Title: DNA Structure and Function
1DNA Structure and Function
2What are genes?
- Scientists figured out how heredity worked years
before they figured out what a gene is - They knew a few facts. Genes had to be
- able to store information both for initial
development and to respond to changes over a
lifetime - stable enough to be replicated and passed to
offspring - fragile enough so that mutations are possible
- The structure, chemical makeup, and method for
doing these things, however, was still a mystery
3Deoxyribonucleic Acid
- In 1869, six years after Mendels first
experiment, Swiss chemist Friedrich Meischer
discovered a new chemical that contained
phosphorus but not sulfur - This fact alone established a new molecule
distinct from carbohydrates or proteins - Because it had acidic properties and was
discovered inside of a nucleus, they were called
nucleic acids - Later, in the early 1900s, it was discovered
there were four types of nucleic acids, each with
a separate nitrogenous base - These were called nucleotides
4Griffiths Transformation Experiment
- One of the first genetic experiments conducted,
as usual, had nothing to do with genetics. - In 1931, Frederick Griffith was working with mice
and two strains of Streptococcus pneumoniae - One strain was rough in appearance and
nonvirulent - One strain was smooth in appearance and
virulent - When injected with the rough strain, mice lived
- When injected with the smooth strain, mice died.
Both as expected.
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6Griffiths Transformation Experiment
- Also as expected, when he heat-killed the
virulent, smooth strand, the virus did not kill
the mice - When injected with heat-killed smooth strands of
virus AND healthy, nonvirulent rough strands, the
mice died. - Although the virulent strand had been
heat-killed, the nonvirulent strand had taken up
part of the virulent strand - The virulent strand had died, but its genetic
material survived.
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8Griffiths Transformation Experiment
- Griffiths experiment proved the concept of
transformation, which means cells can take parts
of other cells and use them for themselves - What it did in the world of genetics was get
people wondering about what the actual molecule
is that gets passed from organism to organism
9What are genes? (Dont you love the mystery??)
- In the early 1900s, good money said genes were
controlled by proteins - We know genes are passed from cell to cell. So
are proteins - Nucleic acids only have four different
nucleotides. Proteins have 20 different amino
acids. - Considering the trillions of genes that must
exist, is it more likely they are built with 4
different pieces or 20?
10Hershey and Chase Experiment
- In 1952, Alfred Hershey and Martha Chase used a
T2 bacteriophage to answer this question. - They inserted radioactive isotopes of phosphorus
and sulfur into bacteriophages, knowing they
would be taken in due to transformation - Both isotopes would be visible under radioactive
treatments - Whatever radiation is found in offspring would
show which molecule is passed genetically - Phosphorus is only found in nucleic acids
- Sulfur is only found in proteins
- In the offspring, only phosphorus was detected.
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12Deoxyribonucleic Acid
- The structure of a nucleic acid contains three
sections - A Phosphate phosphates connect nucleotides
together - Ribose sugar the structural backbone
- Nitrogenous base the genetic code
- There are two ribose sugars, one with an extra
oxygen (ribose) and one missing an oxygen
(deoxyribose) - Which sugar the nucleotide has determines whether
it is DNA or RNA (ribonucleic acid).
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14Nucleic Acids
- For DNA, the four nucleotides are
- Adenine (A)
- Cytosine (C)
- Guanine (G)
- Thymine (T)
- For RNA, Thymine is replaced with a fifth
nucleotide - Uracil (U)
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16Chargoffs Rule
- In the 1940s Erwin Chargoff conducted
experiments on DNA of various species. - By measuring the quantities of each nucleotide,
Chargoff came to some conclusions that he called
Chargoffs rules. - 1. The amount of A, T, C, and G in DNA varies
from species. - 2. In each species, for DNA, the amount of A T
and the amount of C G.
