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Part 1: The Blueprint of Life

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1 Part 1: The Blueprint of Life
DNA Part 1: The Blueprint of Life

2 DNA – The Blueprint of life

3

4 How would you describe DNA ??

5 DeoxyriboNucleic Acid
DNA stands for … DeoxyriboNucleic Acid

6 DNA Facts Establishes by James Watson and Francis Crick
Spape of a double helix

7 Codes for your genes (traits)
Made of repeating subunits called nucleotides Nucleotides are held together by Hydrogen bonds.

8 What is a nucleotide? Has three parts: Deoxyribose (sugar)
Nitrogen base (A, T, G, C) Phosphate Group

9 Base- Pair Rule Adenine – Thymine Guanine – Cytosine
The sides of the DNA ladder are phosphate & sugar Held together by hydrogen bonds

10 Base Pair Rule One side: A T A T C A T G C G A G
Other Side: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

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12 What exactly is a Gene??

13 What exactly is a gene? A segment of DNA that codes for a protein, which in turn codes for a traits ( eye color, freckles,…) A gene is a stretch of DNA

14 How the Code Works The combination of A, T, G, C determines what traits you might have …. C A T C A T C A T = purple hair T A C T A C T A G = yellow hair

15 Think of the bases of DNA like letters. Letters form words …
Words form sentences … Endless combinations

16 Let‘s Review What We Know About DNA
DNA stands for: De_______ribo__________ acid What is the shape of DNA? _________________ Who established the structure of DNA? _______________ and ______________ Adenine always pairs with ________________ Guanine always pairs with ________________. The sides of the DNA ladder are deoxyribose and ___________________ .

17 What is the complementary sequence:
C A T T A G The two sides of DNA are held together by __________________________ bonds. DNA is composed of repeating subunits called ________________________ . What are the 4 bases that make up the rugs of the DNA ladder? __________________________________________

18 Part 2: DNA Replication

19 DNA Replication The process by which DNA makes a copy of itself (cell division) Why does DNA need to copy? Cells divide for an organism to grow, heal or reproduce, every new cell needs a copy of the DNA or instructions to know how to be a cell. DNA replicates right before cell division.

20 DNA Replication Enzyme Heliase opens the DNA molecule by breaking the Hydrogen bonds. DNA replication is semi-conservative: That means that half of the old strand is saved. This helps to reduce errors.

21 DNA Replication

22 Part 3: From DNA to making a Protein

23 RNA - messenger DNA stays in the nucleus, but in order for it to get its instructions translated into proteins, it must send a message The message is send to the Ribosome, where Proteins are made. The chemical used to carry the message is the messanger RNA mRNA

24 RNA - messenger DNA: A T A G C G RNA: RNA = ribonucleic acid
RNA is similar to DNA except: Has one single strand instead of two strands Has Uracil instead of Thymine Has Ribose instead of deoxyribose Follows base pair rule: A -> U DNA: A T A G C G RNA:

25 The Job of mRNA: RNA carries the „message“ to the ribosome, where proteins are made

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28 How does DNA make a protein?

29 DNA  RNA  Protein Proteins are the building blocks of the organism (traits)

30 Transcription – process where RNA is made from DNA
Translation – process where proteins are made from RNA

31 Let‘s draw …

32 DNA transcription

33 Part 4: How Proteins are made by the Cell
This section thrives to answer the following question: What is a protein, how is it made and why is it important for living systems?

34 Inside those cells, proteins are allowing our body to do what it does:
Your body is made up of trillions of cells, of all different kinds: muscle cells, brain cells, blood cells, and many more. Inside those cells, proteins are allowing our body to do what it does: break down food to power your muscles, send signals through your brain that control the body, and transport nutrients through your blood. Proteins are building blocks they make up all that you are.

35 Transcription One of the strands of DNA is used as a template to create a strand of mRNA. The enzyme RNA polymerase makes the mRNA. Transcription always starts at a region called the promoter.

36 2 Sections of genes: Introns are segments of DNA that do not contain genes. Exons are segments that contain genes. Each 3 bases on mRNA make up a codon, it corresponds to an amino acid (see codon chart)

37 Translation Takes the message on mRNA and converts it into an amino acid chain Individual amino acids will join to form a protein. Shapes and structure of the protein determine its function: (hair, enzymes, skin, muscles etc)

38 Let‘s draw ….

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40 The steps in translation are:
The Ribosome binds to mRNA.  The Ribosome starts matching tRNA anticodon sequences to the mRNA codon sequence.  Each time a new tRNA comes into the Ribosome, the amino acid that it was carrying gets added to the growing protein chain.  The Ribosome continues until it hits a stop sequence.  The Protein chain forms into its assigned shape and starts acting as a functional protein in the cell.

41 Place the appropriate labels in the boxes…

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