochromatin stains darkly Heterchromatin example Barr body (facultative, extent of inactivity varies) Inactivated X chromosome in females 2. Euchromatin Lighter staining regions of DNA that contain genes Transcriptionally active Unique Sequences and Repetitive DNA What genes are on a chromosome? http://www.dnalc.org/ddnalc/resources/chr11.html Chromosome 11 flyover Terms: Transposon Pseudogene Olfactory Polymorphism 1. Unique Sequence DNA (1 to a few copies) a. Genes Encode proteins ~60% of DNA Only 2% of DNA is coding (H. sapiens) Estimated 20,000 genes in humans b. Gene families Example: Beta globin (encode subunits of hemoglobin) e encodes embryonic beta globin g encode fetal beta globin y is a pseudogene (not functional) d encodes normal beta globin b encodes normal adult beta globin 2. Repetitive DNA Repeated 10 – 1000sX in the genome a. Dispersed repeated DNA LINES = long interspersed elements 1000 – 7000 bp Ex. humans have 500,000 copies of L1 = 15 % of genome. some are transposons= copy and move SINES 100 – 400 bp Ex. Alu repeats repeated 1 million times = 10% of genome b. Tandem repeats 1 – 10 bp long tandemly repeated Centromeres, telomeres, rRNA genes Ex. telomere sequence repeated 2000X 5'...TTAGGG TTAGGG TTAGGG TTAGGG TTAGGG TTAGGG..3' 3'...AATCCC AATCCC AATCCC AATCCC AATCCC AATCCC..5' Ex. rRNA genes