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DNA, Chromosomes, and DNA Replication. Chapter 12. Who are the key contributors?. Frederick Griffith Oswald Avery Alfred Henry and Martha Chase Chargaff Rosalind Franklin Francis Crick and James Watson. Griffith. Frederick Griffith. Responsible for transformation
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DNA, Chromosomes, and DNA Replication Chapter 12
Who are the key contributors? • Frederick Griffith • Oswald Avery • Alfred Henry and Martha Chase • Chargaff • Rosalind Franklin • Francis Crick and James Watson
Frederick Griffith • Responsible for transformation • Process in which one strain of bacteria is changed by gene(s) from another strain • Worked with mice and pnuemonia
Oswald Avery • Responsible for determining that the molecule important in transformation was nucleic acid DNA • Took heat-killed bacteria and made extract • Enzymes for lipids, proteins, and carbohydrates—no effect • Still smooth strain • Enzymes for nucleic acid—rough strain • Smooth strain not transformed
Alfred Hershey and Martha Chase • Determined that the genetic material is made out of DNA, not protein • Used radioactive labels • Sulfur-35 for protein • Phosphorus-32 for nucleic acid
Chargaff • Looked at numerous organisms • Compared concentrations of nitrogenous bases (bases) • What do you notice? _________________________ Chargaff had no idea WHY this was happening!
Rosalind Franklin • Used X-ray diffraction to study image of DNA • Helical shape • Twisted strands • 2 strands • Bases near middle
Francis Crick and James Watson • Built 3-D models of DNA • Used work of everyone before them • Model: double helix • Twisted ladder • H-bonds between nitrogenous bases • Base pairing: A with T, G with C • EXPLAINS CHARGAFF
DNA structure • Made up of nucleotides • 5 C sugar • Deoxyribose • Phosphate group • Nitrogenous base
DNA isolation virtual lab DNA condensation • Very condensed • 1 cell holds 1m DNA • How?
DNA condensation • DNA coils around proteins called histones • These coil into structures called nucleosomes • This coils further into supercoils • And then eventually chromosomes • Seen only during cell division (mitosis)
DNA replication • DNA is AWESOME • Each strand has all the information it needs to make its partner (complimentary strand) • Strand 1: ATT GAC TAC GGA TTC • Strand 2: TAA CTG ATG CCT AAG
DNA Replication • Prokaryotes start replicating in one place and go to completion • Eukaryotes start replicating in hundreds of places and meet up • Opening called a “replication fork”
Steps of Replication • Enzyme unzips DNA (helicase) • Breaks H bonds • Lots of enzymes • Now two separate strands • DNA polymerase (enzyme) makes a new strand of DNA from the old strand • From base-pairing rules
Replication A G C C T A AG C T T C G G A T T C G A T C G G A T T C G A A G C C T A AG C T DNA Replication Video
RNA Structure • RNA has 3 main differences from DNA • Ribose instead of deoxyribose • Uracil instead of thymine • Single stranded instead of double stranded
Messenger mRNA Serve as messengers from DNA to rest of cell Types of RNA • Ribosomal • rRNA • Site of protein synthesis • Transfer • tRNA • Transfers amino acid to ribosome
Transcription • DNARNA • RNA polymerase binds to DNA • Special site called promoter • RNA polymerase makes complimentary strand out of RNA nucleotides Transcription Video
Transcription • Practice • DNA: TAA GTC AGT CAC TTC • RNA: • DNA: GGC TTA GGT CCT ATG • RNA:
The Genetic Code • How to you get from RNA to protein? • Proteins are made from amino acids • “Language” of mRNA is called the genetic code • Each amino acid has a “code” of three mRNA nucleotides • Called a codon
The Genetic Code • 20 amino acids • 64 possible codons • Some amino acids have more than one codon • “Start” codon—initiates translation • AUG • “Stop” codon—terminates translation • UAA, UAG, UGA
The Genetic Code • Let’s look at one half of DNA • DNA: AGCGTGCCA • RNA: UCGCACGGU • Into three-letter codons UCG-CAC-GGU • Amino acids: Serine-Histidine-Glycine
Translation • Translation is the process of taking the mRNA information and turning it into a polypeptide chain
Translation Steps • mRNA is transcribed in the nucleus • Exits via nuclear pore to cytoplasm • Attaches to a ribosome • Translation begins at “AUG” (start codon) • tRNAmolecule that has methionine (amino acid) and anticodon UAC attaches • Ribosome binds next codon/anticodon pair
Translation Steps • Ribosome joins 2 amino acids—peptide bond • tRNA for methionine breaks off • Ribosome binds next codon/anticodon pair • Joins these amino acids • Lather, rinse, repeat
Translation Steps • The process stops when… • The ribsosome reaches either • UAA • UAG • UGA More Protein Synthesis Protein Synthesis Video
Mutations Section 12-4
Kinds of Mutations • Point Mutations • Changes in one or a few nucleotides • Types of point mutations • Substitutions • Insertions • Deletions
Substitution One base is changed to another CT Usually affects only one (if any) amino acids Kinds of Mutations
Kinds of Mutations • Practice substitution • RNA strand: UAC-CCG-UAG-UUC-UAA • Original a.a: • RNA sub: UAC-CCA-UAG-UUC-UAA • Change? • RNA sub: UAC-CCG-UAG-UUC-UAC • Change?
Kinds of Mutations • Insertions & Deletions • One nucleotide is added or deleted • Called a frameshift mutation • Effects everything “downstream” • Can drastically change/destroy a protein’s function
Kinds of Mutations • Practice insertion & deletion • RNA strand: UAG-CCG-UAG-UUC-UAA • Original a.a: • RNA ins: UAG-CCGGUAGUUCUAA • Change? • RNA del: UAG-CCGUAGUUCUAC • Change?
Kinds of Mutations • Chromosomal mutations • Changes in the number or structure of chromosomes • Types: • Deletion • Duplication • Inversion • Translocation
Deletion: loss of all or part of chromosome Duplication: extra copies of chromosome parts Inversion: reverses the direction of parts of chromosomes Translocation: one part breaks off and attaches to another chromosome NOT CROSSING OVER!!!