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Published byKerry Barber Modified over 8 years ago
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DNA Structure DNA was discovered in 1869 By the early 1900s people knew that DNA was a very long molecule found in the nucleus of cells In 1919 it was discovered that each molecule of DNA is made up of millions of tiny subunits called nucleotides.
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Nucleotide Structure Each nucleotide consists of: 1. Phosphate group – PO 4 - 2. Pentose sugar – 5 carbon 3. Nitrogenous base – contains nitrogen
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Nucleotides Phosphate Pentose Sugar Nitrogenous Base
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4 Nucleotides A Adenine T Thymine G Guanine C Cytosine
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By the mid 1900s the race to figure out DNA’s structure was on! Scientists knew the following things about DNA: It’s the hereditary material It’s made of 4 types of nucleotides It’s a long chain of these nucleotides It’s linked to the production of proteins
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What scientists didn’t know How the nucleotides are connected The importance of the 4 bases for carrying information So they played around with potential structures, like playing with Legos
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A critical piece of evidence: patterns discovered in base pairing What does this indicate? Species are different in the pattern of bases The amount of A matches the amount of T and the amount of C matches the amount of G
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Nitrogen bases have to pair a certain way! Each base will only bond with one other specific base. Adenine (A) Thymine (T) Cytosine (C) Guanine (G) Form a base pair.
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But how could the nucleotides fit together? This x-ray picture of DNA by Rosalind Franklin was the last piece in the DNA puzzle—it showed James Watson and Francis Crick that DNA must be a double helix.
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Double helix
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Why do bases pair like this? 1.To fit: A 2-ring base has to pair with a 1-ring base 2.To allow hydrogen bonding: A and T: 2 bonds C and G: 3 bonds
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DNA Structure Because of this complementary base pairing, the order of the bases in one strand determines the order of the bases in the other strand.
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G G A T T A A C T G C A T C
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