Title: Chapter 11: Understanding
1.
- Chapter 11 Understanding
- DNA
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3CHAPTER 11 DNA AND GENES LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- In addition to reading this material , you are
expected to do all of the Section Assessment
questions, as well as all of the Chapter 11
Assessment Questions, and the Standardized Test
Practice in your textbook - We will do a project related to this chapter.
You will research and prepare a brief biography
for one individual who contributed to our current
knowledge of DNA or Heredity. This will be due
on Tuesday, Feb 27. To create a class Timeline of
DNA Discoveries. - Be familiar with those scientists that largely
contributed to discovering the structure and
nature of DNA. - Understand the structure of DNA, its components,
bonds. - Be able to describe DNA replication
- Be able to describe the significance of the
nucleotide sequence between organisms. - Be able to describe ways that nucleotide
sequencing is useful to scientists and you - Be able to sequence the steps in protein
synthesis - Be able to distinguish between different types of
mutations - Be able to describe the effect of genetic
mutations - Be able to describe the causes of mutations
4..\My Videos\NOVA Online Cracking the Code of
Life Watch the Program Here.htm
5UNDERSTANDING DNAHistory of Research
- Mendel 1860s--traits passed parent to offspring
- Others set out to identify the substance
responsible
6Transformation-Genetic material could be
transferred to another organism
- 1928 Fredrick Griffith
- Discovers that Genetic material could be
transferred to another organism - Transformation Process by which bacteria takes
up foreign DNA - Non-Virulent bacteria become Virulent (disease
causing) - Descendents of the transformed cells also
virulent.
7Transformed bacteria
8.
1.Infected with non- virulent bacteria
3. Mice infected with heat-killed bacteria.
4.Infected with live, nonvirulent AND heat-killed
bacteria. Mouse dies FROM TRANSFORMED BACTERIA
2. Mice infected with live, virulent bacteria.
9Oswald Avery (1944) Protein or DNA?DNA is the
Genetic material.
10Oswald Avery
- Protein vs. DNA?
- Did same type of experiments as Griffith, but
treated with protein and DNA-digesting enzymes. - RESULTS Treatment with protein-digesting
enzymes-- bacteria still transform - Treatment with DNA-digesting enzymes-not
able to transform - Concluded that DNA, not protein, transforms
bacteria
111952 Hershey Chase Reconfirm DNA is the
Genetic Material. They Infected bacteria with
Labeled Viruses (radioisotopes of Sulfur and
Phosphorous)(protein contains sulfur DNA
contains Phosphorous)
virus particle labeled with 35S
virus particle labeled with 32P
bacterial cell (cutaway view)
label outside cell
label inside cell
12Hershey and Chase
- The virus protein coat was outside the bacteria,
but not inside any of the new viruses formed. - Found the labeled DNA (phosphorous) inside the
new virses and the bacteria.
13Structure of the Hereditary Material Still Was
a Mystery
- 1953 Nobel Prize
- James Watson Francis Crick
- Maurice Wilkins
14Watson Crick Developed Accurate Model
- Double helix shape
- Two strands of nucleotides
- Like a spiral staircase
15Watson-Crick Model
- 2 Strands of nucleotides
- Sugar and phosphates covalently bonded to one
another. - 2 Strands held together by
- hydrogen bonds between bases (rungs on a
ladder)
16Shape of a double helix
- Twisted like a coiled spring.
- The molecule coils into this
- shape as a result of the
- base bonding.
17Rosalind Franklins Work was Critical
- Expert in x-ray images
- DNA was some sort of helix-like a tightly coiled
spring
18Structure
- DNApolymer of nucleotides (4)
- Nucleotides
- Sugar (deoxyribose)
- Phosphate
- Nitrogen base
- Forms 2 long parallel chains
- of nucleotides
- covalently bonded (chains)
- Sugar to -phosphate
19- Phosphate-sugar-phosphate-sugar-phosphate..
