DNA Structure & Replication (Outline)
Transcript of DNA Structure & Replication (Outline)
1
DNA Structure amp Replication (Outline)bull Historical perspective (DNA as the genetic material)
bull Genetic transformationbull DNA as the transforming agentbull DNA is the genetic material in bacterial viruses (phage)
bull Historical perspective (Structure of DNA) bull Identifying ribose and deoxy ribosebull Equal parts of a nucleotide bull The base-pairing rulebull DNA structure double stranded anti-parallel strandsbull DNA structure helix
bull Basis for polarity of SS DNA and anti-parallel complementary strands of DNAbull Models of DNA replicationbull Mechanism of DNA replication steps and molecular machinerybull Fidelity of DNA replicationbull Telomerase activity
2
Genetic MaterialldquoA genetic material must carry out two jobs
duplicate itself and control the development of the rest of the cell in a specific wayrdquo
- Francis Crick 1953
Nucleus
DNA
Cell
3
The Road to the Double Helix
4
History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
Friedrich Miescher 1871 - Swiss physician and biochemist- Isolated white blood cell nuclei from pus
o Acid substance with nitrogen and phosphoruso ldquoNucleinrdquo later changed into nucleic acid
5
History of DNAArchibald Garrod 1902- English physician
- Linked inheritance of ldquoinborn
errors of metabolismrdquo with the
lack of a particular enzyme for
breakdown of 2 amino acid
- First described the disease
alkaptonuria black urine
bone and cartilage and
osteoarthritis
6
History of DNAFrederick Griffith 1928
- English microbiologist
- Established the concept of transformation
a change in genotype (genetic makeup) by a foreign substance that changes the phenotype (observed properties or trait)
7
Frederick Griffith
Worked with Diplococcus pneumonia which exists in two typeso Type S (Smooth) = Produces capsule
o Type R (Rough) = No capsule
o Capsule associated with virulence (causing disease)
8
Figure 91
Discovery of Bacterial Transformation
Figure 91
9
History of DNA
Avery MacLeod and McCarty 1944- American physicians- DNA is the transforming material
(Can convert Type R bacteria into S)
10
Figure 91
The Transforming Principle (No)
Figure 92
11
History of DNAAlfred Hershey and Martha Chase 1953
bull American microbiologists
bull Viruses can infect E coli bacteria
bull A virus in not a cell it has protein ldquoheadrdquo and DNA core
bull Can replicate only using host living cells as host
bull DNA is the genetic material of these viruses
12
Discovering the Structure of DNAPhoebus Levine
- Russian-American biochemist
- Identified the 5-carbon sugars ribose in 1909 and deoxyribose in 1929
- Discovered that the three parts of a nucleotide are found in equal proportions
- Sugar- Phosphate- Nitrogen Base
13
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Erwin Chargaff 1951- Austrian-American biochemist
- Analyzed base composition of DNA from various species and observed regular relationships
- Adenine + Guanine = Thymine + Cytosine- A = T and C = G
14
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins 1952- English scientists- Used a technique called X-ray diffraction- It took Franklin 100 hours to obtain ldquophoto 51rdquo
15
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Franklin reasoned that the DNA is a helix with symmetrically organized subunits
Figure 94
16
Discovering the Structure of DNAJames Watson and Francis Crick- Did not perform any experiments
- Used results of others and cardboard cutouts to build a model of the structure of DNA
Figure 95
17
DNA Structure
A single building block is a nucleotide
Each nucleotide is composed of- A deoxyribose sugar- A phosphate group- A nitrogenous base one of four types
- Adenine (A) Guanine (G) = Purines- Cytosine (C) Thymine (T) = Pyrimidines
18
DNA Structure
Figure 96
Figure 97
19
20
DNA Structure
Nucleotides join via a bond between the 5rsquo-phosphate of one and the 3rsquo hydroxyl of another- This creates a continuous sugar-phosphate backbone
Figure 98
21
Polarity and anti-parallel nature of the two DNA strands (5rsquo and 3rsquo ends)
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
2
Genetic MaterialldquoA genetic material must carry out two jobs
duplicate itself and control the development of the rest of the cell in a specific wayrdquo
