Title: A Glance on Genetics I
1 2In this presentation
- Part 1 Findings in Classical Genetics
- Part 2 Carbohydrates
- Part 3 Nucleotides
- Part 4 Amino Acids
3Part1
- Findings in Classical Genetics
4Findings
- Children resemble their parents
- Genes come in pairs
- Genes do not blend
- Some genes are dominant whereas some are
recessive - Genetic inheritance follows rules
- All cells arise from pre-existing cells
- Sex cells have one set of chromosomes body cells
have two - Specialized chromosomes determine gender
- Chromosomes carry genes
- Genes get shuffled when chromosomes exchange
pieces
5Findings
- Evolution begins with the inheritance of gene
variations - Mendelian genetics cannot fully explain human
health and behaviour - There are 44 autosomes and 2 sex chromosomes in
human genome, for a total of 46 - Most of the disorders in human is due to
non-disjunction associated with chromosome 21 - Higher cells incorporate an ancient chromosome
- Genes can be turned on and off
- Genes can be moved between species
- Different genes are active in different kinds of
cells - Master genes control basic body plans
- Development balances cell growth and death
6Findings
- A genome is an entire set of genes
- Living things share common genes
7HSV Virus
8(No Transcript)
9Evolution levels
- Level 1
- Gases
- Level 2
- N-bases
- Sugars
- Amino acids
- Glycerin
- Fatty acids
- Level 3
- Fats, lipids
- Proteins
- Polysaccharides
- Nucleotides
- Nucleic acids
- Level 4
- Energy sources
- Enzymes
- Construction materials
- Coenzymes
- Energy carriers
- DNA
- RNA
10- Cells that possess numerous intracellular
compartments enclosed by membranes (called
organelles) are called eukaryotic cells, for
example, cells of animals, plants, fungi and
protists. There are certain non-membranous
organelles such as centrioles and ribosomes - Cells that do not possess membrane bound
organelles are called prokaryotic cells. Some
cells do not even the chromosomes enclosed, for
instance, bacteriaThe collection of various
types of molecules in a cell is termed as the
cellular pool - Approximately, 93 percent of the cellular
material is composed of carbon, hydrogen and
oxygen. The non-metal elements nitrogen,
phosphorus, chlorine and sulphur form about 2
percent of the total material in the cell whereas
iodine, fluorine, boron and selenium occur in
traces. Less than 5 percent of the constituents
comprise major metal elements such as calcium,
potassium, sodium and magnesium. Traces of
copper, cobalt, zinc, manganese, molybdenum, and
chromium are found
11- Polymerization of a large number of small
molecules gives rise to macromolecules such as
proteins, nucleic acids and certain
polysaccharides - Proteins cannot be synthesized without DNA and
DNA cannot be made without enzymes, which are
proteins. This is a kind of chicken-and-egg
dogma
12Flow of information to a cell
- Flow of genetic information Genetic information
contained in DNA is transcribed into RNA, which
is translated into specific proteins - Flow of extrinsic information Molecules such as
hormones pass information, coming from outside to
the cell. Some of these enter the cell to
influence its activities. Others bind on to the
cell surface with certain molecules that serve as
receptors. Such binding leads to significant
changes in cellular activities. Studying the
nature and action of such molecular receptors of
cell membrane is an important line of modern
research.
13Part2
14Carbohydrates
- About 80 percent of the dry weight of plants is
made of carbohydrates, which is produced due to
photosynthesis - General formula for carbohydrates is CnH2nOn.
- Carbohydrates are known as saccharides or
compounds containing sugar, the simplest being
monosaccharides, which cannot be hydrolysed still
further - Monosaccharides are composed of 3 to 7 carbon
atoms viz., trioses (C3H6O3), tetroses (C4H8O4),
pentoses (C5H10O5), hexoses (C6H12O6) and
heptoses (C7H14O7) - Hexoses and heptoses exists in both open chain
and in ring forms
15Hexoses and heptoses exists in both open chain
and in ring forms
16- Glucose, fructose and galactose are hexoses.
