Download presentation
1
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
2
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
EXPERIMENTS HAVE SHOWN THAT DNA IS THE GENETIC MATERIAL DNA HAS BEEN KNOWN ABOUT FOR OVER 100 YEARS; HOWEVER, KNOWLEDGE OF ITS ROLE AS GENETIC MATERIAL IS RELATIVELY NEW ORIGINALLY, IT WAS THOUGHT THAT PROTEIN WAS IN CHARGE OF TRAITS (WHY DO YOU THINK THEY BELIEVED PROTEINS WERE THE ANSWER?)
3
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
GRIFFITH’S EXPERIMENT
4
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
GRIFFITH’S SETUP INVOLVED A TYPE OF BACTERIA (STREPTOCOCCUS) UTILIZED HEAT SHOCK TO DENATURE PROTEINS GRIFFITH’S RESULTS HARMLESS FORM (R FORM) WAS TURNED INTO HARMFUL FORM (S FORM) WHEN HEAT-SHOCKED “S” WAS MIXED WITH NORMAL “R” IDENTIFIED DNA IS GENETIC CARRIER
5
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
SCIENTISTS WERE RESISTANT TO GRIFFITH’S FINDINGS SCIENTISTS KNEW ABOUT CHROMOSOMES CHROMOSOMES ARE MADE UP OF PROTEINS (VERSATILE SUBSTANCES, 20 DIFFERENT AMINO ACIDS) NUCLEIC ACIDS (ONLY 5 DIFFERENT NUCLEOTIDES)
6
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
HERSHEY AND CHASE EXPERIMENT
7
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
HERSHEY AND CHASE SETUP USED T2 BACTERIOPHAGES (PHAGE = VIRUS THAT ATTACKS/EATS BACTERIA) GREW PHAGES IN RADIOACTIVE ELEMENTS SULFUR FOR PROTEIN / PHOSPHOROUS FOR DNA TRACING RADIOACTIVITY ALLOWED THEM TO DETERMINE THE GENETIC CARRIER RESULTS RADIOACTIVE PHOSPHOROUS ONLY WAS PRESENT IN BACTERIAS; CONCLUSIVELY SHOWING THAT DNA (NUCLEIC ACIDS) ARE CONTROLLING TRAITS/GENETICS
8
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
NOW THE RACE WAS ON TO STUDY DNA/RNA DNA / RNA POLYMERS OF NUCLEOTIDES NUCLEOTIDE?? POLYNUCLEOTIDE?? SUGAR-PHOSPHATE BACKBONE REPEATING PATTERN OF SUGAR (PENTOSE) AND PHOSPHATE
9
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
DNA RNA DEOXYRIBONUCLEIC ACID RIBONUCLEIC ACID RIBOSE ?? DEOXYRIBOSE ?? NUCLEIC ?? NUCLEIC ?? ACID ?? 4 TYPES OF BASES IN RNA (2 GROUPS) 4 TYPES OF BASES IN DNA (2 GROUPS) PURINES (2 RINGS) ADENINE / GUANINE PYRIMIDINES (1 RING) CYTOSINE / URACIL CYTOSINE / THYMINE
10
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
STRUCTURE DENOTES ____________ THEREFORE LEARNING THE STRUCTURE OF DNA BECAME OF EXTREME IMPORTANCE
11
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
DNA IS A DOUBLE STRANDED HELIX DOUBLE HELIX TWO STRANDS OF DNA, COILED AROUND EACH OTHER (*TWISTED LADDER*) EXPLAINED BY WATSON AND CRICK USED DATA FROM WILKINS AND FRANKLIN X-RAY CRYSTALLOGRAPHY
12
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
WATSON AND CRICK EXPLAINED THE DOUBLE HELIX USING DATA FROM ERWIN CHARGAFF (EXPERIMENT THAT SHOWED # OF A’S AND T’S WAS ALWAYS EQUAL, AND # OF C’S AND G’S WAS ALWAYS EQUAL) AS WELL AS DATA THAT SHOWED DNA STRANDS WERE ALWAYS THE SAME DISTANCE APART
13
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
DISCOVERED STRUCTURE SUGGESTED AN EXPLANATION OF DNA REPLICATION SPECIFIC BASE PAIRING IS HOW DNA IS COPIED
14
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
WHILE THE CONCEPT OF REPLICATION IS SIMPLE, ACTUAL PROCESS IS COMPLEX
15
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
DNA REPLICATION: A CLOSER LOOK REPLICATION BEGINS AT SPECIFICS POINTS CALLED ORIGINS OF REPLICATION (O.R.’S)
16
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
DNA REPLICATION: A CLOSER LOOK THERE ARE MULTIPLE O.R.’S ALONG THE DNA STRAND (WHY IS THAT??) REPLICATION BUBBLES WHERE DNA SPLITS AND REPLICATION OCCURS IN BOTH DIRECTIONS (WHY IS THAT??) THE STRANDS OF DNA ARE ORIENTED IN OPPOSITE DIRECTIONS!!! HOW WILL THIS AFFECT REPLICATION? REMEMBER, ENZYMES HAVE SPECIFIC SHAPES!!
