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Chapter 16 Section 1 – Pt. 2 Pgs. 305 – 310 Objective: I can thoroughly describe the structure of DNA and all of its parts.
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Rosalind Franklin – X-ray diffraction James Watson and Francis Crick Put it all together
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DNA is 1 of 4 types of macromolecules All macromolecules are types of polymers: chains of repeating units Repeating unit is called monomer For DNA: Type of macromolecule = nucleic acid Monomer = nucleotide Polymer = polynucleotide chain
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Nucleotide is made of 3 parts 5-carbon sugar called Deoxyribose Has 1 less oxygen than ribose Phosphate Group Nitrogenous Base 4 Types: A, T, C, G Nucleotides “polymerize” through Sugar-Phosphate (covalent)bonds 2 chains (strands) join via bases Twist into double helix shape
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The Sugar-Phosphate Backbone “The sides of the ladder” Formed from bonds between deoxyribose sugar and phosphate Strongest part of DNA: Phosphodiester Bond These bonds were made via (hint: polymerization) Dehydration Synthesis
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4 Nitrogenous Bases 2 categories Purines (larger: 2 rings) Adenine and Guanine Pyrimidines (smaller: 1 ring) Thymine and Cytosine Base Pairing: A – T C – G Purine + Pyrimidine (2 rings + 1 ring) Otherwise, gap or bulge
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So why can’t A - C or T - G? Nitrogenous Bases from opposite strands held by hydrogen (H) bonds # of H-bonds SPECIFIC A and T form 2 H-bonds C and G form 3 H-bonds
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Because A-T and C-G # of A = # of T # of C = # of G Measured as % of Nitrogen Bases THUS, if know the amount of ONE base, will know the amount of the others… If 1 DNA molecule is 22% A… Then know 22% T Know C & G = 56% So, C = 28% and G = 28% % of A & T = 44% Actually, Chargaff discovered in reverse!!!
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Dexoyribose has an orientation 5 carbons arranged in a pentagon 5 th carbon hanging off pentagon – will bond with phosphate (same nucleotide) 1 st carbon will bond with nitro. base 3 rd carbon will bond with next nucleotide 5’ 4’ 3’2’ 1’
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5’ end is the phosphate side of nucleotide 3’ end is the sugar side of nucleotide 5’ 3’ 5’ 3’ 5’ 3’ 5’ If the nucleotide sequence of one strand of DNA is 5’-C-A-T-3’, then the complementary strand would be A.5’-G-T-A-3’ B.5’-A-T-G-3’ C.5’-C-A-T-3’ D.5’-T-A-C-3’ E.3’-A-T-G-5’
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Two strands of DNA run anti-parallel to each other: opposite directions 5’ to 3’ & 3’ to 5’ Nucleotide cannot “flip” due to 3D structure - can only “turn” upside down
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