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Materials: › Karyotyping Activity worksheet › PICK UP Molecular Biology notes packet and Nucleic Acids packet Plan: › Complete Karyotype Activity (‘til 12:45 pm) › History of DNA notes (12:50 to 1:30 pm) › CrashCourse DNA Intro (1:30 to 1:52 pm) Homework: › Review notes › Complete Nucleic Acids packet pages 1-2
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Both female and male organisms have identical chromosomes except for one pair. Genes are located on chromosomes All organisms have two types of chromosomes: › Sex chromosomes › Autosomes
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Male Female Usually the Y chromosome. Y is usually smaller than the X. Male genotype: XY Usually the X chromosome. X is usually larger than the Y. Female genotype: XX
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British bacteriologist 1928 = designed and performed experiment on rats and bacteria that causes pneumonia. 2 strains of the bacteria Type S = causes severe pneumonia Type R = relatively harmless Because the dead rat tissue showed living Type S bacteria, something “brought the Type S back to life” Actually one bacterial type incorporated the DNA, or instructions, from the dead bacteria into its own DNA Known as transformation. Confirmed by Avery, MacLeod, and McCarty in 1944
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Canadian biologist (1877-1955) Discovered DNA in 1944 with a team of scientists.
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1952 Attempted to solve the debate on whether DNA or proteins are responsible for providing genetic material. Use a bacteriophage virus (a virus that attacks bacteria) to prove that DNA is definitely the genetic material.
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The Hershey-Chase Experiment Mix radioactively labeled phages with bacteria. The phages infect the bacterial cells. Phage Bacterium Radioactive protein DNA Empty protein shell 12 Agitate in a blender to separate phages outside the bacteria from the cells and their contents. 3 Centrifuge the mixture so bacteria form a pellet at the bottom of the test tube. 4 Measure the radioactivity in the pellet and liquid. Batch 1 Radioactive protein Batch 2 Radioactive DNA Radioactive DNA Phage DNA Centrifuge Pellet Radioactivity in liquid Radioactivity in pellet Pellet Centrifuge
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The relative amounts of adenine and thymine are the same in DNA The relative amounts of cytosine and guanine are the same. Named after Erwin Chargaff
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Used X-Ray diffraction to get information about the structure of DNA Died in 1958 at the age of 37 of ovarian cancer
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1953 discovered the double helix structure of DNA. Admitted to using Franklin’s data without her knowledge.
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A twisted ladder with two long chains of alternating phosphates and sugars. The nitrogenous bases act as the “rungs” joining the two strands.
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The nucleus of one human cell contains approximately 2.5 MILLION nucleotide bases. One cell has about 1.7m of DNA if unwound That means DNA in every cell in your body could stretch to the MOON and BACK 1500 times!
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Histones = DNA tightly wrapped around a protein
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Materials: › Molecular Biology notes pages › PICK UP Intro to DNA Internet workshop Plan: › DNA Structure and Replication notes › Intro to DNA Workshop (Look up Karyotype Disorder if needed, too!) › Complete Understanding DNA Worksheet Homework: › Finish any incomplete classwork
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Nucleic Acids DNA RNA
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Made of monomers called nucleotides › Nucleotides are made up of a 5-carbon sugar phosphate group a nitrogen base Types › RNA (ribonucleic acid) › DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) Functions › Store hereditary information (DNA) › Transmit hereditary information (RNA)
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Polymer of nucleotides Made of monomers of deoxyribo nucleotides In DNA, the nucleotides of TWO strands will come together › The two strands will connect at the nitrogen bases with hydrogen bonds and twist forming a DOUBLE HELIX
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Nucleotide Phosphate group Nitrogenous base Sugar PolynucleotideSugar-phosphate backbone DNA nucleotide Phosphate group Nitrogenous base (A, G, C, or T) Thymine (T) Sugar (deoxyribose)
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Pyrimidines Thymine (T)Cytosine (C) Purines Adenine (A)Guanine (G) Single ring structureDouble ring structure
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Made of monomers of ribonucleotides Only occurs in SINGLE- STRANDED form Three main types mRNA rRNA tRNA
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3 Differences: › RNA has a different sugar (ribose). › RNA has Uracil instead of Thymine. › RNA is a single strand. Phosphate group Nitrogenous base (A, G, C, or U) Uracil (U) Sugar (ribose)
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Consists of 2 polynucleotide strands wrapped around each other in a double helix Twist
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Strands are held together by hydrogen bonds. “Complementary Base Pairing” › In DNA (A, T, C, G) Adenine will base pair with Thymine 2 H-bonds between Cytosine will base pair with Guanine 3 H-bonds between › In RNA (A, U, C, G) Adenine will base pair with Uracil Cytosine will base pair with Guanine
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Each time a cell divides, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes (which are made of DNA) › Throughout the process, one strand of the DNA molecule will be “conserved” and one will be given away… This is known as “semiconservative replication”… Resulting strands will contain one old strand and one new strand