17
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
DNA REPLICATION: A CLOSER LOOK ENZYMES OF IMPORTANCE DNA POLYMERASE ENZYME THAT ADDS NUCLEOTIDES TO GROW DAUGHTER STRAND
18
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
DNA REPLICATION: A CLOSER LOOK DNA LIGASE TIES/GLUES PIECES OF DNA TOGETHER INTO A SINGLE CONTINUOUS STRAND DNA HELICASE UNZIPS THE DOUBLE STRANDED HELIX TOPOISOMERASE RELIEVES THE PRESSURE/TENSION PLACED ON PARTS OF DNA STRAND THAT ARE STILLED COILED
19
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
DNA REPLICATION: A CLOSER LOOK ENSURES THAT EXACT COPIES OF DNA ARE PASSED ALONG TO ALL SOMATIC CELLS AMAZINGLY ACCURATE; ONLY ONE MISTAKE EVERY BILLION NUCLEOTIDES PLACED!!
20
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
THE STRUCTURE OF DNA ALSO OFFERS AN EXPLANATION AS TO HOW IT CAN CONTROL YOUR TRAITS THE DNA GENOTYPE (NUCLEOTIDE MAKEUP) IS EXPRESSED AS PROTEINS, WHICH ACTS AS THE MOLECULAR MAKEUP FOR PHENOTYPIC EXPRESSION!!
21
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
DNA RNA PROTEIN = PHENOTYPE TRANSCRIPTION PROCESS BY WHICH DNA IS CONVERTED TO RNA TRANSLATION PROCESS BY WHICH RNA IS CONVERTED TO PROTEIN PROTEINS CONTROL THE PHENOTYPE (TRAITS) OF AN ORGANISM
22
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
BEADLE AND TATUM EXPERIMENT SHOWED THAT MUTANT MOLD, DEFICIENT IN ONLY ONE GENE; COULDN’T GROW ON MEDIA THAT IT COULD GROW ON WITH NORMAL GENE ONE GENE : ONE POLYPEPTIDE HYPOTHESIS
23
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
TRANSCRIPTION : A CLOSER LOOK PRODUCES GENETIC MESSAGES IN THE FORM OF RNA ONLY OCCURS IN THE NUCLEUS (WHY??) SIMILAR TO REPLICATION 2 STRANDS SPLIT BUT; ONLY STRAND SERVES AS TEMPLATE
24
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
TRANSCRIPTION : A CLOSER LOOK REQUIRES THE FOLLOWING: RNA POLYMERASE ENZYME THAT PLACES AND LINKS NUCLEOTIDES BEING TRANSCRIBED PROMOTER SPECIFIC REGION OF DNA FOR RNA POLYMERASE TO BIND
25
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
TRANSCRIPTION : A CLOSER LOOK OCCURS IN 3 STAGES INITIATION ELONGATION TERMINATION
26
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
TRANSCRIPTION : A CLOSER LOOK INITIATION ????
27
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
TRANSCRIPTION : A CLOSER LOOK ELONGATION ????
28
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
TRANSCRIPTION : A CLOSER LOOK TERMINATION ????? TERMINATOR SPECIFIC SEQUENCE ON DNA THAT SIGNALS THE RNA POLYMERASE TO DETACH
29
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
TRANSCRIPTION : A CLOSER LOOK EUKARYOTIC RNA IS PROCESSED BEFORE LEAVING THE NUCLEUS mRNA = MESSENGER RNA; CARRIES MESSAGE OF DNA TO RIBOSOME FOR PROTEIN SYNTHESIS IN EUKARYOTES, THE mRNA MUST BE PROCESSED (CLEANED UP) BEFORE IT CAN LEAVE
30
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
TRANSCRIPTION : A CLOSER LOOK EUKARYOTIC mRNA PROCESSING ONE TYPE OF PROCESSING IS ADDING A “CAP” AND “TAIL” WHY DOES THIS HAPPEN??
