Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byEmery Warren Modified over 9 years ago
1
Fun Times with the Double Helix
2
Set up notes page as shown Fold colored paper as shown Record new vocab words and review these at home Use different colored pencils
3
Itself is not alive… Exists for only one reason… to make more DNA 2 meters squeezed into each cell ~2o million km! Holds the instructions to make and maintain you. Contains roughly 3.2 billion letters- 10 3,480,000,000 combinations Is 99.9% identical to everyone else’s DNA Is 0.1% completely and utterly unique to you.
4
James Watson and Francis Crick- discovered the structure of DNA– the double helix
5
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sf0YXnAFBs8 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sf0YXnAFBs8
7
4 types of nucleotides, A,T, C, G Complementary base pairing: A = T C = G
9
DNA inside nucleus makes copy of itself during _____ stage of _______________. Part of the DNA helix unwinds (by enzyme “helicase”) when H+ bonds between nitrogenous bases are broken.
12
Each strand serves as a pattern for a new strand of DNA Enzyme DNA Polymerase moves along each separate strand and matches bases (A, C, T, G) on each strand to a new base that is “floating” inside the nucleus.
14
H+ bonds reform between bases…
15
Each strand of DNA serves as a template for a new strand. The replicated DNA is made of one old strand and one new strand
17
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4jtmOZaIvS0&feature=related
18
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d1UPf7lXeO8&feature=related
19
How does a cell interpret DNA? Simulation: Group A: Design a structure using all the materials in the ziplock bag. Devise a way to communicate with Group B how to duplicate this design… no words, no pictures… all blueprints stay at Group A site.
20
From DNA to messenger RNA
21
Making a protein (polypeptide) begins with making mRNA (messengerRNA) inside the nucleus. RNA is also a “nucleic acid” is single-stranded has “uracil” (U) instead of thymine has 5C sugar “ribose”
22
Step 1: DNA strand separates at a gene spot on DNA. Only 1 strand of DNA will serve as a template- starts at a “promoter” Step 2: Enzyme “RNA polymerase” matches RNA bases with DNA bases: A, U, C, G Step 3: Enzymes link RNA nucleotides together into a single-strand of RNA.
23
Step 4: mRNA leaves nucleus with code for protein and moves to ribosomes where the protein will be made. Important editing is required of mRNA: Introns: cut-out connected sequences Exons: expressed sequences spliced together- final edited RNA
25
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5MfSYnItYvg&fea ture=relmfu
26
There are actually many types of RNA. In most cells three kinds of RNA are critical to the making of proteins. mRNA – “messenger RNA” carry copies of the instructions for the proteins from the DNA to the ribosomes rRNA – “ribosomal RNA” are part of the ribosomal structure tRNA - “transfer RNA” transfers the amino acids to the ribosomes to make the protein
28
Making of proteins is called “protein synthesis” Instructions for each protein comes from the mRNA in 3-base messages called “codons” Codons are translated in the ribosomes. mRNA attaches to the ribosome (rRNA)
29
“Translation” is the decoding of the message from the mRNA into a polypeptide chain (protein). The tRNA is a cloverleaf-shaped molecule that has on one end a complementary “anticodon” and on the other end an amino acid. Example: codon AAA, anticodon UUU or lysine
31
As the codons from the mRNA are “read” inside the ribosome and the tRNA delivers one amino acid at a time… these amino acids bond together with “polypeptide” bonds … the “language” of mRNA instructions is called the Genetic Code… How can 3 base codons make 20 amino acids? (4 x 4 x 4) = 64 possibilities
34
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=41_Ne5mS2ls&NR=1
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.