20- The sugars and phosphates are held together by
strong covalent bonds. - The bases hold the 2 strands together
- The bases are held together by HYDROGEN BONDS(
WEAK). - They form the rungs of the ladder-like shape.
21DNA Structure
- 2 strands of nucleotides
- Nucleotides bond (strong-covalent
- bonds) together to form 2
- long chains
- Each chain connected in the
- middle by (weak) hydrogen bonds
22DNA-Made of 4 different. Nucleotides (
- Nucleotides have 3 parts
- 1 A sugar-deoxyribose
- 2. Phosphate Group
- 3. A Base (4 kinds)
- (draw and color in
- your notes)
234 different nitrogeneous bases
- C cytosine
- T thymine
- A adenine
- G guanine
24Pattern of Base Pairing
- Chargaff s Rule (1949)
- Amount of adenine always equals amount of thymine
and amount of guanine always equals amount of
cytosine - AT and GC
25Base Pairing
- C with G
- A with T
- ALWAYS TRUE
26DNA in cells
- Where is it found?
- Does it leave?
- Why/why not?
- Does a cell ever need to make more DNA?
- Why?
- When?
27Base Pairing
or
or
one base pair
in-text, p. 195
28The Importance of Nucleotide Sequences
- All organisms DNA made of the same 4 bases
- Vary in the
- Sequence of the bases
- Amount of DNA
- The closer the relationship, the more similar the
DNA sequences. - Useful
- Determine evolutionary relationships
- Determine whether 2 people are related
- Crime scene investigation
29NAME______________ DNA QUIZ
- 1. Nucleotides are the ________from which the
Nucleic Acid polymers DNA and RNA are - 2.What is Chargoffs rule?________________________
_____________ - 3. Who constructed the first accurate model of
DNA?___________________________ - 4. List the three parts of a DNA nucleotide
- 1.
- 2.
- 3.
- 5 _______________is the process by which
bacteria takes up foreign DNA -
- .
- 56 Nucleotides link together to form 2 sides of
the DNA molecule ( like 2 sides of a ladder). The
sugars and phosphates are held together by strong
_____________bonds. - 7. The bases hold the 2 strands together. The
bases are held together by weak
________________bonds. - 8. _________________are viruses that infect
bacteria. - 9. How does the DNA in YOU differ from the DNA in
a tomato plant? - (choose a or b)
- A) in tomato plants there are different
nucleotides - B) In tomato plants, the nucleotides are
assembled in a different way, but using the same
4 nucleotides as in people
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31Problem Solving Lab 11.1 page 283
32WE WILL BEGIN CONSTRUCTING A DNA MOLECULE-need 8
different colored pencils and plain paper.
- Color code
- Phosphate yellow
- Sugar pink
- Covalent Bondspurple
- Hydrogen Bonds pencil
- Adeninegreen
- Thyminered
- Guanine orange
- Cytosineblue
- Make 2 chains of P-S-P-S (20/each long)
- (covalent bonds).
- Leave 2 inches between the 2 strands.
33Replication of DNA
34DNA in cells
- Where is it found?
- Does it leave?
- Why/why not?
- Does a cell ever need to make more DNA?
- Why?
- When?
35Discussion questions
- What if DNA was not replicated BEFORE MITOSIS?
- What if DNA was not replicated BEFORE MEIOSIS?
36Look at Figure 11.4
- When a DNA molecule replicates, 2 molecules are
formed. - DNA replication produces _____ molecules from
one. - Each molecule has one original strand, and one
new strand. - Please draw the first 2 steps of fig 11.4 in your
notesuse 2 colors. - Why are you using 2 colors??
37DNA REPLICATION-THE PROCESS OF COPYING DNA
- Preserves the sequence of bases in an organisms
DNA - There are basically 2 steps
38HOW DNA IS COPIED
39 new
new
old
old
40First Step Replication bubble forms An
enzyme breaks the hydrogen bonds between
bases. Unzips a section of the double helix,
exposing the bases.
41.