31
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
TRANSCRIPTION : A CLOSER LOOK EUKARYOTIC mRNA PROCESSING SECOND TYPE OF PROCESSING IS REMOVAL OF NON-CODING REGIONS = RNA SPLICING TWO TYPES EXONS ??? INTRONS
32
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
TRANSCRIPTION : A CLOSER LOOK EUKARYOTIC mRNA PROCESSING RNA SPLICING REMOVAL OF INTRONS TO PRODUCE FINAL mRNA PRODUCT SPLICEOSOMES (A.KA. snRNP’S = PRONOUNCED SNURPS)
33
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
TRANSLATION : A CLOSER LOOK RIBOSOMES BUILD POLYPEPTIDES RIBOSOMES ARE COMPOSED OF PROTEINS AND rRNA RIBOSOMES COORDINATE mRNA, tRNA, AND AMINO ACIDS TO ALLOW PROTEIN SYNTHESIS RIBOSOME STRUCTURE TWO SUBUNITS (LARGE VS SMALL) P SITE = PEPTIDYL – tRNA BINDING A SITE = AMINOACYL – tRNA BINDING
34
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
TRANSLATION : A CLOSER LOOK tRNA MOLECULES SERVE AS INTERPRETERS DURING TRANSLATION AMINO ACIDS ARE READILY AVAILABLE IN THE CELL FROM DIGESTED FOOD tRNA PICKS UP THE APPROPRIATE AMINO ACID AND BRINGS IT TO THE MATCHING CODON OF THE mRNA
35
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
TRANSLATION : A CLOSER LOOK CODONS THREE NITROGENOUS BASE “WORD” THAT SPECIFIES A PARTICULAR AMINO ACID
36
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
TRANSLATION : A CLOSER LOOK CODONS 4 “UNIQUE” CODONS AUG START CODON, ALSO CODES FOR METHIONINE 3 STOP CODONS SIGNAL END OF TRANSLATION “WOBBLE” HYPOTHESIS MORE THAN ONE CODON CAN CODE FOR THE SAME AMINO ACID (OVERLAP)
37
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
TRANSLATION : A CLOSER LOOK
38
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
TRANSLATION : A CLOSER LOOK TRANSLATION CAN BE DIVIDED INTO THREE STAGES INITIATION ELONGATION TERMINATION
39
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
TRANSLATION : A CLOSER LOOK INITIATION
40
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
TRANSLATION : A CLOSER LOOK INITIATION 2 STEPS mRNA BINDS TO SMALL SUBUNIT OF RIBOSOME; tRNA WITH THE STARD CODON BINDS (MET = AUG) LARGE RIBOSOMAL SUBUNIT ATTACHES, CREATING A FUCNTIONAL RIBOSOME; INITIATOR tRNA FITS INTO “P” SITE
41
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
TRANSLATION : A CLOSER LOOK ELONGATION ADDS NUCLEOTIDES TO POLYPEPTIDE CHAIN 3 STEPS TO ELONGATION CODON RECOGNITION PEPTIDE BOND FORMATION TRANSLOCATION
42
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
TRANSLATION : A CLOSER LOOK TERMINATION ELONGATION CONTINUES UNTIL A “STOP” CODON ENTERS THE “A” SITE
43
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
REVIEW
44
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
MUTATIONS CAN CHANGE THE MEANING OF GENES MUTATION ANY RANDOM CHANGE IN THE NUCLEOTIDE SEQUENCE OF DNA CAN BE CLASSIFIED 3 WAYS SUBSTITUTIONS INSERTIONS (ADDITIONS) DELETIONS
45
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
SUBSTITUTIONS A BASE SUBSITUTION MAY CHANGE AN AMINO ACIDIN A POLYPEPTIDE, CHANGING THE PROTEIN “WOBBLE” HYPOTHESIS??
46
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
INSERTIONS AND DELETIONS CAN BE MORE SEVERE THEY CHANGE THE “READING FRAME”
47
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
MUTAGENESIS THE FORMATION OF MUTATIONS 2 COMMON WAYS SPONTANEOUS MUTATION ERRORS IN DNA REPLICATION/TRANSCRIPTION UNKNOWN ORIGINS MUTAGEN PHYSICAL (RADIATION) OR CHEMICAL AGENT *WHILE MUTATIONS ARE USUALLY HARMFUL; THEY CAN ALSO BE EXTREMELY USEFUL PROMOTES EVOLUTION IN THE LAB, PROVIDES A USEFUL TOOL FOR GENETIC RESEEARCH
48
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
VIRUSES IN A SENSE, VIRUSES ARE NOTHING MORE THAN PACKAGED GENES
49
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
VIRUSES USE HOST CELL MACHINERY TO REPRODUCE HOW CAN THIS LEAD TO DISEASE? WHY ARE VIRUSES DIFFICULT TO TREAT WITH ANTI-BIOTICS? HOW DO WE TREAT VIRUSES?
50
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
VIRUSES TWO REPRODUCTIVE CYCLES LYTIC CYCLE
51
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
VIRUSES TWO REPRODUCTIVE CYCLES LYSOGENIC CYCLE **CAN LEAD TO A PROPHAGE
52
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
EMERGING VIRUSES AIDS (HIV) FLU EBOLA HANTA HOW DO VIRUSES ARISE? UNKNOWN!!!! POSSIBLE THEORIES??
53
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
AIDS HIV IS A RETROVIRUS (UNIQUE) MAKES DNA FROM AN RNA TEMPLATE
54
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
AIDS REQUIRES THE USE OF REVERSE TRANSCRIPTASE TURNS HOST CELL INTO A “PROVIRUS” WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN AIDS & HIV?? WHY IS HIV SO DIFFICULT TO TREAT?
55
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
THE STRUCTURE OF DNA CAN TELL US HOW IT COPIES ITSELF AND HOW IT CAN GET CONVERTED INTO PROTEIN; BUT HOW COME IF EVERY CELL HAS THE SAME DNA, THEY CAN ALL LOOK DIFFERENT THAN EACH OTHER? YOU JUST HAVE TO STICK AROUND TO FIND OUT MORE!!
56
THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE GENE
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.