Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

DNA Structure & Properties Lecture 6. Lecture Objectives  Describe the experiments that first supported the hypothesis that a cell’s hereditary material.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "DNA Structure & Properties Lecture 6. Lecture Objectives  Describe the experiments that first supported the hypothesis that a cell’s hereditary material."— Presentation transcript:

1 DNA Structure & Properties Lecture 6

2 Lecture Objectives  Describe the experiments that first supported the hypothesis that a cell’s hereditary material is located in the nucleus.  Explain the evidence that supports the identity of DNA as hereditary material.  Identify the three subunits of DNA and describe how they are put together to construct an intact molecule.  Describe Watson and Crick’s three-- dimensional model of DNA based upon Franklin’s X-ray crystallography. The objectives of this lecture are to :

3 I. DNA’s Discovery & Structure

4 1. A History of DNA

5 F. Griffiths (1928) Tried to determine what genetic material was made of.

6 Griffiths’ Experiment

7 Avery, MacCleod & McCarthy (1944) Tried purifying the transforming principle to change R-type Pneumococcus to S-type

8 The Transforming Principle is DNA  Avery, Macleod, & McCarty – 1943  Attempted to identify Griffith’s “transforming principle”  Separated the dead virulent cells into fractions  The protein fraction  DNA fraction  Co-injected them with the avirulent strain.  When co-injected with protein fraction, the mice lived  with the DNA fraction, the mice died  Result was IGNORED  Most scientists believed protein was the genetic material.

9 The Hershey-Chase Experiment  Hershey & Chase – 1952  Performed the definitive experiment that showed that DNA was the genetic material.

10 Chargaff’s Rule Chargaff’s rule is a rule about DNA,

11 Chargaff’s Rule  Once DNA was recognized as the genetic material, scientists began investigating its mechanism and structure.  Erwin Chargaff – 1950  discovered the % content of the 4 nucleotides was the same in all tissues of the same species  percentages could vary from species to species.  He also found that in all animals (Chargaff’s rule): %G = %C %A = %T

12 Watson and Crick shared the 1962 Nobel Prize for Physiology and Medicine with Maurice Wilkins. Rosalind Franklin died before this date. The Double Helix: Watson & Crick

13  James Watson and Francis Crick – 1953  Presented a model of the structure of DNA.  It was already known from chemical studies that DNA was a polymer of nucleotide (sugar, base and phosphate) units.  X-ray crystallographic data obtained by Rosalind Franklin, combined with the previous results from Chargaff and others, were fitted together by Watson and Crick into the double helix model.

14  Two types of nucleic acid can be recognized: deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and ribonucleic acid (RNA).  DNA is mostly found in the nucleus where it forms the principal substance of the chromosomal material, the chromatin. In addition to DNA, chromatin contains proteins, mainly histones, and little RNA. 2. Chemical Bases in DNA

15  In prokaryotes, DNA is present in a single chromosome in the nucleoid.  Little DNA is also found in mitochondria and in chloroplasts.  Many viruses are made up of DNA, mostly double stranded, but some are single stranded. 2. Chemical Bases in DNA

16 3. Primary Structure: Nucleotide & Nucleoside  The addition of a pentose sugar to a base produces a nucleoside.  If the sugar is ribose, a ribonucleoside is produced; if the sugar is 2- deoxyribose, a deoxyribonucleoside is produced  Addition of phosphate group to nucleoside produces nucleoside mono-phosphate (NMP) like AMP or CMP or a nucleotide

17 3. Primary Structure: Mononucleotide

18  PURINES 1.Adenine (A) 2.Guanine (G)  PYRIMIDINES 3.Thymine (T) 4.Cytosine (C) T or C 3. Primary Structure: Nitrogenous Bases A or G

19 3. Primary Structure: Dinucleotide

20 3. Primary Structure: Polynucleotide

21

22 4. Secondary structure: double helical structure  The 2 strands are twisted about each other, coiled around a common axis, forming a right- handed double helix.  The hydrophilic sugar- phosphate backbone of each chain lies on the outside of the molecule. The hydrophobic nitrogenous bases project inwards from the outer sugar-phosphate framework, perpendicular to the long axis of the helix and are stacked one above the other. The stacking of bases is held by hydrophobic bonds.This helps in holding the helical structure.

23  The nitrogenous bases of the 2 strands meet each other near the central axis of the helix where they become connected by hydrogen bonds between the amino, or imino, hydrogen and the ketonic oxygen atoms. The hydrogen bonding between the bases helps to hold the 2 strands of the DNA together. GuanineThymineAdenineCytosine 4. Secondary structure: double helical structure

24 A nitrogen-containing ring structure called a base. The base is attached to the 1' carbon atom of the pentose. In DNA, four different bases are found: two purines, called adenine (A) and guanine (G) two pyrimidines, called thymine (T) and cytosine (C) *A always pairs with T : two hydrogen bonds *C always pairs with G : three hydrogen bonds 4. Secondary Structure: Chargaff’s Rule

25  The 2 strands of the double helical molecule are antiparallel, i.e., they run in opposite direction; one runs in the 5’ to 3’ direction, while the other runs in the 3’ to 5’ direction. 4. Secondary Structure: Direction of Strands

26  B conformation (B-DNA):  The most common form of DNA.  The minor groove and major groove, are of different widths on the outside of DNA.  A-DNA:  Forms under conditions of low salt and low humidity.  There can be transient shifts from B to A form.  Z-DNA:  Consists of alternating purines and pyrimidines  Found infrequently.  Z-DNA is: long and thin Left-handed, Phosphate backbone has a zig-zag appearance. 5. DNA Conformations

27 6. Key Features of a DNA molecule

28  DNA is the carrier of genetic information, which is stored in the form of a nucleotide sequence. DNA has 2 important functions: “replication” and “transcription”. Replication DNA Transcription RNA Translation Protein 7. Biochemistry of DNA

29 8. What is Gene ?  The gene, the basic units of inheritance; it is a segment within a very long strand of DNA with specific instruction for the production of one specific protein. Genes located on chromosome on it's place or locus.

30 8. What is Gene ? A gene in relation to the double helix structure of DNA and to a chromosome (right). Introns are regions often found in eukaryote genes that are removed in the splicing process (after the DNA is transcribed into RNA): only the exons encode the protein. This diagram labels a region of only 40 or so bases as a gene. In reality most genes are hundreds of times larger.


Download ppt "DNA Structure & Properties Lecture 6. Lecture Objectives  Describe the experiments that first supported the hypothesis that a cell’s hereditary material."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google