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Published byJulia Martin Modified over 8 years ago
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Fun Times with the Double Helix
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Set up notes page as shown Fold colored paper as shown Record new vocab words and review these at home Use different colored pencils
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Itself is not alive… Exists for only one reason… to make more DNA 2 meters squeezed into each cell ~2o million km! Holds the instructions to make and maintain you. Contains roughly 3.2 billion letters- 10 3,480,000,000 combinations Is 99.9% identical to everyone else’s DNA Is 0.1% completely and utterly unique to you.
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The nucleus of a human cell contains 30,000 to 40,000 genes in the form of DNA called the GENOME.
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CHROMOSOMES are coiled DNA and proteins. Humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes in the NUCLEUS of any one of your cells
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Segment of DNA that codes for an organism’s trait.
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The genetic material found in the NUCLEUS of a cell. Carries the “code” to make proteins (expressed as traits). The unit of HEREDITY.
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Griffith wanted to find out how bacteria causes diseases. Do they release a toxin? Is there some unit of HEREDITY in organisms?
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Mice with dead disease causing bacteria survived, but when that dead bacteria was combined with live, non- disease causing bacteria, the mouse died AND live disease causing bacteria was found in that mouse’s blood.
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Bacteriophages cause diseases by passing on their genetic material They are only made up of protein and DNA. They used radioactive isotopes to label them and find out what the bacteriophage injects into the bacteria. DNA is the unit of heredity!
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Took the first X-ray photograph of DNA http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/photo51/
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Used Franklin and Wilkin’s x-ray photograph and Chargaff’s data to determine the DOUBLE HELIX shape http://www.dnai.org/a/index.html http://www.dnai.org/a/index.html
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4 types of nucleotides, A,T, C, G Complementary base pairing: A = T C = G
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DNA inside nucleus makes copy of itself during G1 stage of “interphase” (cell division). Part of the DNA helix unwinds (by enzyme “helicase”) when H+ bonds between nitrogenous bases are broken.
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Each strand serves as a pattern for a new strand of DNA Enzyme DNA Polymerase moves along each separate strand and matches bases (A, C, T, G) on each strand to a new base that is “floating” inside the nucleus.
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H+ bonds reform between bases…
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Each strand of DNA serves as a template for a new strand. The replicated DNA is made of one old strand and one new strand The enzyme DNA ligase helps repair or form bonds in the sugar-phosphate backbone chain.
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4jtmOZaIvS0&feature=related
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d1UPf7lXeO8&feature=related
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How does a cell interpret DNA? Simulation: Group A: Design a structure using all the materials in the ziplock bag. Devise a way to communicate with Group B how to duplicate this design… no words, no pictures… all blueprints stay at Group A site.
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From DNA to messenger RNA
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Making a protein (polypeptide) begins with making mRNA (messengerRNA) inside the nucleus. RNA is also a “nucleic acid” is single-stranded has “uracil” (U) instead of thymine has 5C sugar “ribose”
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Step 1: DNA strand separates at a gene spot on DNA. Only 1 strand of DNA will serve as a template- starts at a “promoter” Step 2: Enzyme “RNA polymerase” matches RNA bases with DNA bases: A, U, C, G Step 3: Enzymes link RNA nucleotides together into a single-strand of RNA.
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Step 4: mRNA leaves nucleus with code for protein and moves to ribosomes where the protein will be made. Important editing is required of mRNA: Introns: cut-out connected sequences Exons: expressed sequences spliced together- final edited RNA
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There are actually many types of RNA. In most cells three kinds of RNA are critical to the making of proteins. mRNA – “messenger RNA” carry copies of the instructions for the proteins from the DNA to the ribosomes rRNA – “ribosomal RNA” are part of the ribosomal structure tRNA - “transfer RNA” transfers the amino acids to the ribosomes to make the protein
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Making of proteins is called “protein synthesis” Instructions for each protein comes from the mRNA in 3-base messages called “codons” Codons are translated in the ribosomes. mRNA attaches to the ribosome (rRNA)
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“Translation” is the decoding of the message from the mRNA into a polypeptide chain (protein). The tRNA is a cloverleaf-shaped molecule that has on one end a complementary “anticodon” and on the other end an amino acid. Example: codon AAA, anticodon UUU or lysine
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As the codons from the mRNA are “read” inside the ribosome and the tRNA delivers one amino acid at a time… these amino acids bond together with “polypeptide” bonds … the “language” of mRNA instructions is called the Genetic Code… How can 3 base codons make 20 amino acids? (4 x 4 x 4) = 64 possibilities
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3aVT2DTbtA8&feature=related
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=41_Ne5mS2ls&NR=1
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