They are all white, crystalline, sweet-tasting
substances extremely soluble in water. - Ribose is a pentose and glyceraldehydes and
dihydroxyacetone are trioses - Deoxyribose that occurs in DNA is a pentose
17- Compound carbohydrates can be classified into
three major groups - Oligosacchrides (made of few molecules of
monosaccharides) such as membranes - Structural polysaccharides (composed of hundreds
of simple sugar molecules such as cellulose and
lignocellulose of plant wall - Food-storage polysaccharides such as starch and
glycogen - Disaccharides are composed of two
monosaccharides. - A molecule of sucrose is formed from a molecule
of glucose and one of fructose. - Lactose or milk sugar is formed from one glucose
molecule and one of galactose - Maltose or malt sugar is formed from two
molecules of glucose
18Hexokinase Glucose
19Part3
20Nucleotides
- Nucleotides contain carbon, hydrogen, oxygen,
nitrogen and phosphorus - Each nucleotide is made up of a cyclic
nitrogenous base, a pentose and one to three
phosphate groups - The nitrogenous ring in nucleotides are either a
purine or pyrimidine - The pentose is either ribose or deoxyribose. The
nucleotides are thus called ribonucleotides or
deoxyribonucleotides - Examples of ribonucleotides or deoxyribonucleotide
s are adenylic acid (AMP) and deoxyadenylic acid
(d AMP) respectively - A combination of the nitrogenous base with the
pentose sugar is known as a nucleoside. For
instance, adenosine is a nucleoside made of
adenine and ribose - Ribonucleotides are the basic units of RNA and
deoxyribonucleotides are basic units of DNA
21Nucleotides are mono-, di-, or tri-phosphates of
nucleoside. For example, adenylic acid or
adenosine monophosphate (AMP), adenosine
diphosphate (ADP) and adenosine triphosphate
(ATP) are all adenine nucleotides
22- Likewise, other purines and pyrimidines can also
form higher nucleotides - Sugars, amino acids and nucleotides polymerize to
produce large molecules or macromolecules - Most important macromolecules are the
polysaccharides, proteins and nucleic acids,
which have high molecular weights and may be
branched or unbranched - Starch, cellulose and glycogen are composed of a
single type of monosaccharides while some other
like agar are made up of more than one type of
monosachharides
23Part4
24Amino Acids
- Proteins are the fundamental building blocks of
life - Enzymes are proteins that are molecular machines
responsible for all the chemical transformations
cells are capable of - Those structure that are not made of proteins are
produced by enzymes (which are proteins) - A human contains proteins of the order of 100,000
different proteins - Proteins are of variable length and shape
- Proteins are mixed polymers of 20 different amino
acids (or residues)
25(No Transcript)
26(No Transcript)
27The protein backbone unit and the 20 amino acid
side chains, shown with the three and one letter
abbreviations for each. Proline is an amino acid,
and its N and Ca backbone atoms are shown. Greek
letters ( a, b, g, d, e, z, h) identify the
distance (number of bonds) from the central ( a)
carbon atom. Ccarbon, Hhydrogen, Nnitrogen,
Ooxygen, Ssulphur atoms
28- Polymers of amino acids are also called peptides
or polypeptides - Polymers fold themselves to generate a shape
characteristic of each different protein - The shape of the protein along with different
chemical properties of the 20 amino acids
determine the function of the protein - In theory, by knowing the sequence of a protein,
it is possible to infer its function - Small or simple molecular modules are called
monomers whereas large or complex biological
molecular modules are termed as polymers - Many monomer molecules can be joined together to
form a single and large macromolecule - In both DNA and RNA, the linear polymers can form
pair with one another - The nucleotides Adenine (A) and Guanine (G) are
called Purines whereas Cytosine (C) and Thymine
(T) are called Pyrimidines
29Purines
Guanine
Adenine
30Pyrimidines
Cytosine
Uracil
Thymine
31(No Transcript)
32A double-ringed purine is always bonded to a
single ringed pyrimidine. G pairs with C and A
pairs with T or U
33- Amino acids are small molecules made of carbon,
hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen, and in some cases
also sulphur - They are monocarboxylic or dicarboxylic acids
bearing one or two amino groups - The four valences of the a-carbon of an amino
acid hold respectively an amino (NH2) group, a
carboxyl (COOH) group, a hydrogen atom and a side
chain - The side chain may be polar or non-polar
34The activities of DNA Polymerase I on various
templates and primers
35- A free amino group is basic a free carboxyl
group is acidic - Lysine and arginine are basic amino acids since
they carry two amino groups and one carboxyl
group - Glutamic acid (glutamate) and aspartic acid
(aspartate) contain one amino and two carboxyl
groups each and are classified as acidic amino
acids - Alanine, glycine, valine and phenylalanine are
neutral amino acids as they contain one amino and
one carboxyl group
36The basic chemical structure of an amino acid.
Carbon atoms are black, oxygen is dark grey,
nitrogen light gray, and hydrogen white.
37- Amino acid side chains differ in their
physico-chemical features - Some amino acids like to be exposed to water and
hence called hydrophilic whereas the hydrophobic
amino acids tend to avoid exposure to water - Hydrophobic amino acids tend to occur in the
interior of globular proteins whereas hydrophilic
residues are found preferentially at the surface
of the proteins
38Relationships between the physiochemical
properties of amino acids
39- The genetic code consists of 61 amino acid coding
codons and three termination codons that start
and stop the process of translation - Features of individual amino acids also play a
key role in protein secondary structure formation - Proteins are macromolecules formed from a large
number of amino acids. They are distinct from
amino acids and small peptides in many properties
40- Charge, size, or flexibility in the backbone are
only some of the other examples of amino acid
parameters - The parameters are measured on a numeric scale
such that for every parameter there exists a
table assigning a number to each amino acid - Taking both parameters viz., physico-chemical and
preferential occurrences together into account,
more than 200 amino acid parameters have been
published
41- An amino acid, tyrosine, is converted into the
hormones thyroxin and adrenaline, as well as the
skin pigment melanin - Glycine is involved in the formation of heme and
tryptophan in the formation of the vitamin
nicotinamide as well as the plant hormone
indole-3-acetic acid - In trans-membrane proteins, the regions of the
chain that span the membrane tend to be strongly
hydrophobic
42- Successive amino acids can be linked by the
formation of a peptide bond to form a linear
chain of many amino acids - When few amino acids are joined together, the
molecule is called a peptide - Glutamate is frequently found in ? helices,
Valine has a preference for ? strands and Proline
is known to be strongly avoided in helices
43- Many structural proteins contain amphipatic
helices, which consist of hydrophobic, non-polar
residues on one side of the helical cylinder and
hydrophilic and polar residues on the other side,
resulting in a hydrophobic moment. Such proteins
aggregate with other hydrophobe surfaces and
serve for example as pores or channels in the
cell membrane - Some amphipatic helices are arranged as
inter-twined helices and are also called as
coiled-coils or super-helices
44- Generally, the sequence of an alpha helix that
participates in a coiled-coil region will display
a periodicity with a repeated unit length of 7
amino acids, which is called a heptad repeat - Half of the 7 amino acids denoted by a through g,
then position a and d are hydrophobic (define an
apolar stripe) while there exist electrostatic
interactions between residues at positions e and
g. They form a parallel coiled-coil of alpha
helices from two polypeptides chains holding them
together