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DNA, RNA and Protein Synthesis
TAKS Review Spring 2012
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Structure of DNA DNA is deoxyribonucleic acid
DNA is a large molecule that has subunits called nucleotides. The nucleotides come together to make the DNA molecule in the shape of a double helix (looks like a twisted ladder).
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Nucleotides Nucleotides are the subunits that make up DNA and they have 3 major parts: A sugar molecule (deoxyribose sugar) A phosphate group A nitrogen base
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Nitrogen bases There are 4 kinds of nitrogen bases: Adenine (A)
Guanine (G) Thymine (T) Cytosine (C)
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DNA Structure DNA is a double helix (twisted ladder)
The handrails of the ladder are made of phosphate and sugar The rungs of the ladder are made of nitrogen bases.
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Bonding Sugar and phosphate bond using covalent bonds (strong) and nitrogen bases bond using hydrogen bonds (weak) Nitrogen bases are specific: Adenine (A) always attaches to Thymine (T); and Cytosine (C) always attaches to Guanine (G) (Think apples in trees, cars in garages)
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DNA Replication A review:
A cell will make an exact copy of itself during a process called mitosis Before the cell can copy itself it must copy all of it’s DNA so that both daughter cells have the same number of chromosomes.
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DNA replication takes place in 3 steps
1. DNA unwinds at the hydrogen bonds 2. nucleotides are added to the exposed nitrogen bases. It follows base pairing rules. (A –T and C-G) 3. The DNA winds back up producing 2 new strands.
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What’s the complementary strand?
If one side is CAG, what is the complementary strand? Answer: GTC If one side is AAC, what is the complementary strand? Answer: TTG
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RNA vs DNA Characteristic RNA DNA Strands 1 2 Sugar molecule Ribose
Deoxyribose Bases A, U, C, G A, T, C, G Found Nucleus and cytoplasm Nucleus only Building block Nucleotide
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Kinds of RNA There is only one kind of DNA, but there are 3 kinds of RNA. Messenger RNA (mRNA) Transfer RNA (tRNA) Ribosomal RNA (rRNA)
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Gene Expression DNA (double-stranded) Transcription
RNA (single-stranded) Translation Protein (amino acid chain)
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Central Dogma of Molecular Biology
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Transcription= taking DNA and making an RNA copy of it
Transcription= taking DNA and making an RNA copy of it. Uses complementary nucleotides. C=G, G=C, T=A, A=U
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The Genetic Code Remember that messenger RNA – mRNA- is a copy of the DNA. It carries instructions for making a protein. The instructions (nucleotides) have to be translated into proteins (amino acids). A sequence of three nucleotides is called a codon, and it corresponds to an amino acid. We use a codon chart for translation
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Genetic Mutations
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Mutation A mutation is any change in a genetic code (DNA).
It may not change the resulting amino acid chain and is called a silent mutation EXAMPLE: Notice how the resulting a.a. sequence is the same in spite of the change: Original DNA: CAA CCC AAA Resulting mRNA: GUU GGG UUU Resulting amino acid: Val – Gly - Phe Mutated DNA: CAA CCC AAG Resulting mRNA GUU GGG UUC Resulting amino acid: Val – Gly – Phe
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Point Mutation or Substitution Mutation
A point mutation is a change in one nucleotide. It can be silent or it can cause a change in one amino acid Can be devestating if the resulting amino acid has a STOP codon inserted as a result Original DNA: ATG CCC AAA Resulting mRNA: UAC GGG UUU Resulting amino acid: Tyr – Gly - Phe Mutated DNA: ATG ACC AAA Resulting mRNA UAC UGG UUU Resulting amino acid: Tyr – Trp – Phe Mutated DNA: ATT CCC AAA Resulting mRNA: UAA GGG UUU Resulting amino acid: Stop
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Insertion and Deletion Mutations
Insertion – addition of one or more nucleotides Deletion – deletion of one or more nucleotides Insertion and deletion mutations are almost always devastating because it will cause a frame-shift to occur. Imagine if a sentence of 3-letter words lost a letter? Original sentence: The cat and dog are fat. A mutation occurs that deletes the c in cat. Mutated sentence: Thc ata ndd oga ref at. The same things happen to DNA when it mutates
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Frame Shift Mutation Original DNA: CAT AGC TAG GAT
Resulting mRNA: GUA UCG AUC CUA Resulting amino acid: Val–Ser-Ile-Leu Mutated DNA: CAA GCT AGG AT Resulting mRNA: GUU CGA UCC UA Resulting amino acid: Val-Arg-Ser-?
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Mendel’s Theory and Studying Heredity
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The Flower
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Mendelian Theory of Heredity
2 sets of chromosomes = 2 copies of each gene Alleles—alternative forms of a gene Purple vs. white flowers Dominant allele—trait that is expressed or seen. Recessive allele—trait that is not seen. To be seen, must be present in 2 copies.
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Terms and Notations Dominant alleles = capital letters
Recessive alleles = lower case letters Dominant allele is always written first Homozygous individual—alleles are the same (EX: PP or pp) Heterozygous individual—alleles are different (EX: Pp)
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Terms and Notations Continued
Genotype—set of alleles, or genes. Phenotype—physical appearance of a trait. Genotype Phenotype PP purple flowers, homozygous dominant Pp purple flowers, heterozygous pp white flowers, homozygous recessive
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Punnett Squares Diagram that predicts the outcome of a genetic cross
Top represents one parent, side the other Letters in the box indicate the possible genotypes of the offspring.
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Example Punnett Square
¼=YY homozygous dominant 2/4=Yy heterozygous ¼=yy homozygous recessive Yy—heterozygote Y y Y YY Yy Yy—heterozygote y Yy yy
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Inheritance of Traits Pedigree—family history that shows how a trait is inherited over several generations. Helps identify carriers of genetic disorders Carriers—individuals who are heterozygous for a genetic disorder but do not show symptoms—can pass the mutant allele to their offspring
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Example Pedigree Male Male with disorder Female Female with disorder
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