- Francis Crick 1953
Nucleus
DNA
Cell
3
The Road to the Double Helix
4
History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
Friedrich Miescher 1871 - Swiss physician and biochemist- Isolated white blood cell nuclei from pus
o Acid substance with nitrogen and phosphoruso ldquoNucleinrdquo later changed into nucleic acid
5
History of DNAArchibald Garrod 1902- English physician
- Linked inheritance of ldquoinborn
errors of metabolismrdquo with the
lack of a particular enzyme for
breakdown of 2 amino acid
- First described the disease
alkaptonuria black urine
bone and cartilage and
osteoarthritis
6
History of DNAFrederick Griffith 1928
- English microbiologist
- Established the concept of transformation
a change in genotype (genetic makeup) by a foreign substance that changes the phenotype (observed properties or trait)
7
Frederick Griffith
Worked with Diplococcus pneumonia which exists in two typeso Type S (Smooth) = Produces capsule
o Type R (Rough) = No capsule
o Capsule associated with virulence (causing disease)
8
Figure 91
Discovery of Bacterial Transformation
Figure 91
9
History of DNA
Avery MacLeod and McCarty 1944- American physicians- DNA is the transforming material
(Can convert Type R bacteria into S)
10
Figure 91
The Transforming Principle (No)
Figure 92
11
History of DNAAlfred Hershey and Martha Chase 1953
bull American microbiologists
bull Viruses can infect E coli bacteria
bull A virus in not a cell it has protein ldquoheadrdquo and DNA core
bull Can replicate only using host living cells as host
bull DNA is the genetic material of these viruses
12
Discovering the Structure of DNAPhoebus Levine
- Russian-American biochemist
- Identified the 5-carbon sugars ribose in 1909 and deoxyribose in 1929
- Discovered that the three parts of a nucleotide are found in equal proportions
- Sugar- Phosphate- Nitrogen Base
13
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Erwin Chargaff 1951- Austrian-American biochemist
- Analyzed base composition of DNA from various species and observed regular relationships
- Adenine + Guanine = Thymine + Cytosine- A = T and C = G
14
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins 1952- English scientists- Used a technique called X-ray diffraction- It took Franklin 100 hours to obtain ldquophoto 51rdquo
15
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Franklin reasoned that the DNA is a helix with symmetrically organized subunits
Figure 94
16
Discovering the Structure of DNAJames Watson and Francis Crick- Did not perform any experiments
- Used results of others and cardboard cutouts to build a model of the structure of DNA
Figure 95
17
DNA Structure
A single building block is a nucleotide
Each nucleotide is composed of- A deoxyribose sugar- A phosphate group- A nitrogenous base one of four types
- Adenine (A) Guanine (G) = Purines- Cytosine (C) Thymine (T) = Pyrimidines
18
DNA Structure
Figure 96
Figure 97
19
20
DNA Structure
Nucleotides join via a bond between the 5rsquo-phosphate of one and the 3rsquo hydroxyl of another- This creates a continuous sugar-phosphate backbone
Figure 98
21
Polarity and anti-parallel nature of the two DNA strands (5rsquo and 3rsquo ends)
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
3
The Road to the Double Helix
4
History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
Friedrich Miescher 1871 - Swiss physician and biochemist- Isolated white blood cell nuclei from pus
o Acid substance with nitrogen and phosphoruso ldquoNucleinrdquo later changed into nucleic acid
5
History of DNAArchibald Garrod 1902- English physician
- Linked inheritance of ldquoinborn
errors of metabolismrdquo with the
lack of a particular enzyme for
breakdown of 2 amino acid
- First described the disease
alkaptonuria black urine
bone and cartilage and
osteoarthritis
6
History of DNAFrederick Griffith 1928
- English microbiologist
- Established the concept of transformation
a change in genotype (genetic makeup) by a foreign substance that changes the phenotype (observed properties or trait)
7
Frederick Griffith
Worked with Diplococcus pneumonia which exists in two typeso Type S (Smooth) = Produces capsule
o Type R (Rough) = No capsule
o Capsule associated with virulence (causing disease)
8
Figure 91
Discovery of Bacterial Transformation
