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Published byBarnaby Brooks Modified over 8 years ago
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Warm Up Take 2-3 minutes to review your notes over DNA/RNA structure and function to be ready for a short quiz!
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Overview of DNA (Deoxyribonucleic Acid) EQ: What is DNA? What is DNA made of? What is the function of DNA? What is a gene? What is a genetic code?
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DNA is a complex molecule (polymer), found in ALL living things Eukaryotic: animals, plants, fungi, protists – DNA in NUCLEUS Prokaryotic – bacteria – NO NUCLEUS Do nonliving things have DNA?
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DNA is a complex molecule (polymer), found in ALL living things Eukaryotic: animals, plants, fungi, protists – DNA in NUCLEUS Prokaryotic – bacteria – NO NUCLEUS Do nonliving things have DNA? Some viruses: bacteriophage
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DNA is a nucleic acid so it is made of nucleotides. (Monomers) Nitrogenous base pairs Deoxyribose Sugar Phosphate Group Nucleotide (monomer) – all 3 parts
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Chromosomes are super coiled DNA Nucleus Double helix Gene – section of DNA which codes for a specific protein that codes for a trait Base pairs – fit like puzzle pieces Genetic code = sequence (order) of nitrogen bases (A,T,C,G)
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DNA Function: Stores genetic information, Carries the genetic CODE (instructions) for making proteins DNA determines an organisms traits by controlling the synthesis of proteins. Ex height, hair color Proteins- Traits Hereditary material – passed on to offspring Blueprint for LIFE
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DNA Replication EQ: When and how does DNA make a copy of itself? Why is DNA replication important?
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What do you think is happening in this picture?
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Why does DNA need a copy? Cells divide for an organism to grow or reproduce; every new cell needs an identical copy of the DNA to know how to be a cell
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When does DNA make a replica of itself? Right before a cell division http://yourgenome.org/video/dna-replication
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STEPS to DNA replication (duplication)
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1. An enzyme, helicase unwinds and “unzips” DNA by breaking weak hydrogen bonds between base pairs “Replication fork” forms
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2. An enzyme, DNA polymerase, adds free-floating complimentary nucleotides to each strand in a 5’ to 3’ direction. An enzyme, ligase, joins the nucleotides together (GLUE). “Matching Up”
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3. Two new genetically identical DNA molecules are formed ½ - NEW ½ - from Original Old strand New Strand
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4. Two new genetically identical DNA molecules rewind
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