42Step Second
- DNA polymerase (an enzyme) moves along the 2
strands, pairing complementary bases to the
exposed nucleotides
one parent DNA strand
43- This process continues until the entire DNA
molecule has unzipped and been copied. - WHY MUST DNA BE UNZIPPED BEFORE IT CAN BE COPIED?
44DNA REPLICATION
- Result is 2 identical DNA molecules.
- Semi-conservative
45Replication-recap
- The 2 original strands serve as templates for 2
new strands. - Follow base-pairing of Chargaffs rule.
- Two complete DNA molecules result from
replication.
46Relication preserves the sequence of bases in
organisms DNA.
new
new
old
old
47Problem to do
- If the sequence of nitrogenous bases on one
strand of a DNA molecule is - CCGAATGATTTG
- What would be the sequence of bases on the
complimentary strand?
48Take out the DNA strand you began constructing
earlier.
49 new
new
old
old
50Base Pairing During Replication
- Each old strand serves as the template for
complementary new strand
51Using DNAWhat was (is) the molecular cause of
Lorenzos disease?
- DNA Contains instructions for making proteins.
- Recall that proteins are built on __________IN
THE CYTOPLASM. - So how can we accomplish the protein building
task?
52Mutation-An alteration in DNA structure
- May result from
- 1. Errors during replication
- OR
- 2. Mutagens an environmental agent
53Genes
- Segment of DNA that controls protein production.
- The specific nucleotide sequence is a recipe
for a particular protein.
54- AS YOU ENTERGET YOUR PAPER DNA MODEL
55Section 11.2 DNA to Protein
- DNA controls cells
- HOW?
- Encoding instructions for making proteins
- Proteins and their functions
- Structural muscles, hair
- Enzymes control chemical reactions in organisms
- Cellular respiration, photosynthesis, digesting
food, controlling cell cycle
56RNA is the link (lets make a double bubble using
RNA and DNA)
- A nucleic acid
- Single stranded molecule
- Sugar is RIBOSE
- Polymer
- Monomers are nucleotides
- C, U, A, G
- UUracilit replaces Thymine
- U base pairs with _________
- 3 kinds of RNA
- Carry out the job of protein assembly
57Sequence in DNA
- Contains information
- To make proteins
58Roles of protein
- Structural
- Enzymes
- Cell Membranes-transport molecules
- Hormones
59Proteins
- Polymers of _____ _______
- The sequence of _________in each gene contains
information for the assembling the string of
_______ ______ that make up a single ________
60RNA
- Nucleic acid
- Single stranded
- Ribose
- Uracil ( in place of T)
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62Nucleotide Base Comparison
- DNA
- Cytosine
- Guanine
- Adenine
- Thymine
- RNA
- Cytosine
- Guanine
- Adenine
- Uracil
63An analogy DNA Project Engineer RNAs
The workers. Production site
ribosomes Product proteins
643 types of RNA
- 1. mRNA a gene is transcribed into a
messenger RNA - 2. rRNA part of the ribosome
- 2. tRNA transfers amino acids to ribosome for
assembly.
65 How Proteins are made
- Gene Expression
- Using the genetic information in DNA to make
proteins.
66Gene Expression-2 steps
- 1. Transcription Copying a portion of DNA to
form an mRNA (using RNA Nucleotides) - 2. Translation 3 kinds of RNA work together to
assemble ________ _________ into a protein
molecule.
67GENE EXPRESSIONTranscription Translation
68- ..\Bio 1\DNA\DNA animation link.mht
69Transcription Practice
- Well make an mRNA from your paper DNA model.
- ---afterward, we will learn about the UNIVERSAL
GENETIC CODE AND - Then translation
70- Transcription page 290
- 1. enzymes unzip the DNA in the region of the
gene to be transcribed. - 2. Free nucleotides complimentary base pair with
one strand of the DNA. - The mRNA strand breaks away the DNA zips back
up. - mRNA leave nucleus, goes to cytoplasm.
