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A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation……. Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes. Part 1. DNA. Some DNA can jump DNA responds to signals from outside the cell DNA is only the beginning for understanding the human genome
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In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes
Part1 DNA
Some DNA can jump • DNA responds to signals from outside the cell • DNA is only the beginning for understanding the human genome • DNA and proteins are key molecules of the cell nucleus • One gene makes one protein • A gene is made of DNA • Bacteria and viruses have DNA too • DNA is packaged in a chromosome • A gene is a discrete sequence of DNA nucleotides • There is a phosphate group in nucleotide along with sugar molecule whereas no phosphate group exists in nucleoside
This is an example of a gel electrophoresis run.. Each column was loaded with a different mixture. The mixtures are then separated vertically by their charge and size. The gel is then stained, producing dark bands where a molecule of a given size or charge is present in a mixture. In this gel, the columns marked with a - are a control group. The band marked with an arrow is filled only in the + columns.
The DNA molecule is shaped like a twisted ladder, is a double helix, was found in 1953 by Watson and Crick
DNA is a linear polymer of four nucleotides viz., deoxy Adenosine monophosphate (abbreviated A), deoxy Thymidine monophosphate (abbreviated T), deoxy Guanosine monophosphate (abbreviated G), and deoxy Cytidine monophosphate (abbreviated C)
Double helix maintains a constant width because purines always face pyrimidines in the complementary A-T and G-C base pairs. The sequence in the figure isT-AC-GA-TG-C
Part2 RNA
Some viruses store genetic information in RNA • RNA was the first genetic molecule • RNA is a very similar polymer of Adenosine monophosphate, Guanosine monophosphate, Cytidine monophosphate, and Uridine monophosphate • Uridine monophosphate, abbreviated U, is a nucleotide functionally equivalent to Thymidine monophosphate • RNA is an intermediary between DNA and protein • The RNA message is sometimes edited • RNA was discovered after DNA • RNA occurs in the nucleus as well as in the cytoplasm • Ribosomes are 2/3 RNA (a type of RNA known as ribosomal RNA or rRNA) and 1/3 protein
Cells of developing embryos contain high levels of RNA • RNA has ribose sugar instead of deoxyribose sugar. The base uracil (U) replaces thymine (T) in RNA • Most RNA is single stranded, although tRNA forms a “cloverleaf” structure due to complementary base pairing • There are 61 different tRNAs, each having a different binding site for the amino acid and a different anticodon. For instance, for the codon UUU, the anticodon is AAA • Energy for binding the amino acid to tRNA comes from ATP conversion to adenosine monophosphate (AMP) • mRNA molecules are long containing 500-10,000 nucleotides
Part3 Operations on Genes
Biochemical reactions are controlled by enzymes, and often are organized into chains of reactions known as metabolic pathways • Genes undergo different operations called mutation, cross over, local twist and variation • Mutations are changes in genetic information, usually only one bit • Variation modifies the encoded value by a small increment or decrement • Crossover exchanges a contiguous fragment of an individual • There could be single crossover, two point crossover or uniform crossover
Some types of mutations are automatically repaired • Replication is of three types viz., conservative, semi-conservative and dispersive • In conservative replication, an entirely new DNA strand is produced • In semi-conservative replication, two DNA molecules are produced, each of which is composed of one-half of the parental DNA along with an entirely new complementary strand • In dispersive replication, the parental strands are broken and a mix of old and new fragments of each stand of DNA are reassembled