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Unit C Chap 18 Cell Division

This document summarizes key discoveries and concepts in genetics and molecular genetics. It describes early experiments that identified DNA as the genetic material, including those by Griffith, Avery, MacLeod, McCarty, Hershey and Chase. It also outlines Watson and Crick's discovery of DNA's double helix structure and defines the four building blocks of DNA. The document then explains DNA replication, transcription, translation, gene structure and expression, mutations, and the genetic code.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
84 views9 pages

Unit C Chap 18 Cell Division

This document summarizes key discoveries and concepts in genetics and molecular genetics. It describes early experiments that identified DNA as the genetic material, including those by Griffith, Avery, MacLeod, McCarty, Hershey and Chase. It also outlines Watson and Crick's discovery of DNA's double helix structure and defines the four building blocks of DNA. The document then explains DNA replication, transcription, translation, gene structure and expression, mutations, and the genetic code.

Uploaded by

Jane Xu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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UNIT C CHAP 18 CELL DIVISION, GENETICS, AND MOLECULAR GENETICS

Miescher
- Used the term nucleic acid – DNA was found to be slightly acidic, contained phosphorus
Levene
- Isolated nucleic acid into RNA and DNA
Griffith
- Studied 2 strains of bacterium on mice
- R bacteria had been transformed into pathogenic S bacteria by an unknown heritable
substance from dead S cells
- Transforming principle
Avery, MacLeod, and McCarty
- Identified that DNA was the agent responsible for transformation
Hershey and Chase
- Used viruses called bacteriophages which infected bacteria
- Radioactive labelling:
o Protein = sulfur
o DNA = phosphorus
o Centrifuge and sulfur on top, phosphorus on bottom
Chargaff
- Provided support for Levene that nucleotides were present in equal and characteristic
proportions
Rosalind Franklin
- X-ray scans of DNA
- Helped with double helix
Watson and Crick
- Double helix
Structure of DNA
- Four building blocks
o Nucleotides
o 5-carbon sugar (deoxyribose for DNA and ribose for RNA)
o Phosphate group (nucleic acid)
o Nitrogenous bases (AGCT)
 Purines (double ringed) = AG
 Pyrimidines (single ringed) = TC
 Uracil replaces thymine in RNA

DNA
- Generic DNA nucleotide:
o Phosphate on 5’ carbon
o Base on 1’ carbon
o Hydroxyl on 3’ carbon
- RNA nucleotide would have a hydroxyl off the 2’ carbon
- The difference between RNA and DNA is that DNA nucleotide has no oxygen
- A chain of nucleotides forms a single strand of DNA
- Nucleotide + nucleotide = phosphodiester bonds between phosphate and sugar groups:
which creates the “backbone” of DNA strand
- Bond between 5’ end with phosphate group and 3’ end with the -OH group
- Hydrogen bonds for between nitrogen bases
o 3 between GC
o 2 between AT
o Rungs of the ladder

Matching up nucleotides
- Purine always match up with pyrimidines
- Antiparallel
o Run 5’ – 3’ on one strand and 3’ – 5’ on complementary strand
o Very important for DNA replication and protein synthesis

RNA
- 3 main differences:
- Ribose instead of deoxyribose
- Uracil instead of thymine
- Single strande

Genes and the genome


- Gene – functional subunit of DNA, directs production of one or more polypeptides
- Genome – all the DNA carried in each cell of organism
- Chromosomes have different numbers of genes
- Human genome = 3 billion base pairs approx. 25000 genes

DNA replication
- S phase (replication of DNA) -> semi conservative replication (each new molecule of
DNA contains one original strand and one newly made strand)

Initiation, elongation, termination

Initiation:
- Replication origin
- Helicases: enzyme that bind to replication origin, break H bonds, creates replication
bubble and replication forks
- Single strand binding proteins stabilize DNA strands
- Single strands = templates for complementary base pairing to create molecules of DNA
- Enzymes that build DNA CANNOT start the process
- RNA strand (primer): synthesized by the enzyme primase and starts the process, about
5-10 nucleotides long
o Starts at 3’ end of the RNA primer – always goes in 5’-3’ direction
Elongation and termination
- DNA polymerase adds DNA nucleotides to primer
- Creates a complementary strand: A-T and G-C
- Elongation only takes place in the 5’ – 3’ direction!!! (adds nucleotides to the 3’ – OH of
previous nucleotide)