Figure 91
9
History of DNA
Avery MacLeod and McCarty 1944- American physicians- DNA is the transforming material
(Can convert Type R bacteria into S)
10
Figure 91
The Transforming Principle (No)
Figure 92
11
History of DNAAlfred Hershey and Martha Chase 1953
bull American microbiologists
bull Viruses can infect E coli bacteria
bull A virus in not a cell it has protein ldquoheadrdquo and DNA core
bull Can replicate only using host living cells as host
bull DNA is the genetic material of these viruses
12
Discovering the Structure of DNAPhoebus Levine
- Russian-American biochemist
- Identified the 5-carbon sugars ribose in 1909 and deoxyribose in 1929
- Discovered that the three parts of a nucleotide are found in equal proportions
- Sugar- Phosphate- Nitrogen Base
13
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Erwin Chargaff 1951- Austrian-American biochemist
- Analyzed base composition of DNA from various species and observed regular relationships
- Adenine + Guanine = Thymine + Cytosine- A = T and C = G
14
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins 1952- English scientists- Used a technique called X-ray diffraction- It took Franklin 100 hours to obtain ldquophoto 51rdquo
15
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Franklin reasoned that the DNA is a helix with symmetrically organized subunits
Figure 94
16
Discovering the Structure of DNAJames Watson and Francis Crick- Did not perform any experiments
- Used results of others and cardboard cutouts to build a model of the structure of DNA
Figure 95
17
DNA Structure
A single building block is a nucleotide
Each nucleotide is composed of- A deoxyribose sugar- A phosphate group- A nitrogenous base one of four types
- Adenine (A) Guanine (G) = Purines- Cytosine (C) Thymine (T) = Pyrimidines
18
DNA Structure
Figure 96
Figure 97
19
20
DNA Structure
Nucleotides join via a bond between the 5rsquo-phosphate of one and the 3rsquo hydroxyl of another- This creates a continuous sugar-phosphate backbone
Figure 98
21
Polarity and anti-parallel nature of the two DNA strands (5rsquo and 3rsquo ends)
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
4
History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
Friedrich Miescher 1871 - Swiss physician and biochemist- Isolated white blood cell nuclei from pus
o Acid substance with nitrogen and phosphoruso ldquoNucleinrdquo later changed into nucleic acid
5
History of DNAArchibald Garrod 1902- English physician
- Linked inheritance of ldquoinborn
errors of metabolismrdquo with the
lack of a particular enzyme for
breakdown of 2 amino acid
- First described the disease
alkaptonuria black urine
bone and cartilage and
osteoarthritis
6
History of DNAFrederick Griffith 1928
- English microbiologist
- Established the concept of transformation
a change in genotype (genetic makeup) by a foreign substance that changes the phenotype (observed properties or trait)
7
Frederick Griffith
Worked with Diplococcus pneumonia which exists in two typeso Type S (Smooth) = Produces capsule
o Type R (Rough) = No capsule
o Capsule associated with virulence (causing disease)
8
Figure 91
Discovery of Bacterial Transformation
Figure 91
9
History of DNA
Avery MacLeod and McCarty 1944- American physicians- DNA is the transforming material
(Can convert Type R bacteria into S)
10
Figure 91
The Transforming Principle (No)
Figure 92
11
History of DNAAlfred Hershey and Martha Chase 1953
bull American microbiologists
bull Viruses can infect E coli bacteria
bull A virus in not a cell it has protein ldquoheadrdquo and DNA core
bull Can replicate only using host living cells as host
bull DNA is the genetic material of these viruses
12
Discovering the Structure of DNAPhoebus Levine
- Russian-American biochemist
- Identified the 5-carbon sugars ribose in 1909 and deoxyribose in 1929
- Discovered that the three parts of a nucleotide are found in equal proportions
- Sugar- Phosphate- Nitrogen Base
13
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Erwin Chargaff 1951- Austrian-American biochemist
- Analyzed base composition of DNA from various species and observed regular relationships
- Adenine + Guanine = Thymine + Cytosine- A = T and C = G
14
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins 1952- English scientists- Used a technique called X-ray diffraction- It took Franklin 100 hours to obtain ldquophoto 51rdquo