17Chargoffs DNA Database
Species A T G C
Bacillus Subtillus (Bacillus bacteria) 28.4 29.0 21.0 21.6
Escherichia coli (E. coli) 24.6 24.3 25.5 25.6
Neurospora crassa (Bread mold) 23.0 23.3 27.1 26.6
Zea mays (Corn) 25.6 25.3 24.5 24.6
Drosophila melanogaster (Fruit fly) 27.3 27.6 22.5 22.5
Homo Sapiens (Human) 31.0 31.5 19.1 18.4
18Watson and Crick (And Franklin)
- In the 1940s, Rosalind Franklin used x-ray beams
to pass through a crystalline DNA. - The x-Ray diffracted through the crystal and
created an atomic ray pattern that showed, among
other things, a relative shape of DNA molecules. - Two of Franklins colleagues, James Watson and
Francis Crick, used this image Franklin created
to develop one of the most important discoveries
of the 20th century the DNA model
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21Watson and Crick (And Franklin)
- The model showed a double-helix structure. Two
strands of DNA attached to each other. - The strands matched nitrogenous base to
nitrogenous base (A matched with T, C matched
with G) - Bases are connected using hydrogen bonds
- This proved Chargoffs rules.
- Each nucleotide was attached using the phosphates
- Each strand faces the opposite direction
- The strand fits the size and shape of Franklins
photograph
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23Complimentary Base Pairing
- Pyramidines (Nitrogenous base is a single ring)
- Thymine and Cytosine
- Purines (Nitrogenous base is a double ring)
- Adenine and Guanine
- Adenine and Thymine are connected using two
hydrogen bonds - Guanine and Cytosine are connected using three
hydrogen bonds - This is how the two strands of DNA attach to each
other
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25DNA Replication
- DNA Replication is the process of copying a DNA
molecule - Watson and Cricks model was so effective and
accurate that immediately after publishing it
they were easily able to develop their
replication hypothesis - During replication, each strand of DNA is
separated from the other. - These strands are then used as a template for
building a new strand
26DNA Replication
- 1. Unwinding.
- The weak hydrogen bonds holding the strands
together at the nitrogenous bases are unzipped. - An enzyme called Helicase unwinds the molecule
- 2 Base Pairing
- New nucleotides are constantly being built and
present in the nucleus of cells - An enzyme called DNA polymerase attaches new
nucleotides to the new strand of DNA - Polymerase knows which nucleotide comes next
because of the base pairing rules
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28DNA Replication
- After the strands are separated by helicase, the
first thing that happens is an enzyme called RNA
polymerase lays down an RNA primer on top of the
template - DNA polymerase cannot start a strand. It uses the
RNA primer as its co-factor. - Once activated, the DNA polymerase begins
attaching new nucleotides to the 3 carbon - Thus, DNA polymerase moves in the 5?3 direction
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31DNA Replication
- Because DNA strands face the opposite direction
from each other, DNA polymerase works well on the
strand moving in the 5?3 direction - This is called the leading strand
- For the other strand, polymerase cannot go in the
opposite direction. - Instead, small sections of DNA called Okazaki
fragments are built separately, then attached one
section at a time. - This is called the lagging strand.
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33Semiconservative Replication
- Replication was finally confirmed by Meselson and
Stahl in 1958 - Meselson and Stahl took a strand of DNA that
contained 15N and allowed it to go through
replication with free nucleotides that contained
14N nitrogen ions. - 14N is lighter than 15N.
- When placed in a centrifuge and allowed to sit
for 2-3 days, the heavier DNA will sink to the
bottom and the lighter will float toward the top
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35Semiconservative Replication
- After replicating DNA, if Watson and Cricks
model is correct then a centrifuge should show
both strands of DNA - If another model is correct, they should only see
one or the other floating in the centrifuge - At the end of the experiment, both strands were
visible in the centrifuge. - This proved semi conservative replication, which
means each new copy of DNA has one recycled
strand and one newly-formed strand.
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37Prokaryotic Replication
- Prokaryotic DNA is a single, circular structure
called a plasmid. - Replication occurs in either one or both
directions - Bacteria takes approximately 40 minutes to copy
the entire genome at a rate of 106 base
pairs/minute - Eukaryotic replication occurs at multiple origins
and at a much slower rate - 500-5000 bp/minute.
