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Chapter 13: DNA

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Title: Chapter 13: DNA


1
Chapter 13 DNA
2
I. Mystery of DNA Structure
  • Griffith (1920s) Injected mice with deadly
  • bacteria (rough colony) and they die.
  • Inject mice with smooth bacteria and they
  • live.
  • Inject mice with heat-killed rough and
  • they live.
  • Mix heat-killed rough with healthy smooth,
    mice die.
  • Conclusion Transforming factor smaller than
    cell.

3
I. Mystery of DNA Structure
  • B. Hershey/Chase (1950s)
  • Radiolabeled proteins and DNA.
  • Found viruses injected radiolabeled DNA,
  • but no proteins.
  • Conclusion DNA is transforming factor.

4
Figure 16.2a The Hershey-Chase experiment phages
5
virus particle labeled with 35S
virus particle labeled with 32P
bacterial cell (cutaway view)
label outside cell
label inside cell
Fig. 13.5, p. 217
6
I. Mystery of DNA Structure
  • C. Chargaff (1950s)
  • Worked with DNA and found that the
  • amount of adenine (A) equaled the
  • amount of thymine (T) while the amount
  • of cytosine (C ) equaled the amount of
  • guanine (G).
  • Conclusion Chargaffs base-pairing rule.

7
I. Mystery of DNA Structure
  • D. Franklin/Wilkins (1953) X-ray
  • crystalography
  • They froze DNA and ran x-rays through
  • resulting crystal.
  • Conclusion DNA tightly-wound helix
  • (at least they provided the evidence
  • for this conclusion).

8
Figure 16.4 Rosalind Franklin and her X-ray
diffraction photo of DNA
9
I. Mystery of DNA Structure
  • Watson Crick (1953)
  • Assemble all evidence and correctly
  • interpret data to create double helix.
  • Conclusion Current model of DNA
  • (and Noble prize and fame and
  • glory and chicks)

10
II. Model of DNA
  • Nucleotide Basic building block of DNA.
  • 1 phosphate group, 1 deoxyribose
  • sugar, 1 nitrogenous base.

11
II. Model of DNA
  • A. Nucleotide
  • Sugar (Deoxyribose) Each carbon is
  • numbered sequentially.

12
2-nanometer diameter, overall
distance between each pair of bases 0.34
nanometer
each full twist of the DNA double helix 3.4
nanometers
Fig. 13.7, p. 219
13
  • Nucleotide
  • 2. Phosphate Negative yet next to each other
    along DNA backbone, resulting in twisting.

14
II. Model of DNA
  • A. Nucleotide
  • 3. Nitrogenous Bases
  • Adenine and Guanine are Purines
  • (double ring structures)
  • Cytosine and Thymine are
  • Pyrimadines (sing ring structures)

15
phosphate group
ADENINE (A) base with a double-ring structure
GUANINE (G) base with a double-ring structure
sugar (ribose)
THYMINE (T) base with a single-ring structure
CYTOSINE (C) base with a single-ring structure
Fig. 13.6, p. 218
16
II. Model of DNA
  • B. Bonds within DNA Molecule
  • 1. Phosphate to Sugar Covalent (note which
    carbon in sugar is attached to which phosphate).

17
II. Model of DNA
  • B. Bonds within DNA Molecule
  • 2. Sugar to Nitrogenous Base Covalent.
  • 3. N-base to N-base
  • Hydrogen Bonds.

18
II. Model of DNA
  • C. Complete molecule is
  • antiparallel (one side
  • runs 3 to 5, other side
  • runs upside down,
  • or 5 to 3)

19
For each, 1. How many base pairs?
2. How many nucleotides? 3.
How many sugars? 4. Circle a
hydrogen bond.
in-text, p. 219
20
III. DNA Replication
  • Replication Occurs in the nucleus process of
    DNA creating an exact replica of original strand.

21
III. DNA Replication
  • B. Semi-Conservative Nature of Replication
  • The two daughter strands are half new and
    half original (order and molecules of parent
    strand are conserved ).
  • Each half of original strand becomes a
    template for each new DNA molecule. The new
    strand is half old, half new.

22
III. DNA Replication
  • C. Steps of Replication
  • 1. DNA uncoils and unzips (done by
  • enzyme DNA helicase).
  • 2. New nucleotides are added to exposed
  • strand and added by DNA polymerase
  • enzyme.
  • 3. DNA ligase fills in gaps in new DNA
  • strands.

23
III. DNA Replication
  • D. Okazawi Segements DNA is read from 3 to 5.
  • 1. Leading strand reads 3 to 5 as DNA is
  • unzipped.
  • 2. Lag strand would have to wait for entire
  • strand of DNA to unzip to begin rather
  • it builds short segments, known as
  • Okazawi segments (later stitched
  • together with DNA ligase).

24
Note 3 to 5 direction
25
Figure 16.13 Synthesis of leading and lagging
strands during DNA replication
26
Label Middle image 3 to 5
27
Okazaki Segment Illustrated
28
III. DNA Replication
  • E. Replication Fork/Bubble
  • As DNA unzips, it replication begins
  • immediately. Replication simultanelously
  • occurs at many sites along a strand of
  • DNA.

29
Figure 16.10 Origins of replication in eukaryotes
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