Biochemistry Lecture 6. Functions of Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids Nucleotide Functions: –Energy for metabolism (ATP) –Enzyme cofactors (NAD + ) –Signal.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chemistry 2100 Lecture 12.
Advertisements

Chapter 10 – DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene.
Unit 3c Microbial Genetics. Genetics: the science of heredity Genome: the genetic information in the cell Genomics: the sequencing and molecular characterization.
Chapter 8.3: Nucleic Acid Chemistry CHEM 7784 Biochemistry Professor Bensley.
Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids Part 1 Chapter 8. Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids –Biological function of nucleotides and nucleic acids –Structures of common.
Nucleic Acids, DNA Replication, and Protein Synthesis
DNA, RNA, and the Flow of Genetic Information. Nucleic Acid Structure What structural features do DNA and RNA share? What structural features do DNA and.
1 Nucleic acids: DNA and RNA Done By Majed Felemban.
DNA Structure and Replication. Lifespan Gene In The News.
General Microbiology (Micr300) Lecture 11 Biotechnology (Text Chapters: ; )
–DNA functions as the inherited directions for a cell or organism. –How are these directions carried out? Flow of Genetic Information Gene DNA RNA Protein.
8.1 Identifying DNA as the Genetic Material KEY CONCEPT DNA was identified as the genetic material through a series of experiments.
NUCLEOTIDES AND NUCLEIC ACIDS
DNA Biology Lab 11. Nucleic Acids  DNA and RNA both built of nucleotides containing Sugar (deoxyribose or ribose) Nitrogenous base (ATCG or AUCG) Phosphate.
Chapter 8.2: Nucleic Acid Structure
Biochemistry Lecture 6. Functions of Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids Nucleotide Functions: –Energy for metabolism (ATP) –Enzyme cofactors (NAD + ) –Signal.
Biochemistry Lecture 4.
How do you identify and clone a gene of interest? Shotgun approach? Is there a better way?
Molecular Biology (Foundation Block) The central dogma of molecular biology Nucleotide chemistry DNA, RNA and chromosome structure DNA replication Gene.
Nucleotides & Nucleic Acids Roles: Energy currency (ATP, GTP) Chemical links in response of cells to hormones (cAMP) Involved in cofactors (NAD, FAD, CoA)
NUCLEIC ACIDS AND PROTEIN SYNTHESIS. QUESTION 1 DNA.
The Central Dogma of Molecular Biology DNA → RNA → Proteins Biology II D. Mitchell.
From DNA to Protein. Knowledge of Nucleic Acid Chemistry Is Essential to the Understanding of DNA Structure.
Chromosome Abnormalities Non-disjunction during meiosis can cause a gamete to have an extra chromosome Trisomy = three copies of the same chromosome. Most.
Chemistry 2100 Chapter 25. Nucleic Acids There are two kinds of nucleic acids in cells: –Ribonucleic acids (RNA) –Deoxyribonucleic acids (DNA) Both.
Nucleic Acids The nucleic acids DNA and RNA consist of monomers called nucleotides that consist of a Pentose sugar. Nitrogen-containing base. Phosphate.
Molecular Biology I-II The central dogma of molecular biology Nucleotide chemistry DNA, RNA and Chromosome Structure DNA Replication Gene Expression Transcription.
AP Biology Nucleic Acids Information storage Energy Transfer.
8.2 Structure of DNA KEY CONCEPT DNA structure is the same in all organisms.
Gene Expression Gene: contains the recipe for a protein 1. is a specific region of DNA on a chromosome 2. codes for a specific mRNA.
DNA, Genes, and Gene Expression Grades 9-12 M. Wetherbee.
Nucleotides and nucleic acids Nucleotides: small molecules –Components of nucleic acids –Energy storage (eg. ATP) –Signal transduction/info transfer (eg.
DNA: Structure and Function Unit 7. Recall: DNA is a nucleic acid and made of nucleotides Nucleotides contain a sugar, phosphate, and a base In DNA, the.
Introduction to Organic and Biochemistry (CHE 124) Reading Assignment General, Organic, and Biological Chemistry: An Integrated Approach 3 rd. Ed. Ramond.
AP Biology Nucleic acids AP Biology Nucleic Acids Information storage.
DNA and RNA Structure Biochemistry Connection: How is structure related to function?
DNA Isolation. Nucleic Acid Structure & Function DNA & RNA are composed of Nucleotides A nucleotide consists of three covalently-linked parts: –A nitrogen.
Molecular Biology - I Dr. Sumbul Fatma Clinical Chemistry Unit Department of Pathology.
Biotechnology is a field of applied biology and biochemistry, that involves the use of living organisms and bioprocesses in engineering, technology, medicine.
Nucleotides & Nucleic Acids Roles: Energy currency (____________) Chemical links in response of cells to hormones (________) Involved in cofactors (______________)
From DNA to Proteins Ch. 8.
Transcription & Translation
THE MOLECULE BASIS OF INHERITANCE
DNA The Molecule of Life.
Molecular biology (1) (Foundation Block).
The Information of LIFE
Biochemistry Lecture 2 Nucleic Acids.
4- Nucleic acids (DNA & RNA) Watson and Crick discovered the double helix by building models to conform to X-ray data In April 1953, James Watson.
Gene Expression Gene: contains the recipe for a protein
Reminder-four classes of large biomolecules
Chapter 14 Bioinformatics—the study of a genome
Fundamentals of Organic Chemistry
Fundamentals of Organic Chemistry
Reminder-four main classes of large biomolecules
Inquiry into Life Twelfth Edition
Reminder-we recognize four classes of large biomolecules
DNA is the Hereditary Material
Deoxyribonucleic Acid
THE NUCLEIC ACIDS. STRUCTURE
Structure of DNA Unit 5B
Fundamentals of Organic Chemistry
Review JEOPARDY! History DNA structure Replication Transcription
Fundamentals of Organic Chemistry
Life’s Instruction Manual or What Genes are Made Of
DNA and RNA structure The painting “Dawn of the Double Helix” composes the DNA duplex as human figures. The theme in this painting is “Life forms: The.
4- Nucleic acids (DNA & RNA) Watson and Crick discovered the double helix by building models to conform to X-ray data In April 1953, James Watson.
Structure and function of DNA
Fundamentals of Organic Chemistry
Nucleic acids (DNA & RNA)
Molecular biology (1) (Foundation Block).
Presentation transcript:

