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The Structure of DNA

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Hershey & Chase's Experiment. Hershey and Chase reasoned ... Hershey and Chase concluded that the genetic material of the bacteriophage was DNA, not protein. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Structure of DNA


1
The Structure of DNA
  • Learning Targets
  • What did scientists discover about the
    relationship between genes and DNA?
  • What is the overall structure of the DNA
    molecule?

2
Interest Grabber
Section 12-1
  • Genes are made of DNA, a large, complex molecule.
    DNA is composed of individual units called
    nucleotides. Three of these units form a code.
    The order, or sequence, of a code and the type of
    code determine the meaning of the message.

Go to Section
3
Interest Grabber
  • 1. On a sheet of paper, write the word cats. List
  • the letters or units that make up the word
    cats.
  • 2. Try rearranging the units to form other
    words.
  • Remember that each new word can have only three
    units. Write each word on your paper, and then
    add a definition for each word.
  • 3. Did any of the codes you formed have the same
  • meaning?
  • 4. How do you think changing the order of the
  • nucleotides in the DNA codon changes the
    codons message?

4
Section Outline
Section 12-1
  • DNA
  • A. Griffith and Transformation
  • 1. Griffiths Experiments
  • 2. Transformation
  • B. Avery and DNA
  • C. The Hershey-Chase Experiment
  • 1. Bacteriophages
  • 2. Radioactive Markers
  • D. The Structure of DNA
  • 1. Chargaffs Rules
  • 2. X-Ray Evidence
  • 3. The Double Helix

Go to Section
5
Griffiths Experiment
  • In 1928, British scientist Frederick Griffith was
    trying to figure out how certain types of
    bacteria produce a serious lung disease known as
    pneumonia.
  • Griffith had isolated two slightly different
    strains, or types, of pneumonia bacteria from
    mice. Both strains grew very well in culture
    plates in his lab, but only one of the strains
    caused pneumonia.
  • clip

6
Figure 122 Griffiths Experiment
Section 12-1
Heat-killed, disease-causing bacteria (smooth
colonies)
Harmless bacteria (rough colonies)
Control(no growth)
Harmless bacteria (rough colonies)
Heat-killed, disease-causing bacteria (smooth
colonies)
Disease-causing bacteria (smooth colonies)
Dies of pneumonia
Dies of pneumonia
Lives
Lives
Live, disease-causingbacteria (smooth colonies)
Go to Section
7
Griffiths Conclusions
  • Griffith hypothesized that when the live,
    harmless bacteria and the heat-killed bacteria
    were mixed together, some factor was transferred
    from the heat-killed cells into the live cells.
    That factor might contain a gene with the
    information that could change harmless bacteria
    into disease-causing ones.
  • He called this process as transformation.

8
Averys Conclusion
  • Avery and his colleagues made an extract, or
    juice, from the heat-killed bacteria. They then
    carefully treated the extract with enzymes that
    destroyed proteins, lipids, carbohydrates, and
    other molecules, including the nucleic acid RNA.
    Transformation still occurred.
  • Avery and other scientists discovered that DNA is
    the nucleic acid that stores and transmits the
    genetic information from one generation of an
    organism to the next.
  • clip

9
Hershey Chases Experiment
  • Hershey and Chase reasoned that if they could
    determine which part of the virusthe protein
    coat or the DNA coreentered the infected cell,
    they would learn whether genes were made of
    protein or DNA.
  • The two scientists mixed the marked viruses with
    bacteria. Then, they waited a few minutes for the
    viruses to inject their genetic material. Next,
    they separated the viruses from the bacteria and
    tested the bacteria for radioactivity. Nearly all
    the radioactivity in the bacteria was from
    phosphorus (32P), the marker found in DNA.  

10
 Hershey-Chase Experiment
Bacteriophage with phosphorus-32 in DNA
Phage infectsbacterium
Radioactivity inside bacterium
Bacteriophage with sulfur-35 in protein coat
Phage infectsbacterium
No radioactivity inside bacterium
Go to Section
11
Hershey Chase Conclusion
  • clip
  • Hershey and Chase concluded that the genetic
    material of the bacteriophage was DNA, not
    protein.

12
Structure of DNA
  • DNA is a long molecule made up of units called
    nucleotides.
  • Each nucleotide is made up of three basic parts
    a 5-carbon sugar called deoxyribose, a phosphate
    group, and a nitrogenous base.
  • There are four kinds of nitrogenous bases in DNA.
    Two of the nitrogenous bases, adenine and
    guanine, belong to a group of compounds known as
    purines. The remaining two bases, cytosine and
    thymine, are known as pyrimidines.

13
Structure of DNA
  • The backbone of a DNA chain is formed by sugar
    and phosphate groups of each nucleotide. The
    nitrogenous bases stick out sideways from the
    chain.

14
 DNA Nucleotides
Purines
Pyrimidines
Adenine
Guanine
Cytosine
Thymine
Phosphate group
Deoxyribose
Go to Section
15
Chargaffs Rules
  • Chargaff discovered that the percentages of
    guanine G and cytosine C bases are almost
    equal in any sample of DNA. The same thing is
    true for the other two nucleotides, adenine A
    and thymine T.
  • The observation that A T and G C
    became known as Chargaffs rules.
  • clip

16
Percentage of Bases in Four Organisms
Source of DNA A T G C
Streptococcus 29.8 31.6 20.5 18.0 Yeast 31.3 32.9
18.7 17.1 Herring 27.8 27.5 22.2 22.6 Human 30.9 2
9.4 19.9 19.8
Go to Section
17
Franklins Conclusion
  • Using X-ray diffraction technique, Franklin
    discovered that the strands in DNA are twisted
    around each other like the coils of a spring, a
    shape known as a helix. The angle of the X
    suggests that there are two strands in the
    structure. Other clues suggest that the
    nitrogenous bases are near the center of the
    molecule.
  • clip

18
Watson Crick
  • DNA is a double helix in which two strands are
    wound around each other. A double helix looks
    like a twisted ladder or a spiral staircase.
  • Each strand is made up of a chain of nucleotides.
    The two strands are held together by hydrogen
    bonds between adenine and thymine and between
    guanine and cytosine.
  • clip

19
 Structure of DNA
Nucleotide
Hydrogen bonds
Sugar-phosphate backbone
Key Adenine (A) Thymine (T) Cytosine (C) Guanine
(G)
Go to Section
20
Checkpoint
  • What are the complementary nucleotides on the DNA
    strand
  • Ans A-T, G-C
  • Identify the complementary nucleotides sequence
    on the other strand of DNA, if one strand has the
    following sequence ACTGCCA
  • Ans TGACGGT
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