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Explore the fundamentals of DNA and genes, including the structure of DNA, genetic code, cellular organization, and the importance of complementary pairing. Learn how mutations can impact genetic information.
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Things to find out: • What is DNA? • The Genetic Code • The Human Genome
Diversity of Life • All biological systems are composed of the same types of molecules • Similar organization principles are used at the cellular level
The Cell • Basic component of life • Two main categories, prokarytic and eukaryotic cells • Differences in the nucleus
Prokaryotes: no defined nucleus and a simplified internal structure • Eukaryotes: membrane limited nucleus and complicated internal structure • Three branches of life
Genetic material is located in nucleus • The genetic information is stored in Deoxyribonucleic acid, DNA • DNA contains the information needed to build an individual
What is DNA needed for? • Genetic information is • transferred from DNA and • converted to protein • RNA molecules work as messengers • Proteins are the biological workers
Information of the DNA is copied to a RNA • molecule in transcription • RNA directs the protein synthesis in a translation • Protein’s 3D structure determines it’s function • Information transfer only in one direction
DNA (Deoxyribo Nucleic Acid) • a polymer of nucleotide monomers • 2’-deoxyribose sugar • Four bases: • Adenine, A • Guanine, G • Thymine, T • Cytosine, C Base part Sugar part
Purine bases Adenine and guanine Two carbon rings Pyrimidine bases Thymine and cytosine A single carbon ring Four bases...
DNA chains • Nucleotides are joined with phosphodiesteri bond • Sequence of bases vary genetic information • Extremely long chains!
DNA Molecules • Two polynucleotide chains are joined • Double helix, twisted in right handed way • Full circle in every 10 bases
”ladder-structure” • Bases = steps • Sugars and phosphates = supporting pilars • Two nucleotide chains run in opposite directions • chemical direction (5´-3´)
Complementary Pairing • Bases pair with other bases • Space between the chains is limited Purines with two carbon rings pair only with single ring pyrimidines A + T G + C • Complementary pairing is vital for the use and storage of the genetic information! • Interaction is stabilized by hydrogen bonds
The Genetic Code • Describes how nucleotide sequence is converted to protein sequence • Unit of three nucleotides = a codon • A codon codes for a specific amino acid (structural component of protein)
The four bases can form 64 different codons • 20 amino acids are found from the nature • Regulatory codons
Right reading frame is obligatory! • Part of the sequence from psoriasis associated gene HCR atgtttccac cttcaggttc cactgggctg attcccccct cccactttca agctcggccc ctttcaactc tgccaagaat ggctcccacc tggctctcag acattcccct ggtccaaccc • Three different reading frames can be used, but only one is the right one • Translate tools are found from the internet Frame 1 Met F P P S G S T G L I P P S H F Q A R P L S T L P R Met A P T W L S D I P L V Q Frame 2 C F H L Q V P L G Stop F P P P T F K L G P F Q L C Q E W L P P G S Q T F P W S N Frame 1 G L D Q G N V Stop E P G G S H S W Q S Stop K G P S L K V G G G N Q P S G T Stop R W K H The right one
Chromosome Condenced scaffold fibers connected to chromosome scaffold chromatin fibers chromatin DNA
Genes • A gene: DNA sequence that is needed to encode amino acid sequence of a protein • Composed of exons, introns and different control elements • Exon – protein coding sequence • Intron – intervening sequence
Genes vary a lot in size: • Humans: average 3000bp • largest 2.4 million bp • Genes are separated by sequences with unknown function • Only one strand of the DNA carries biological information template strand • Potential to store biological information is enormous
The Human genome... The different types of sequences that make up the total DNA of a human cell • 3 billion base pairs • about 22 000 genes • Only 2 % of the DNA encode proteins • Genes include exons and introns • Beside coding areas also additional secuences are found • 50 % repeated sequences (”junk DNA”)
23 chromosome pairs 46 chromosomes • 44 autosomes, 2 sex chromosomes • X and Y –chromosomes • XX female • XY Male
Mutations • Alterations in DNA sequence • Some are part of normal DNA variation • Caused by chemical and physiological agents • and errors in DNA replication • Cells can repaire some mistakes • If not repaired changes in DNA sequence • are made permanent by DNA replication
Point mutations: Single base mutations: 1. Missense mutation: leads to an amino acid change 2. Silent mutation: does not change the amino acid 3. Nonsense mutation: causes premature stop-codon
Frameshift mutations: • insertion/deletion • dublication • translocation • Altered reading frame • Severe impacts on protein structure
Passing on the genetic information: • Information passed on in the sexual reproduction • Needed for new characteristics to develop • Offspring recieve genes by inheriting chromosomes
Two important terms... Phenotype: The outlook of an organism Genotype: The genetic information written in DNA Phenotypes Genotype Genotype GCCAAGAATGGCTCCCACCT GGCTCTCAGACATTCCCCTGGTCCAACCCCCAGGCCATCAAGATGTCTCAGAGAGGCGGCTAGACACCCAGAGACCTCAAGTGACCATGTGGGAACGGGATGTTTCCAGTGACAGGCA ATGTTTCCACCTTCAGGTTCC ACTGGGCTGATTCCCCCCTCC CACTTTCAAGCTCGGCCCCTT TCAACTCAGAGAGGCGGCTA GACACCCAGAGACCTCAAGT GACCATGTGGGAACGGGATG TTTCCAGTGACAGGCAG
All somatic cells • 23 chromosome pairs • (46 chromosomes) • Diploid cells, 2n Fertilization: + n n • Sperm cell • 23 chromosomes • Haploid cell, n • Egg cell • 23 chromosomes • Haploid cell, n • Fertilized egg • 2n • 46 chromosomes
A chromosome pare: • A locus • An allele
Mitosis • Division of somatic cells • Products two daughter cells from • one parent cell • The number of chromosomes • does not change • DNA duplicates before entering • the mitosis • Takes 1-2 hours
Meiosis • Only in gamete formation • One diploidic parent cell produces • four haploid gametosytes • Mature gametocytes have 23 • chromosomes (n)
Crossing over: • Chromatids change parts • between homologous chromatids • during the meiosis • Causes redistribution of heridary • material between the homologous • chromosomes • number of genes doesn’t • change • new allele combinations • are formed
Inherited diseases • DNA mutations are significant in development of diseases • Inherited diseases are caused by mutations passed from • a parent to a offspring • Monogenic diseases: disease is caused by one mutation in • one gene • Multifactiorial diseases: disease is caused by interaction • of different mutations and environmental factors • Mendelian inheritance: Presence or absence of the phenotype depends on the genotype at a single locus
Dominant character: only one allele needed to cause the • phenotype (heterozygous) • Recessive character: both allels needed to cause the • phenotype (homozygous)
Autosomal dominant inheritance: Aa aa Aa aa Aa
Autosomal recessive inheritance: aa Aa aa Aa Aa aa aa Aa AA