15
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Franklin reasoned that the DNA is a helix with symmetrically organized subunits
Figure 94
16
Discovering the Structure of DNAJames Watson and Francis Crick- Did not perform any experiments
- Used results of others and cardboard cutouts to build a model of the structure of DNA
Figure 95
17
DNA Structure
A single building block is a nucleotide
Each nucleotide is composed of- A deoxyribose sugar- A phosphate group- A nitrogenous base one of four types
- Adenine (A) Guanine (G) = Purines- Cytosine (C) Thymine (T) = Pyrimidines
18
DNA Structure
Figure 96
Figure 97
19
20
DNA Structure
Nucleotides join via a bond between the 5rsquo-phosphate of one and the 3rsquo hydroxyl of another- This creates a continuous sugar-phosphate backbone
Figure 98
21
Polarity and anti-parallel nature of the two DNA strands (5rsquo and 3rsquo ends)
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
5
History of DNAArchibald Garrod 1902- English physician
- Linked inheritance of ldquoinborn
errors of metabolismrdquo with the
lack of a particular enzyme for
breakdown of 2 amino acid
- First described the disease
alkaptonuria black urine
bone and cartilage and
osteoarthritis
6
History of DNAFrederick Griffith 1928
- English microbiologist
- Established the concept of transformation
a change in genotype (genetic makeup) by a foreign substance that changes the phenotype (observed properties or trait)
7
Frederick Griffith
Worked with Diplococcus pneumonia which exists in two typeso Type S (Smooth) = Produces capsule
o Type R (Rough) = No capsule
o Capsule associated with virulence (causing disease)
8
Figure 91
Discovery of Bacterial Transformation
Figure 91
9
History of DNA
Avery MacLeod and McCarty 1944- American physicians- DNA is the transforming material
(Can convert Type R bacteria into S)
10
Figure 91
The Transforming Principle (No)
Figure 92
11
History of DNAAlfred Hershey and Martha Chase 1953
bull American microbiologists
bull Viruses can infect E coli bacteria
bull A virus in not a cell it has protein ldquoheadrdquo and DNA core
bull Can replicate only using host living cells as host
bull DNA is the genetic material of these viruses
12
Discovering the Structure of DNAPhoebus Levine
- Russian-American biochemist
- Identified the 5-carbon sugars ribose in 1909 and deoxyribose in 1929
- Discovered that the three parts of a nucleotide are found in equal proportions
- Sugar- Phosphate- Nitrogen Base
13
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Erwin Chargaff 1951- Austrian-American biochemist
- Analyzed base composition of DNA from various species and observed regular relationships
- Adenine + Guanine = Thymine + Cytosine- A = T and C = G
14
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins 1952- English scientists- Used a technique called X-ray diffraction- It took Franklin 100 hours to obtain ldquophoto 51rdquo
15
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Franklin reasoned that the DNA is a helix with symmetrically organized subunits
Figure 94
16
Discovering the Structure of DNAJames Watson and Francis Crick- Did not perform any experiments
- Used results of others and cardboard cutouts to build a model of the structure of DNA
Figure 95
17
DNA Structure
A single building block is a nucleotide
Each nucleotide is composed of- A deoxyribose sugar- A phosphate group- A nitrogenous base one of four types
- Adenine (A) Guanine (G) = Purines- Cytosine (C) Thymine (T) = Pyrimidines
18
DNA Structure
Figure 96
Figure 97
19
20
DNA Structure
Nucleotides join via a bond between the 5rsquo-phosphate of one and the 3rsquo hydroxyl of another- This creates a continuous sugar-phosphate backbone
Figure 98
21
Polarity and anti-parallel nature of the two DNA strands (5rsquo and 3rsquo ends)
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
6
History of DNAFrederick Griffith 1928
- English microbiologist
- Established the concept of transformation
a change in genotype (genetic makeup) by a foreign substance that changes the phenotype (observed properties or trait)
7
Frederick Griffith
Worked with Diplococcus pneumonia which exists in two typeso Type S (Smooth) = Produces capsule
o Type R (Rough) = No capsule
