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What is the structure of DNA? Hw 293-299 Q 1-4 p. 299.

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Presentation on theme: "What is the structure of DNA? Hw 293-299 Q 1-4 p. 299."— Presentation transcript:

1 What is the structure of DNA? Hw 293-299 Q 1-4 p. 299

2 The Structure of DNA: Made of units called nucleotides. Nucleotides include: a. Deoxyribose (a sugar) b. A Phosphate Group c. One of four possible Nitrogenous Bases… InterActive http://ny.pbslearningmedia.org/resource/tdc02.sci.life.gen.journeydna/journey-into-dna/

3 The Four Nucleotides in DNA 1. Adenine (AD-un- neen) 2. Thymine (THY- meen) 3. Guanine (GWAH- neen) 4. Cytosine (SY-to- zeen) Adenine Guanine Cytosine Thymine Phosphate group Deoxyribose

4 Nucleotide Use Like letters in the alphabet, many different arrangements can give you an infinite number of words: The different arrangements of bases to code for and carry genetic information.

5 2. The Structure of DNA The Double Helix: A. “A twisted ladder” A=T and G=C in a DNA molecule -This attraction (called Base Pairing) is caused by hydrogen bonds between the bases.

6 More on the double helix Two separate and opposite strands wrap around each other to form a stable twisting molecule Nucleotide Sugar- phosphate backbone Hydrogen bonds Key Adenine (A) Thymine (T) Cytosine (C) Guanine (G)

7 3. Chromosomes Chromosomes are made of long strands of DNA nucleotides wrapped around histone proteins. 1. The smallest of the 46 human chromosomes contains 30 million base pairs. 2. Human Genome Project http://ny.pbslearningmedia.org/resource/tdc02. sci.life.gen.hgp/human-genome-project/

8 New Strand Original Strand DNA Polymerase

9 Process of DNA Replication: 1. Enzymes “unzip” a molecule of DNA by breaking the hydrogen bonds between base pairs. 2. The two strands unwind and each becomes a template for the other strand.

10 DNA Replication 3. DNA strands are Complementary (or opposites) if the two strands are separated, they can recreate their own complementary strand.

11 3. New nucleotides attach to each of the strands, forming two identical sets of DNA! 4. DNA Polymerase- one of the enzymes involved in replication, adds the new bases (nucleotides) and proof- reads each strand so there are very few mistakes.

12 What is the importance of RNA? The main role of RNA is to aid in Protein Synthesis RNA is similar to DNA in that both are made of nucleotides From DNA to Protein-Video http://ny.pbslearningmedia.org/resource/tdc02.sci.life.gen.proteinsynth/from-dna-to-protein/ How Cells Make Proteins-Interactive http://ny.pbslearningmedia.org/resource/lsps07.sci.life.stru.cellprotein/how-do-cells-make-proteins/

13 RNA is different than DNA: Sugar backbone in RNA is Ribose (not Deoxyribose) RNA is single stranded while DNA is double stranded RNA contains Uracil in place of Thymine. (U in place of T) DNA always stays in the nucleus, while RNA can be found in the nucleus and cytoplasm.

14 Use the following to transcribe DNA to mRNA (codons) A=UC=GT=AG=C DNAmRNA A C T G

15 Transcription: DNA is used as a template to make mRNA (messenger)

16 Types of RNA Messenger RNA (mRNA) The role of mRNA is to carry instructions for making proteins from DNA to Ribosomes. Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) One of the building blocks of Ribosomes Transfer RNA (tRNA) Transfers amino acids to ribosomes in the specific order that mRNA states in order to make a specific protein.

17 Transcription Transcription is the process of making mRNA molecules from DNA molecules.

18 A Look at Transcription Adenine (DNA and RNA) Cytosine (DNA and RNA) Guanine(DNA and RNA) Thymine (DNA only) Uracil (RNA only)

19 The Genetic Code & Protein Synthesis 1. Proteins are made by joining long chains of amino acids together to form polypeptides. a. There are a total of 20 different amino acids. b. Different proteins are made by different combinations and numbers of these amino acids. c. These amino acids are assembled using the Genetic code.

20 Translation The process of a cell using mRNA and ribosomes to make proteins is translation

21 More on Protein Synthesis RNA contains 4 different bases A, U, C, and G. The order of these subunits is the Genetic code. a. The genetic code is read three letters at a time, this is called a “Codon.” b. Each codon instructs for one amino acid to be built into a chain.

22 Example: RNA: UCGCACGGU is read as a series of three codons: UCG-CAC-GGU These different codons represent three different amino acids. UCGCACGGU Serine - Histadine - Glycine

23 The codons for the specific amino acids are listed using this table:

24 Putting it all together DNA  RNA  Proteins  Traits Transcription Translation This simple phrase links all the important genetic components together and is the basis for the science of molecular biology

25 6. Mutations Mutations are mistakes cells make when copying DNA. The most common type of mutation is a Point Mutation, this is when one nucleotide is replaced by another. These mutations sometimes alter the RNA molecules transcribed and the proteins translated by the ribosomes. This type of mutation will take place on a piece of DNA that codes for a protein and will be known as a gene mutation

26 Chromosomal Mutations Changes in the number or structure of the chromosomes themselves

27 Types of Chromosomal Mutations Deletion Duplication Inversion Translocation


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