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39Mutations
- DNA polymerase not only attaches nucleotides
together, but proofreads its work. - Mismatched nucleotides causes a kink in the
strand which is identified by the polymerase - The enzyme then excises the incorrect nucleotide
and replaces it with the correct one. - Still, polymerase is so accurate that this is
only necessary once per 100,000 base pairs. - After proofreading, the likelihood of a mutation
is only one mistake every 1 billion base pairs
40Mutations
- Other mutations occur due to mutagens, or
environmental factors. - UV, radiation, organic chemicals such as tobacco
smoke, pesticides, etc. - For these, the cell has DNA repair enzymes that
go around and look for errors after replication
is over. - Mutations may cause harm (cancer) or have no
affect at all. - Throughout history, they also serve as the
possibility for evolutionary changes
41Gene Activity
42Nucleic Acids to Proteins
- Enzymes perform the reactions that make up your
individual traits. But nucleic acids make up the
genes that code for traits. - How do we get from a strand of nucleic acids to a
strand of proteins? - One of the first experiments to test this issue
also revealed one of the strangest examples of a
mutation in the human genome
43Pauling/Itano Experiment
- Linus Pauling and Harvey Itano knew that
hemoglobin, a molecule in red blood cells,
contained a charge. - They wanted to see if the hemoglobin in normal
RBCs is different than the hemoglobin in sickle
RBCs. - To do this, they compared an electrophoresis
experiment of the two hemoglobin structures with
known hemoglobin samples
44Pauling/Itano Experiment
- Based on this experiment, they proved that RBCs
contain a type of hemoglobin called HBA, while
Sickle RBCs contain HBB. - Later, they compared the polypeptide chains of
each strand of hemoglobin - Believing the two chains would be completely
different, they were surprised to find the
difference between a normal and sickle RBC gene
sequence is only one nucleotide out of 438.
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47RNA
- RNA is a polymer of nucleotides. Only a few
differences exist between DNA and RNA though - RNA contains uracil as a replacement for thymine
- RNA is generally single-stranded
- RNA freely leaves the nucleus of cells
- RNA stands can pair with DNA strands according to
the same base-pairing rules. So RNA serves as an
excellent copying system for DNA.
48RNA
- There are hundreds of classes of RNA, but we care
about three of them - Messenger RNA (mRNA) takes a message from the
nucleus to the ribosome - Transfer RNA (tRNA) transfers amino acids to
ribosomes - Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) makes up a portion of
ribosomes
49Transcription
- Transcription is the process of forming an mRNA
strand as a copy of a DNA strand - This occurs separately and independently from
replication - 1. The DNA strand unwinds and unzips similarly to
replication. - The location this occurs is called a promoter.
Promoters are sequences of DNA that identify the
origin of a gene sequence. - The strand will continue to unwind until it
reaches a sequence called the terminator.
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51Transcription
- 2. Once the strand unwinds, an enzyme called RNA
polymerase attaches RNA nucleotides in the 5?3
direction only. - 3. When the polymerase reaches the terminator, it
stops and releases an RNA transcript called mRNA. - 4. The mRNA then exits the nucleus to be picked
up by a ribosome. - The cell will have multiple RNA polymerases
working simultaneously to ensure the maximum
output of mRNA sequences.
52Introns and Exons
- To enhance the integrity of the mRNA strand when
it leaves the cell, a couple steps occur - First, a cap is put on the 5 and 3 ends of the
strand so that nothing can accidentally break off
or be added to the strand. - Second, sections of the mRNA are removed by a
spliceosome - The sections that are removed are called introns.
- The remaining sections, called exons, are what
get expressed (read) by ribosomes
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54Introns and Exons
- Why introns and exons?
- The short answer is, who knows?
- Introns create redundancy, which helps reduce the
likelihood that a mutation will cause a problem - If 100 of the nucleotides are expressed, then a
mutation will cause a problem 100 of the time. - Introns allow for more variety of gene sequences
- Take the word hearth.
- From this word, you get he, ear, art,
heart, and earth, depending on which letters
you cut out.
