Chapter 10 notes

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DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis Chapter 10

Transcript of Chapter 10 notes

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DNA, RNA, and Protein Synthesis

Chapter 10

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DISCOVERY OF DNASection 1

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Griffith’s Experiments

• Fredrick Griffith studied bacteria that cause pneumonia– Some strains, or types, were harmful and

caused pneumonia in mammals (smooth)– Other strains were harmless and did not

cause pneumonia (rough)

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Griffith’s Experiments

• Used the two strains of bacteria in four experiments

• Discovered that genetic material can be transferred from one cell to another and change those cells

• He called this transformation

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Griffith’s Experiments

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Avery’s Experiments

• Oswald Avery wanted to find out what factor caused the transformation in Griffith’s experiments

• Discovered that the factor was DNA

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Hershey-Chase Experiment

• Experimented with bacteriophages – viruses that infect bacteria

• Confirmed that DNA is the hereditary molecule

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Hershey-Chase Experiment

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DNA STRUCTURESection 2

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DNA Double Helix

• Structure of DNA discovered in 1953 by James Watson and Francis Crick

• Used Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin’s x-ray picture of DNA to help

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DNA Nucleotides

• Made of two long strands of nucleotides– Each nucleotide contains three parts

• Five-carbon sugar (deoxyribose)• Phosphate group• Nitrogenous base

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DNA Nucleotides

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Bonds Hold DNA Together

• Structure is similar to a spiral staircase– Alternating sugar and

phosphate molecules = side handrails of the staircase

– Base pairs = steps of the staircase

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Nitrogenous Bases

• Four kinds of bases– Adenine– Guanine– Thymine – Cytosine

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Complementary Bases

• Base-pairing rules: • cytosine always pairs with guanine• adenine always pairs with thymine

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Complementary Bases

• What is the complementary sequence of bases for the following strand of DNA?

• ACCTGTGAGAC• TGGACACTCTG

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DNA REPLICATIONSection 3

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DNA Replication

• DNA replication is the process by which DNA is copied in a cell before a cell divides

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Steps of DNA Replication

1. Enzymes called helicases separate the DNA strands

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Steps of DNA Replication

2. Enzymes called DNA polymerases add complementary nucleotides to each of the original strands

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Steps of DNA Replication

3. DNA polymerases finish replicating the DNA and fall off– Result is two separate

and identical DNA molecules

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DNA Errors in Replication

• DNA replication is usually very accurate– Only about one error occurs for every billion

nucleotides• When mistakes occur, a change in the

nucleotide sequence results in a mutation

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PROTEIN SYNTHESISSection 4

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Flow of Genetic Information

• DNA RNA protein

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RNA Structure and Function

• RNA is very similar to DNA – long strand of nucleotides

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RNA Structure and Function

• RNA is different from DNA in the following ways:– Contains the sugar ribose instead of

deoxyribose– Contains uracil instead of thymine– Single-stranded– Much shorter than DNA

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Types of RNA

• There are three major types of RNA that each play a different role in protein synthesis

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Types of RNA

• Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) – makes up part of the ribosome

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Types of RNA

• Messenger RNA (mRNA) – carries the message from DNA in the nucleus to the ribosomes in the cytoplasm

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Types of RNA

• Transfer RNA (tRNA) – transfers amino acids to the ribosome to make a protein

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The Genetic Code

• The genetic code is the rules for how a sequence of bases codes for a particular amino acid

• Each group of three nucleotides is called a codon and codes for an amino acid

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The Genetic Code

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Transcription

• Instructions for a gene coded in DNA are rewritten into an RNA molecule

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Translation

• Translation = the making of a protein

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Steps of Translation

1. mRNA is fed through a ribosome three bases at a time

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Steps of Translation

2. Molecules of tRNA translate the mRNA code by picking up a specific amino acid from the cytoplasm

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Steps of Translation

3. In the ribosome, bases on the tRNA match with bases on the mRNA like pieces of a puzzle

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Steps of Translation

4. tRNA releases their amino acids and they become linked in a chain