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In DNA replication, the strands separate. › Enzymes use each strand as a template to assemble the new strands. Parental molecule of DNA Both parental strands serve as templates Two identical daughter molecules of DNA Nucleotides A A
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DNA replication begins at specific sites HELICASE Begins when HELICASE unwinds a segment of the DNA and breaks hydrogen bonds between the two complimentary strands of DNA › Helicase “unzips” the helix
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Each strand of the double helix is oriented in the opposite direction 5’to 3’ is forward or leading strand (has to do with “where” the phosphate group is hanging off) 3’to 5’ is the lagging strand 5 end3 end 5 end P P P P P P P P
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Leading Strand DNA POLYMERASE › Daughter will be synthesized continuously with DNA POLYMERASE (from 3’ to 5’) Lagging Strand DNA POLYMERASE › Since DNA POLYMERASE can only add a new nucleotides to a free 3’ end, this strand is DIScontinuously synthesized RNA PRIMASE RNA PRIMASE attaches to the DNA and synthesizes many short RNA primers DNA POLYMERASE DNA POLYMERASE will then remove the RNA primers and replace them with DNA
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DNA Ligase Finally, DNA Ligase inserts phosphates into any remaining gaps in the sugar-phosphate backbone 5 end P P Parental DNA DNA polymerase molecule 5 3 3 5 3 5 Daughter strand synthesized continuously Daughter strand synthesized in pieces DNA ligase Overall direction of replication 5 3 DNA Helicase
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Materials: › Molecular Biology notes pages › PICK UP Simulating Protein Synthesis handout Plan: › Protein synthesis notes › Simulating Protein Synthesis handout Homework: › Complete Nucleic Acids packet › Watch linked CrashCourse Transcription & Translation video
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The DNA genotype is expressed as proteins, which provide the molecular basis of phenotypic traits.
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Genotype vs Phenotype › Every living organism is the outward physical manifestation of internally coded, inheritable, information. Outward physical manifestation = phenotype Internally coded, inheritable information = genotype › Understand now? “The DNA genotype is expressed as proteins, which provide the molecular basis of phenotypic traits.” › The information constituting an organism’s genotype is carried in its sequence of bases.
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DNA is transcribed into RNA which is translated into the protein. DNA RNA Protein TRANSCRIPTION TRANSLATION
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Genetic information transcribed in codons is translated into amino acid sequences. › CODON = words in DNA language; triplets of bases that RNA uses to specify a protein The codons in a gene specify the amino acid sequence of a protein. EXAMPLE: › Amino acid chain: Lysine – serine – leucine – glutamic acid › A triplet of DNA bases codes for an amino acid. › The order of the DNA bases leads to the order of the amino acids. › The order of the amino acids leads to the phenotype (physical trait).
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Through transcription, the DNA code is transferred to mRNA in the NUCLEUS. DNA is unzipped in the nucleus and RNA polymerase binds to a specific section where an mRNA will be synthesized. Transcribe: To make a written copy
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Messenger RNA (mRNA) › Long strands of RNA nucleotides that are formed complementary to one strand of DNA (TRANSCRIPTION) Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) › Associates with proteins to form ribosomes in the cytoplasm Transfer RNA (tRNA) › Smaller segments of RNA nucleotides that transport amino acids to the ribosome mRNA rRNA tRNA
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mRNA now has a transcribed copy of the DNA codons mRNA is moved to the ribosome where it is read.
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DNA molecule Gene 1 Gene 2 Gene 3 DNA strand TRANSCRIPTION RNA Protein TRANSLATION Codon Amino acid
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In translation, tRNA molecules act as the interpreters of the mRNA codon sequence. At the middle of the folded strand (of tRNA) there is a three-base coding sequence called the ANTI- CODON. › Each anti-codon is complementary to a codon on the mRNA. tRNAs add amino acids to a growing polypeptide chain as the mRNA molecule moves through the ribosome one codon at a time. › When the STOP codon is reached, translation terminates and the polypeptide is released.
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An exercise in translating the genetic code Start codon RNA Transcribed strand Stop codon Translation Transcription DNA Protein
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An exercise in translating the genetic code Start codon RNA Transcribed strand Stop codon Translation Transcription DNA Protein
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An exercise in translating the genetic code Start codon RNA Transcribed strand Stop codon Translation Transcription DNA Protein
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An exercise in translating the genetic code Start codon RNA Transcribed strand Stop codon Translation Transcription DNA Protein
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An exercise in translating the genetic code Start codon RNA Transcribed strand Stop codon Translation Transcription DNA Protein
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An exercise in translating the genetic code Start codon RNA Transcribed strand Stop codon Translation Transcription DNA Protein
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An exercise in translating the genetic code Start codon RNA Transcribed strand Stop codon Translation Transcription DNA Protein
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An exercise in translating the genetic code Start codon RNA Transcribed strand Stop codon Translation Transcription DNA Protein
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