55Translation
- Translation is the process of going from a strand
of mRNA to a strand of amino acids. - For this to occur, you need a tRNA molecule.
- tRNA is a molecule built from an RNA strand.
- Bound to one end of the tRNA is a specific amino
acid. - Bound to the opposite end of tRNA is a sequence
of three nucleotides called an anticodon. - Each tRNA with a particular anticodon (ex. GAA)
will always carry a specific amino acid (ex.
Leucine)
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58Translation
- Meanwhile, proteins and rRNA have come together
to build a ribosome. - Ribosomes come in two sections called subunits.
- The two subunits sandwich themselves over a
strand of mRNA and a series of tRNAs. - When this happens, translation is ready to begin
- Eukaryotic cells contain 100,ooos of ribosomes,
all working simultaneously if necessary.
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60Translation
- 1. Initiation
- mRNA strands are organized by codons, or
combinations of three RNA nucleotides - The first codon is always the same AUG
- A tRNA with the anticodon that matches with this
codon (UAC) then enters the ribosome and matches
with the mRNA, codon-to-anticodon
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62Translation
- 2. Elongation
- A second tRNA then enters the ribosome and
matches anticodon-to-codon. - When it attaches to the mRNA, the shape of the
ribosome forces tRNAs to line up in a specific
orientation. - That orientation allows the amino acids that each
tRNA are holding to break from their tRNAs and
attach to each other.
63Translation
- The ribosome has three sites which are able to
hold tRNAs. - The A site, which is where tRNAs enter the
ribosome and wait their turn. - The P site, which is where the attachment of
amino acids will occur (or, the formation of a
peptide bond) - The E site, which is where tRNAs will exit,
leaving their amino acids behind.
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65Translation
- During elongation, only one amino acid is
attached at a time. - One tRNA must leave the ribosome before the next
one can enter. - The entire process to build and form a single
protein and repeat takes around 15 minutes. - 3. Termination
- When the ribosome reaches a stop codon (UAA, UAG,
UGA) the mRNA attaches to a release factor. - The release factor breaks the final amino acid
from the final tRNA, thus completing the protein
chain.
66Translation
- Once the amino acid sequence is released from the
ribosome, it undergoes folding and modification. - The endoplasmic reticulum adds lipids,
carbohydrates, or other proteins to the new
protein - The ER also handles the specific folding of the
protein - The golgi then wraps a vessicle around the
protein for transport to its destination. - Meanwhile, the ER reattaches amino acids to the
tRNAs that have just given theirs up. - The mRNA then is re-translated, or is returned to
the nucleus to be used for spare parts.
67Codon Pattern
- Translation relies on the fact that
- 1) Every codon will match with a specific
anticodon - 2) Ever tRNA with that specific anticodon will
have a specific amino acid. - Thus, each of the 20 amino acids in organisms
must have at least one codon that tells ribosomes
to attach their specific amino acid to the
sequence. - As far as we know, the code is the same for every
species on the planet
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72Mutations
- The human genome contains (best guess)
24,000-26,000 genes. The sequence of DNA to make
these genes is around 3.3 billion nucleotides. - Although ribosomes are able to correct mistakes
in the moment, some do escape notice. - There are two types of transcription/translation
mutations you should be aware of.
73Mutation 1 Point Mutations
- A point mutation is when only one nucleotide is
incorrect. - Even though it is only 1 nucleotide out of 3.3
billion, this one mistake has the potential to
completely change an organisms health. - Example I have a pet cat. This could be I
gave a pet cat I wave a pet cat I have a
wet cat. I have a pet rat. - As discussed, sickle cell anemia is a disease
caused by a single point mutation that tells the
cell to replace a glutamine with a valine
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76Mutation2 Frameshift Mutation
- Frameshift mutations are when at least one
nucleotide is added or deleted from the DNA or
RNA sequence - The correct sequence of amino acids is dependent
on maintaining the 3-nucleotide codon pattern. - If one nucleotide is added or deleted, the codon
pattern does not start at the right spot - This results in an entire sequence of amino acids
being incorrect.
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