270 likes | 379 Views
DNA and biotechnology. What is DNA?. “Structure and function”: molecules are put together in a way so that their structure contributes to their function DNA is a very long, thin molecule Double helix Over 5 feet long when stretched out Contains genetic information Stored in nucleus.
E N D
What is DNA? • “Structure and function”: molecules are put together in a way so that their structure contributes to their function • DNA is a very long, thin molecule • Double helix • Over 5 feet long when stretched out • Contains genetic information • Stored in nucleus
Structure of DNA • Why double helix? • Two strands of nucleotides • “Base-pairing rules” • A-T; C-G • Fits into nucleus • Can be accurately copied when cell divides • Very stable
Accurate copying is extremely important • Semiconservative replication (proven in 1960s) • Two new molecules each contain one old strand and one new strand • “Old” strand is a template for the “new” strand
When DNA is replicated (copied) the entire molecule is copied • When cell divides, both new cells must contain the same DNA • In human cells, how many molecules are copied? • In what phase of the cell cycle does this take place? • In what phase of the cell cycle are the DNA molecules actually separated?
How is the information in DNA used? • To make RNA (transcription) • Three kinds of RNA • Messenger RNA (mRNA)- contains the sequences from which proteins are made; unstable • Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) - part of ribosome • Transfer RNA (tRNA)- carries amino acids to site of protein synthesis • RNA is made in the nucleus, but protein synthesis occurs in the cytoplasm
When mRNA is made, only part of the DNA molecule is transcribed • What is a gene? • The gene is transcribed to make mRNA • (genotype: what is the gene?) • The gene is “expressed” when a protein is made from it • (phenotype: what type of protein is produced?) • Remember you have two copies of each gene (may or may not be identical, but one may be dominant)
Transcription: RNA synthesis • One strand of DNA serves as the template • A very long piece of RNA may be produced, which is then “edited” to make a smaller RNA molecule
How do you get from nucleotides to amino acids? • There are 20 different amino acids, but only four different nucleotides • Genetic code (1960s) • Three nucleotides code for one amino acid • Triplets; codons • 64 possible combinations • Some amino acids have more than one codon • Three “stop” codons
What happens in translation? • Ribosome, mRNA, tRNA come together in cytoplasm • Protein synthesis usually starts with AUG codon (“start” codon) • Transfer RNA “reads” mRNA with anticodon • Transfer RNAs keep reading mRNA and adding amino acids to the growing protein • Process continues until stop codon is reached (see pp. 482-483)
Mutation: a change in the DNA sequence • Substitution of one nucleotide for another • Effect depends on the actual substitution • GUUGUC both valine; no effect • GUU AUU valine isoleucine; similar amino acids so little or no effect • GUA GCA valine alanine; different chemical properties so effect may be significant • UUA UGA leucine STOP; protein is destroyed
Mutation, continued • Insertion or deletion • Effect is usually serious; coding sequence is totally disrupted • THE BIG FAT DOG RAN • Insertion: THE SBI GFA TDO GRA N • Deletion: THB IGF ATD OGR AN • Imagine this effect on amino acid sequence!
Certain chemicals, radiation are known to cause mutations • Mutagens • Often known to cause a specific type of mutation • May lead to disease (loss of protein function) or cancer (control gene is affected)
All cells in your body (except gametes) contain the same DNA • Are all cells in your body exactly the same? • Different functions • Different stages of development • How do they look and act differently if they all have the same DNA?
How is gene activity controlled? • DNA structure • Growth factors • Hormones • Regulatory genes
Implications for genetic engineering • All organisms have the same DNA structure (and share many genes) • DNA sequences can be determined • Gene expression can be controlled • Mutations can be identified (and can be introduced into DNA) • DNA can be “amplified” (many copies of a DNA sequence can be produced)
I. All organisms have the same DNA structure • “Recombinant DNA molecules” combine DNA from different species • Restriction enzymes cut DNA at specific sequences • Ligases join the DNA fragments together • Molecule is put into expression vector
Recombinant DNA molecules, continued • Recombinant DNA molecules can be transferred to and expressed in cells • Bacteria, yeast, animal cell culture, plants, animals! • Large quantities of scarce molecules can be produced this way (growth hormone, insulin) • Genes and gene products can be studied (and modified)
II. DNA sequences can be determined • Technology has been around since the 1970s • Human genome project; determine the complete DNA sequence of humans and many other organisms- why? • Similarities and differences within and between species • Evolutionary relationships • Identify genes associated with disease or other interesting variations • Learn more about gene regulation (most DNA does NOT code for genes. So what DOES it do?)
III. Gene expression can be controlled • Can we turn genes “on” and “off”? • Replace damaged cells and tissues? • Some cells replace themselves easily (skin, blood) • Others do not (nerves, muscles) • Stem cells • Growth factors • Cure cancer by stopping uncontrolled cell growth? • Treat diseases that occur because of a regulatory defect? • Treat chronic infections? • Slow down the aging process?
IV. Mutation analysis • DNA sequence analysis • Mutations can be deliberately introduced into DNA sequences (and then expressed) • Study effects (beneficial or harmful) • To what extent is a condition influenced by genes?
Gene therapy- replacing faulty genes with functional genes • We can sequence and express genes to study protein function • We can deliver genes to the patient (vectors) • When is this appropriate? • If disease is due to a single genetic defect • If therapy is safe and effective
Practical/commercial applications for recombinant DNA technology • Agriculture • Pest-resistant crops • More robust livestock • “Pharming”- transgenic organisms are used to produce pharmaceuticals • New and improved proteins • Forensic analysis
(Forensic) DNA analysis • Individuals have unique DNA (except identical twins) • Criminalistics • Paternity • Human history (mitochondrial, Y chromosome) • DNA analytical techniques (PCR amplification; sequencing; probes) • Diagnostics
We have known the structure of DNA only since 1953! • Technological advances have been extremely rapid • Tools for basic research • Commercial and therapeutic applications • How far can we go? • How far should we go?