71mRNA modification before leaving nucleus
- Introns
- non-coding regions of DNA removed from mRN
- (intervening regions that are not part of the
protein recipe) - Exons amino acid coding regions.
- the part whats left coding regions
(expressed). - NOW, the mRNA is ready to leave the nucleus
72Plan for Today
- Demonstrate proficiency in translation (step 2 of
protein synthesis). - Do this by completing activity following
instruction. - 15-20 minutes of Lorenzos oil. Watch for
effects of treatment with monounsaturated fats.
73The Genetic Code-Secret codes for amino acids.
- Nearly Universal
- all organisms use the same code
- CODON each mRNA triplet
74The Central Dogma of Biology
75GENE EXPRESSION
76Protein Synthesis Part 2. Translation
- Translating the mRNA into a sequence of amino
acids to form a protein. - All three RNAs take part.
77ROLES OF RNAS IN TRANSLATION
- mRNA has the codon
- tRNA carries the amino acids translates the
codon - 20 different kinds of tRNA
- 20 different amino acids
- Has a nucleotide sequence complimentary to mRNA
called an ANTICODON - rRNA is part of the ribosome
78tRNA
- Each kind of tRNA carries only _____type of
_________. - Amino acid carried at one end.
- Three- base ANTICODON.
- This pairs up with an mRNA codon during
translation.
79 Now, theTRANSLATION STEPS
- 1. A ribosome attaches to an mRNA strand.
- 2. Amino acids brought to the ribosome by tRNA.
- The codon AUG codes for Methionine and
signals the start to translation. - The tRNA carrying Methionine attaches to the
ribosome, translates with its Anticodon _____. -
80- 3. The ribosome slides over the mRNA to the next
codon. - A new tRNA attached next on the mRNA, translates
with its anticodon, releases its corresponding
amino acid which bonds to Methionine.
81- Translation continues until a stop codon is
reached. - Complete protein detaches from ribosome.
- mRNA disassembles , so nucleotides can be reused.
-
82Translation PracticeDirections Underline the
codons beginning with the start codon. Identify
the corresponding anticodon and amino acid. Join
the amino acids into a chain.
- Amino acid
- anticodon
- mRNA G G U A U G C C U UC G G A G U U A A C A
G C G UA A
83Translation PracticeDirections Underline the
codons beginning with the start codon. Identify
the corresponding anticodon and amino acid. Join
the amino acids into a chain.
- Amino acid-------Met Proline Serine Glut
Phen Threo Alanine Stop - Anticodon C C A U A C G G A A G C C U C A A
U U G U C G C A U U - mRNA G G U A U G C C U U C G G A G U U A
A C A G C G U A A
84 - tRNA
- On bottom end, is an anticodon - a 3- nucleotide
sequence complimentary to mRNA. - tRNA base pairs with an mRNA codon
- On top is the corresponding Amino Acid.
85.
86Practice
- Chapter review Question 15
87Gene Expression 1. Transcription 2.
Translation
88Section 11.3 Genetic Changes
- Mutations change in ________ sequence
- Cuused by
- Errors in relpication
- Errors in transcription
- Errors in cell division
- External egents
89Mutations in reproductive cells
- Passed on to offspring if mutations occur in
________or __________cells - Rarely have a positive effect
- Important in evolution-if it permits enhanced
survival capability in its environment.
90Mutations in body cells
- Not passed on to _____________gt
- But may cause problems for the individual.
- Passed on in cell division.
- If genes controlling cell division are affected,
may lead to _______.
91Point Mutations
- A change in a single ____ ____.
- May change the structure of a protein its
function. - THE DOG BIT THE CAT
- THE DOG BIT THE CAR
92Frameshift Mutation
- The addition or ________ of a single base .
- Each codon after this would be affectedshifted.
- It shifts the reading codons.
- More harmful than point mutations.
- WHY???
93Practice Problems
- Figure 11.1 answer question and prepare
explanations. - Problem Solving Lab 11.3
- p. 299.
- Problem Solving Lab 11.2 p. 300.
94 95End of Chapter 11
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