Title: DNA Structure and Function
1DNA Structure and Function
2Structure of the Hereditary Material
- Experiments in the 1950s showed that DNA is the
hereditary material - Scientists raced to determine the structure of
DNA - 1953 - Watson and Crick proposed that DNA is a
double helix
3Structure of Nucleotides in DNA
- Each nucleotide consists of
- Deoxyribose (5-carbon sugar)
- Phosphate group
- A nitrogen-containing base
- Four bases
- Adenine, Guanine, Thymine, Cytosine
4Nucleotide Bases
ADENINE (A)
GUANINE (G)
phosphate group
deoxyribose
THYMINE (T)
CYTOSINE (C)
5Composition of DNA
- Chargaff showed
- Amount of adenine relative to guanine differs
among species - Amount of adenine always equals amount of thymine
and amount of guanine always equals amount of
cytosine - AT and GC
6Watson-Crick Model
- DNA consists of two nucleotide strands
- Strands run in opposite directions
- Strands are held together by hydrogen bonds
between bases - A binds with T and C with G
- Molecule is a double helix
7Watson-Crick Model
8DNA Structure Helps Explain How it Duplicates
- DNA is two nucleotide strands held together by
hydrogen bonds - Hydrogen bonds between two strands are easily
broken - Each single strand then serves as template for
new strand
9DNA Replication
- Each parent strand remains intact
- Every DNA molecule is half old and half new
new
new
old
old
10Base Pairing During Replication
- Each old strand serves as the template for
complementary new strand
11Enzymes in Replication
- Enzymes unwind the two strands
- DNA polymerase attaches complementary nucleotides
- DNA ligase fills in gaps
- Enzymes wind two strands together
12Continuous and Discontinuous Assembly
Strands can only be assembled in the 5 to 3
direction
13DNA Repair
- Mistakes can occur during replication
- DNA polymerase can read correct sequence from
complementary strand and, together with DNA
ligase, can repair mistakes in incorrect strand
14Cloning
- Making a genetically identical copy of an
individual - Researchers have been creating clones for decades
- These clones were created by embryo splitting
15Dolly Cloned from an Adult Cell
- Showed that differentiated cells could be used to
create clones - Sheep udder cell was combined with enucleated egg
cell - Dolly is genetically identical to the sheep that
donated the udder cell
16More Clones
- Mice
- Cows
- Pigs
- Goats
- Guar (endangered species)
17Fig. 12.2, p. 191
18phosphate group
ADENINE (A) base with a double-ring structure
GUANINE (G) base with a double-ring structure
sugar (deoxyribose)
THYMINE (T) base with a single-ring structure
CYTOSINE (C) base with a single-ring structure
Fig. 12.6, p. 194
192-nanometer diameter, overall
distance between each pair of bases 0.34
nanometer
each full twist of the DNA double helix 3.4
nanometers
Fig. 12.7, p. 195
20Click to view animation.
animation
21or
or
one base pair
in-text, p. 195
22new
new
old
old
Fig. 12.9, p. 196
23Click to view animation.
animation
24continuous assembly on one strand
discontinuous assembly on other strand
one parent DNA strand
newly forming DNA strand
Fig. 12.10, p. 197
25Click to view animation.
animation