Title: The Molecular Structure of DNA
1The Molecular Structure of DNA
2Watson and Crick Starting Information
- Macromolecule
- Polymer - many recurring subunits
- Polynucleotide - subunits are nucleotides
composed of A, T, C, G, deoxyribose sugar,
phosphate - Sugar backbone - 5-3phosphodiester linkage
- Hydrogen bonds - in solution A and T bond and C
and G bond
3Contribution of Maurice Wilkens and Rosalind
Franklin
4Watson and Crick Model
- Bases inside, sugar-phosphate backbone outside
- Antiparallel chains in opposite 5 - 3
direction - A - T and G - C hydrogen bond pairing
- Complimentary base pairing
- 3 ATGGCTATACGA 5
- 5 TACCGATATGCT 3
Hydrogen bonds
5Adenine - Thymine Bonding
6Cytosine - Guanine Bonding
7What is a nucleotide ?
- The three major components of a nucleotide are
- a 5 - carbon deoxyribose sugar
- a phosphate group
- a nitrogen containing base
- - adenine, thymine, cytosine, guanine
8A Simplistic View of the DNA Molecule Note the
sugar-phosphate backbone and the nitrogenous base
hydrogen bonding.
9The Structure of DNA
10The DNA StructureVideo Store
This page cannot be sent to you for use due to
the lack of Quicktime Movie Viewer on the school
computers.The site is at Umass and is a molecular
genetics site. The address is http//rna.micro.um
ass.edu/molgent/
11DNA Replication
- It is the duplication of the DNA strand.
- It starts at nucleotide sequences called origins
- Binding proteins stabilize the split molecule.
- It is semiconservative.
- Occurs in a 5 - 3 direction.
- Continuous on one strand and not the other.
- Okazaki fragments form on the noncontinuous
strand.
12The Enzymes of Replication
- DNA helicase unwinds the DNA strand
- Primase identifies where the replication begins.
- DNA polymerase facilitates the joining of the
bases - DNA ligase seals joints between continuous
strands
13What can go wrong ?
- deletions
- substitutions
- additions
- all can lead to frame shift mutations
14Chromosome Formation
- Each chromosome is one strand of DNA
- Each cell has about 1 meter of DNA
- Eukaryotic DNA has proteins bound to it called
histones - Some histones form spools for the DNA called
nucleosomes. - Histones cause the coiling of the DNA in the
chromosome. - Non gene areas are supported by scaffolding
proteins.
15The DNA ReplicationVideo Store
This page cannot be sent to you for use due to
the lack of Quicktime Movie Viewer on the school
computers.The site is at Umass and is a molecular
genetics site. The address is http//rna.micro.um
ass.edu/molgent/
16PROTEIN SYNTHESISThe Process Overview 1View
the Process 2
17TRANSCRIPTION OF RNA
- the information in DNA is transcribed to an
intermediary molecule called messenger RNA - One side of the DNA strand acts as a template for
the formation of the RNA. (5-3) - Promoter sequences are found where the
transcription is to begin. RNA polymerase
attaches to the promoter to initiate
transcription. - The mRNA 3 letter codes are called codons.
18- The polymerase facilitates the joining of the
bases to the DNA template. - Uracil replaces thymine as a base in RNA.
- It occurs at a rate of 60 bases per second.
- The polymerase reaches a terminator sequence
that identifies the end of the transcription. The
RNA is then released. - More than one polymerase can work on a strand of
DNA allowing for greater production. - Transcription Video
- Capping of mRNA
19TRANSLATION
- It is the translating of the RNA sequence into
protein. - This involves mRNA, tRNA and rRNA
- tRNA is the interpreter between the nucleic acid
language and the protein. It is about 80
nucleotides in length and at one end has a
triplet code called an ANTICODON. Enzymes bond
specific amino acids to the anticodons according
to the genetic code.
20The Role of the Ribosome
- Ribosomes are comprised of proteins and
rRNA. - They coordinate the coupling of tRNA and mRNA.
- The P site holds the tRNA that is attached to
the growing polypeptide chain. The A site holds
the tRNA carrying the next amino acid to be
connected to the chain. - It catalyzes the formation of the peptide bond
between amino acids.
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22Another View of The Code
23The Synthesis Process
- It is made up of three steps initiation,
elongation and termination. - Initiation - proteins called initiation factors
identify where the frame reading is to begin. A
special initiator tRNA (UAC) carrying the amino
acid methionine will bond to a small ribosomal
subunit. A larger subunit will combine placing
the initiator tRNA in the P site of the ribosome.
24- ELONGATION - This is the lengthening of the
polypeptide. The mRNA of the A site forms H bonds
with the anticodon of an incoming tRNA. A peptide
bond forms between the P site amino acid and the
A site amino acid. The P site tRNA leaves and the
A site tRNA moves into the P site. The poly
peptide begins to grow. Another tRNA will move
into the A site and eventually be moved to the P
site
25- TERMINATION - The elongation continues until a
termination codon is reached. These do not code
for amino acids. They act as a signal for water
to add to the end of the polypeptide chain in
order to bring about termination. The ribosome
then splits again into two subunits. - The folding and shaping of the protein occurs
during the translation process. - Translation Video
26Protein Destination
- Proteins destined for use in the cytoplasm use
free floating ribosomes and are then released. - Proteins destined to be released from the cell
are formed by ribosmes attached to the ER. A
signal substance at the beginning of the
polypeptide tells the ribosome to attach to the
ER and the protein is released into the ER to be
released from the cell.
27Introns and Exons
- Introns are non-coding parts of the DNA chain.
- Exons are coding parts of the DNA chain.
- Introns must be removed from the DNA sequence
following transcription. A large complex
spliceosome controls the cutting out of the
introns and the splicing of the exons together to
form one continuous strand of mRNA. View the
process.
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29What is an Operon?
- A series of genes that function in sequence.
- Lac operon was the first identified.
- Numerous structural genes form one mRNA.
- A promoter containing an operator sequence is
found at the beginning of the operon. The
operator is the on/off switch. - Repressors will attach to the operator to turn
off the sequence. They must combine with an
inducer to activate the gene sequence. - View the process.
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