Biochemistry Lecture 6

Functions of Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids Nucleotide Functions: –Energy for metabolism (ATP) –Enzyme cofactors (NAD + ) –Signal transduction (cAMP) Nucleic Acid Functions: –Storage of genetic info (DNA) –Transmission of genetic info (mRNA) –Processing of genetic information (ribozymes) –Protein synthesis (tRNA and rRNA)

NucleotideNucleosideNucleobase

Pyrimidine Nucleobases

Purine Nucleobases

UV Absorption of Nucleobases

 -D-ribofuranose in RNA  -2’-deoxy-D-ribofuranose in DNA

 N-Glycosidic Bond

Polynucleotides

Hydrolysis of RNA

Hydrogen Bonding!

Discovery of DNA Structure One of the most important discoveries in biology Why is this important – " This structure has novel features which are of considerable biological interest “ --- Watson and Crick, Nature, 1953 Good illustration of science in action: –Missteps in the path to a discovery –Value of knowledge –Value of collaboration –Cost of sharing your data too early

Covalent Structure of DNA ( ) Friedrich Miescher isolates “nuclein” from cell nuclei Hydrolysis of nuclein: –phosphate –pentose –and a nucleobase Chemical analysis: –phosphodiester linkages –pentose is ribofuranoside Structure of DNA: 1929 (Levene and London) Structure of DNA: 1935 (Levene and Tipson)

Road to the Double Helix Franklin and Wilkins: –“Cross” means helix –“Diamonds” mean that the phosphate- sugar backbone is outside – Calculated helical parameters Watson and Crick: – Missing layer means alternating pattern (major & minor groove) – Hydrogen bonding: A pairs with T G pairs with C Double helix fits the data! Watson, Crick, and Wilkins shared 1962 Nobel Prize Franklin died in 1958

Other forms of DNA

The Central Dogma

DNA Replication “It has not escaped our notice that the specific pairing we have postulated immediately suggests a possible copying mechanism for the genetic material” Watson and Crick, in their Nature paper,1953

Using DNA Structure

Thermal Denaturation

Molecular Mechanisms of Spontaneous Mutagenesis Deamination Very slow reactions Large number of residues The net effect is significant: 100 C  U events /day in a mammalian cell Depurination N-glycosidic bond is hydrolyzed Significant for purines: 10,000 purines lost/day in a mammalian cell Cells have mechanisms to correct most of these modifications.

DNA Technologies

DNA Cloning

Restriction Enzymes

Antibiotic Selection Antibiotics, such as penicillin and ampicillin, kill bacteria Plasmids can carry genes that give host bacterium a resistance against antibiotics Allows growth (selection) of bacteria that have taken up the plasmid

PCR Polymerase Chain Reaction

Site-Directed Mutagenesis

DNA Electrophoresis

DNA Sequencing

Shotgun Sequencing

DNA Fingerprinting

Expression of Cloned Genes

Protein Purification

Eukaryotic Gene Expression in Bacteria An eukaryotic gene from the eukaryotic genome will not express correctly in the bacterium Eukaryotic genes have –Exons: coding regions –Introns: noncoding regions Introns in eukaryouric gene pose problems Bacteria cannot splice introns out mRNA is intron-free genetic material

cDNA

DNA Microarrays: Applications DNA Microarrays allow simultaneous screening of many thousands of genes: high-throughput screening genome wide genotyping –Which genes are present in this individual? tissue-specific gene expression –Which genes are used to make proteins? mutational analysis –Which genes have been mutated?

DNA Microarrays: Design Two fundamental approaches One-color array –Patented and commerialized by Affymetrix –Photolitographic synthesis of probe DNA on the chip –Targets are biotin labeled –Bound targets detected using streptavidin-fluorofore complex –Widely used in industry Two-color array –Developed by Stanford University, 1996 –Probes sometimes pipetted on the chip –Targets linked to either green or red fluorescent labels –Used often in academia