Leading and lagging strands:


- Antiparallel nature
- Both strands are built in the 5’ – 3’ direction
- Leading = continuously
- Lagging = replicated in Okazaki fragments
o Primase creates many primers
o DNA polymerase adds to primers and detaches when gets to next primer
o Primase jumps back into opening fork
o DNA ligase forms bonds between fragments

DNA polymerase
- Adds nucleotides in 5’ – 3’ direction
- Removes RNA primer fragments
- Proofreads (recognizes error and replaces incorrect nucleotides) -> only during
replication

Termination
- Replication machine = collection of polypeptides (enzymes and other proteins) and DNA
interacting at replication fork
- Replication machine comes apart
o Two strands of DNA rewind back into double helix structure

Telomeres
- Ends of chromosomes
- Specific nucleotide sequences that repeat
- Do not contain genes
- Protects genes from degradation
- Plays role in aging and preventing cancer
- Telomere shortening: the end Okazaki fragment cannot produce a new primer

Protein structure
- Frederick Sanger
o Proteins consist of amino acids
o Specific sequences of amino acids determine chemical properies of protein
o Proteins determine structure, function, and development of cells

Protein structure
- Primary protein (sequences of amino acids)
- Secondary (local folding of polypeptide)
- Tertiary (three dimensional looking pattern due to side chain interactions)
- Quaternary (protein consisting of more than one amino acid chain)

Proteins
- Combinations of 20 amino acids
- DNA determines the sequences of amino acids and controls the proteins the cells make
- One gene = one protein

Gene types
- Regulatory
o Regulates other genes, activates/stops other genes
o Creates proteins that regulate other genes
- Structural
o Produce proteins that are part of physical structures such as enzymes
- Oncogenes
o Normally directs cell growth
o P 53

Central dogma of gene expression:


- DNA -> transcription -> mRNA -> translation -> protein

The genetic code (see formula sheet)

- 3 bases = codon = 1 amino acid


- Genetic code is in mRNA NOT DNA
- Some codons do not code for amino acids, but rather intiating and terminating codons

Why 3 letter codons?


- 1 base only 4 combinations (ACGT)
- 2 bases only 16 combinations
- 3 bases = 64 different codes

Characteristics of the genetic code


1. Redundant (more than one codon can code for same amino acid)
2. Continuous (genetic code reads as a series of 3 letter codons without spaces or overlap,
knowing where to start and stop is essential)
3. It is nearly universal (almost true for all organisms)

RNA
- Ribose
- Uracil
- Single strand
Transcription

5’ – 3’ direction

Sense and anti-sense strands


- Sense strand = coding strand (segment of DNA running 5’ – 3’ , same sequences as
mRNA to be transcribed)
- Anti-sense strand = template strand (the one that runs 3’ – 5’)

Transcription
- mRNA builds itself in 5’ – 3’ direction off of the template/ anti-sense strand
- template strand is being “read” in the 3’ – 5’ direction
- RNA polymerase does the job of helicase, as well as the jobs of other enzymes
o Binds to promoter, unwinds DNA, initiates RNA synthesis

Translation – mRNA to polypeptide


- mRNA moves from nucleus to cytoplasm
- finds ribosomal subunits
- tRNA carries the amino acid
o synthesized from DNA
o single stranded RNA nucleotides
o one end of tRNA attaches to an amino acid while the other end has the anti-
codon to mRNA, complementary)

Ribosome
- rRNA + protein
- made in nucleoli
- Holds the mRNAs, tRNAs, and amino acids to assemble amino acids into new protein
-
- p site (binding site for the growing polypeptide chain)
- a site (amino acid binding site)
- e site (exit site for empty tRNAs)

