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Published byMerry Butler Modified over 8 years ago
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Introduction to DNA (Deoxyribonucleic acid)
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What do you know?
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Scientists
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Phoebus Levene 1920 – Determined the basic structure of nucleotides that make up DNA 5-carbon sugar, phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base
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Erwin Chargaff 1952 - Nitrogenous base composition % of adenine is equal to % of thymine % of guanine is equal to % cytosine Composition of DNA varies from species to species
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Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin 1951 - Worked with a technique called X-ray diffraction Determined the helical nature of DNA
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James Watson and Francis CrickWatson 1953 – Determined the structure of DNA using Chargaff’s and Franklin’s data A
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What is DNA?
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DNA (Deoxyribonucleic acid) Nucleic acid Consists of monomers called nucleotides Stores genetic information, determines an organisms traits by synthesizing proteins Each organisms genome is unique
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Structure of DNA
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Double helix Consists of a double strand of nucleotides Two strands are anti-parallel – 5’ to 3’ – 3’ to 5’
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Nucleotide Three parts of a nucleotide – 5 carbon sugar called deoxyribose – Phosphate group – A single nitrogenous base
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Four Nitrogenous Bases Purines (double ring) – Adenine (A) – Guanine (G) Pyrimidines (single ring) – Thymine (T) – Cytosine (C)
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Chargaff’s Rules A-T (2 hydrogen bonds) C-G (3 hydrogen bonds)
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Sides of molecule - Alternating sugars and phosphates held together by strong covalent bonds Center – two nitrogenous bases held together by weak hydrogen bonds
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DNA Structure Click on the hyperlink above to watch a short animation about the structure of DNA A
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Genes The sequence of nucleotides in an organisms genome is unique Genes consist of sequences of nucleotides
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Human Genome 3164.7 million nucleotides Average gene length is 3000 base pairs Largest gene is 2.4 million base pairs Approximately 20,000 – 25,000 genes
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DNA Replication
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Why is DNA replication important?
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Why replicate? Each new cell created through cell division must receive an exact copy of the original cells DNA Occurs in the nucleus of cells
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DNA Replication Semi-conservative – new DNA molecules have one original template strand and one new strand Semi-conservative Follows complementary base pair rules “Leading strand” – continuously synthesized “Lagging strand” – synthesized in fragments A
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Origins of Replication
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Steps of DNA Replication 1. DNA helicase unzips the original DNA molecules by severing hydrogen bonds between nucleotides A
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2. New nucleotides are added to the template strands using DNA polymerase enzymes (complementary base pairing)
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3. Okazaki fragments are pieced together by DNA ligase
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DNA Replication C C T A A C G G T A C G A A T A
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