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DNA Structure and Function Homework #1 is posted Bonus #1 will be soon Discussions start M 9/10
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Fig 7.2 Different strains of bacteria are injected into mice. How is information transferred between cells?
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Fig 7.2 How is information transferred between cells?
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Fig 7.2 How is information transferred between cells?
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Fig 7.2 How is information transferred between cells?
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What has happened to the bacteria? Fig 7.2
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DNA is the transforming agent Fig 7.3
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If these two can win a Nobel prize… James Watson and Francis Crick The Structure of DNA
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Rosalind Franklin Data showing uniformity of DNA structure.
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Fig 7.5+8.2 Nucleotides have a sugar backbone
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Fig 7.5 +8.2 This subtle difference in structure has profound effects.
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Fig 7.5+8.2 Plus four different bases
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Together with a phosphate = nucleotide Fig 7.5
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Together with a phosphate = nucleotide Fig 7.5
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Fig 7.8 Connect nucleotides by covalent bond = strand (notice 5’-3’ bond)
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Fig 7.8 DNA is typically double stranded and anti-parallel The strands are connected by hydrogen bonds
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Rosalind Franklin Data showing uniformity of DNA structure.
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Base pairing in DNA Figure 7-10 Fig 7.8
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Two representations of the DNA double helix Figure 7-9 Fig 7.9
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Fig 8.11 DNA stores information, but does not do anything. The information must be expressed to be useful.
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a gene The relationship between DNA and genes promotercoding regionterminatornon-gene DNA
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DNA Composition: In humans: Each cell contains ~6 billion base pairs of DNA. This DNA is ~2 meters long and 2 nm wide. ~97% does not directly code for amino acids In a single human cell only about 3-5% of genes are expressed at a time.
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Width of DNA Length of human DNA in each cell
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DNA Composition: In humans: Each cell contains ~6 billion base pairs of DNA. This DNA is ~2 meters long and 2 nm wide. ~3% directly codes for amino acids ~10% is genes In a single human cell only about 5-10% of genes are expressed at a time.
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a gene - DNA used to produce RNA or protein The relationship between DNA and genes promotercoding regionterminatornon-gene DNA
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Five Perspectives of a Gene
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Genes act as units of heredity…storing and passing on information.
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Genes act as units of heredity… storing and passing on information.
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Genes are seen as a cause of disease
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Sickle-cell anemia is caused by a single nucleotide change in the hemoglobin gene Fig 6.5
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Genes code for proteins Fig 8.11
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Five Perspectives of Genes: 1.Genes act as units of heredity 2.Genes are seen as a cause of disease 3.Genes code for proteins (we stopped here, and will continue with the 5 gene perspectives on F) 4.Genes act as switches, controlling development 5.Genes are replicators (selfish gene)
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