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The Molecular Basis of Heredity Chapter 16. 5.5 Nucleic acids store, transmit, and help express hereditary information.

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Presentation on theme: "The Molecular Basis of Heredity Chapter 16. 5.5 Nucleic acids store, transmit, and help express hereditary information."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Molecular Basis of Heredity Chapter 16

2 5.5 Nucleic acids store, transmit, and help express hereditary information

3 Nucleotides

4 DNA Structure

5 Anti-parallel Structure  Sugar carbons are numbered 1’-5’  One side of DNA runs in the 3’ direction  The other side runs in the 5’ direction  This is important to replication

6 RNA Structure  Ribose sugar  Uracil replaces thymine  Single stranded

7 16.1 DNA is the genetic material

8 Protein as the genetic material?  T.H. Morgan – fruit flies  Discovered genes as part of chromosomes  Chromosomes made of protein and DNA  Protein?  More known  Diverse structures  Specificity of function  DNA?  Little known  Seemed too uniform to be the genetic code of all life

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10 16.2 Many proteins work together in DNA replication and repair

11 DNA Replication  Making DNA from existing DNA  Semi-conservative  At the end of DNA replication, each daughter molecule has one old strand (from the parent DNA) and one new strand (synthesized during replication)  Model proposed by Meselson and Stahl

12 Meselson & Stahl

13 DNA Replication  Step 1:  Helicases unwind DNA at origin of replication by breaking hydrogen bonds between nitrogen bases  Replication bubble forms as two parental strands separate  Replication fork forms at end of each replication bubble

14 DNA Replication  Step 2:  Single-strand binding proteins hold the unpaired DNA strands apart while new DNA strands are being synthesized  Topoisomerase protein binds to parental DNA to relieve strain untwisting puts on replication fork

15 DNA Replication  Step 3:  Primase creates a short RNA primer that binds to the parent DNA to signal DNA polymerase III where to begin adding nucleotides  RNA primer will later be replaced with DNA nucleotides

16 DNA Replication  Step 4:  DNA Polymerase III adds nucleotides to exposed bases in 5’-3’ direction at the RNA primer  Leading strand  Produced continuously in 5’-3’ direction  Elongation moves towards replication fork  Lagging strand  Produced in pieces  Okazaki fragments  Elongation moves in opposite direction of replication fork (5’-3’)

17 DNA Replication  Step 5:  Lagging strand is completed as DNA ligase seals Okazaki fragments

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19 Proofreading & Repair  Initial error rate in replication is 1 in 100,000 nucleotides  DNA polymerases proofread and correct errors  Error rate in completed replication is 1 in 10 billion bases

20 Mismatch Repair  For that 1 in 10 billion errors that escapes DNA polymerase or are due to environmental mutations  Many enzymes involved  Cut out damaged section (nuclease)  Replace with new nucleotides (DNA polymerase I)  Seal in place (DNA ligase)

21 16.3 A chromosome consists of a DNA molecule packed together with proteins

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