Translation
- DNA instructions -> mRNA -> tRNA + amino acids -> proteins
- Order of codons on mRNA dictates order of tRNA and anticodons and amino acids
- Stops when a stop codon is present
- Start in P site, add in A site, and exits in E site
- Uses GTP (energy) for anticodon to bind to codon

Mutations
- Gene mutation
o A change in base sequences of organism’s DNA
o Chromosomal: large alterations that can affect structure and/or number of
chromosomes
o Gene or point: alteration of base sequence of individual genes
- Usually DNA repair enzymes detect and fix, in case of failure is a permanent mutation

Passing on mutations
- All mutations are inheritable
o Copied during DNA replication and passed on to daughter cells
- Not all mutations are passed on to future generations
o Mutation must be in germ cell of gamete to affect offspring
- Body cell mutations (somatic)
o Cancer
- Reproductive cell mutations -> germ line mutations
o Mutation passed to offspring

Types of mutations
- Point: affects one of a few nucleotides, can be substitution, deletion, or insertion
- Frame shift: insertion or deletion of one of more nucleotides (and then every single set
or a codon is different and codons all shifted are now different)
- Silent: no effect on cell’s proteins or metabolism
- Missense: altered protein (difference sequence of amino acids) (e.g. sickle cell anemia)
- Nonsense: premature stop codon

Other mutations
- Chromosomal: translocation (relocation of groups of bases from one part of genome to
another)
- Inversions
o Section of chromosome gets reversed, gene may be disrupted

Causes of mutations
- Spontaneous mutations
o Occurs naturally in cells
o Incorrect base pairing by DNA polymerase, and other errors during replication or
protein synthesis
- Induced
o Caused by agent outside of cell
o Mutagens are substances

Physical mutagens
- Cause physical changes in structure of DNA
- Tear through DNA and cause point mutations or loss of large portions of DNA
o X-rays, UV rays

Chemical Mutagens
- Molecule that enters nucleus of cell and induce mutations by reacting chemically with
DNA
o May insert itself in DNA causing frameshift or substitution
o May have base pairing properties similar to another base
 E.g. carcinogens

DNA repair
- Double strand provides mechanism for repair
- DNA polymerase
- Nucleases

Genetic variation
- Mutations ca accumulate over time
- Use these to track evolution of different species
- Endosymbiont theory: the thought that organelles used to be their own organisms that
were engulfed by a larger one

Genetic variation and evolution


- Same mutations in mtDNA -> likely have recent maternal ancestor
- 2 theories:
o Multiregional: homo sapiens evolved around the world
o Monogenesis: modern ethnic groups are descendants of second migration of
homo sapiens, traced back to Africa (holds true)

Genetic recombination and engineering


- Genetic recombination – new arrangement of genes
- Naturally occur between homologous chromosomes
- Artificial recombination
o DNA from different sources -> recombinant DNA
o Transgenics - gene from one species spliced into another
- GMO

Restriction endonucleases – cutting out DNA


- Enzymes that catalyze cleavage of DNA at specific nucleotide sequences (restriction
enzyme)
- Cut out DNA molecule in middle
- Recognize short sequences of nucleotides – target sequence
- Restriction site – point in target sequence that is cut
- Glue together with ligase
o Mass produce bacterial DNA, e.g. insulin, hGH

Plasmid insertion
- Produces artificial recombinant DNA
- E.g. insulin production in bacteria
Gel electrophoresis
- Separates nucleic acids or proteins according to mass and charge
- Smaller fragments move further

Gel electrophoresis – DNA finger prints

Polymerase chain reaction PCR – mass producing DNA


- Uses Taq polymerase from bacterium Thermos aquaticus
- Functions at high temperatures
- PCR requirements:
o Taq polymerase
o DNA to copy
o Large amounts of 4 deoxyribonucleotides
o Short DNA primers

Genetic engineering applications


- To get mass production of proteins
- Gene therapy
- Improving plant and animal stock

Biotechnology products
- Medicinal bacteria
- Cloned and transgenic animals
- Transgenic plants
o Golden rice

Diagnosis and treatment of genetic disorders

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