The Structure of:
By the end of the day, you should: Know what DNA stands for Understand the shape of DNA and be able to label all parts Know the pairs of nucleotides Know how DNA is used
DNA is the molecule that carries genetic information So what does that really mean?
DNA stands for deoxyribonucleic acid We’ll come back to this one…
The shape of the DNA molecule is called a double helix Think of DNA’s shape as a ladder that has been twisted Straight Twisted Ladder
It’s nice to think of DNA looking nice and simple like this:
But, it really looks more like this: Let’s break it down…
Each side of the ladder is called a sugar-phosphate backbone this part
The sugar-phosphate backbone…up close Consists of: ▪ Phosphate group ▪ Deoxyribose sugar group
The rungs of the latter are made up of nitrogenous bases Bonded to the sugar group There are 4 different kinds of bases in DNA…
Purines Pyrimidines
A deoxyribose sugar group and a phosphate group and a nitrogenous base make up a nucleotide P P P P Adenine Guanine Cytosine Thymine
The deoxyribose sugar group of one nucleotide bonds to the phosphate group of another nucleotide to form the sugar- phosphate backbone The nitrogenous bases of one sugar-phosphate backbone bond to the nitrogenous bases of the other sugar-phosphate backbone to make base pairs A only bonds with T G only bonds with C
Quick Practice: If you had a strand of DNA where one side had this sequence of bases: ATAGGCAT What would the other side’s sequence be???
P A P A P G P C P C P G P T P T
Now that you know about the structure of DNA, let’s revisit its function…
Short version: DNA stores genetic information Long version: The sequence (order) of bases on the strand of DNA is a code for a blueprint of hundreds of thousands of different proteins that, when made, make up living things