o Capsule associated with virulence (causing disease)
8
Figure 91
Discovery of Bacterial Transformation
Figure 91
9
History of DNA
Avery MacLeod and McCarty 1944- American physicians- DNA is the transforming material
(Can convert Type R bacteria into S)
10
Figure 91
The Transforming Principle (No)
Figure 92
11
History of DNAAlfred Hershey and Martha Chase 1953
bull American microbiologists
bull Viruses can infect E coli bacteria
bull A virus in not a cell it has protein ldquoheadrdquo and DNA core
bull Can replicate only using host living cells as host
bull DNA is the genetic material of these viruses
12
Discovering the Structure of DNAPhoebus Levine
- Russian-American biochemist
- Identified the 5-carbon sugars ribose in 1909 and deoxyribose in 1929
- Discovered that the three parts of a nucleotide are found in equal proportions
- Sugar- Phosphate- Nitrogen Base
13
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Erwin Chargaff 1951- Austrian-American biochemist
- Analyzed base composition of DNA from various species and observed regular relationships
- Adenine + Guanine = Thymine + Cytosine- A = T and C = G
14
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins 1952- English scientists- Used a technique called X-ray diffraction- It took Franklin 100 hours to obtain ldquophoto 51rdquo
15
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Franklin reasoned that the DNA is a helix with symmetrically organized subunits
Figure 94
16
Discovering the Structure of DNAJames Watson and Francis Crick- Did not perform any experiments
- Used results of others and cardboard cutouts to build a model of the structure of DNA
Figure 95
17
DNA Structure
A single building block is a nucleotide
Each nucleotide is composed of- A deoxyribose sugar- A phosphate group- A nitrogenous base one of four types
- Adenine (A) Guanine (G) = Purines- Cytosine (C) Thymine (T) = Pyrimidines
18
DNA Structure
Figure 96
Figure 97
19
20
DNA Structure
Nucleotides join via a bond between the 5rsquo-phosphate of one and the 3rsquo hydroxyl of another- This creates a continuous sugar-phosphate backbone
Figure 98
21
Polarity and anti-parallel nature of the two DNA strands (5rsquo and 3rsquo ends)
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
7
Frederick Griffith
Worked with Diplococcus pneumonia which exists in two typeso Type S (Smooth) = Produces capsule
o Type R (Rough) = No capsule
o Capsule associated with virulence (causing disease)
8
Figure 91
Discovery of Bacterial Transformation
Figure 91
9
History of DNA
Avery MacLeod and McCarty 1944- American physicians- DNA is the transforming material
(Can convert Type R bacteria into S)
10
Figure 91
The Transforming Principle (No)
Figure 92
11
History of DNAAlfred Hershey and Martha Chase 1953
bull American microbiologists
bull Viruses can infect E coli bacteria
bull A virus in not a cell it has protein ldquoheadrdquo and DNA core
bull Can replicate only using host living cells as host
bull DNA is the genetic material of these viruses
12
Discovering the Structure of DNAPhoebus Levine
- Russian-American biochemist
- Identified the 5-carbon sugars ribose in 1909 and deoxyribose in 1929
- Discovered that the three parts of a nucleotide are found in equal proportions
- Sugar- Phosphate- Nitrogen Base
13
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Erwin Chargaff 1951- Austrian-American biochemist
- Analyzed base composition of DNA from various species and observed regular relationships
- Adenine + Guanine = Thymine + Cytosine- A = T and C = G
14
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins 1952- English scientists- Used a technique called X-ray diffraction- It took Franklin 100 hours to obtain ldquophoto 51rdquo
15
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Franklin reasoned that the DNA is a helix with symmetrically organized subunits
Figure 94
16
Discovering the Structure of DNAJames Watson and Francis Crick- Did not perform any experiments
- Used results of others and cardboard cutouts to build a model of the structure of DNA
Figure 95
17
DNA Structure
A single building block is a nucleotide
Each nucleotide is composed of- A deoxyribose sugar- A phosphate group- A nitrogenous base one of four types
- Adenine (A) Guanine (G) = Purines- Cytosine (C) Thymine (T) = Pyrimidines
18
DNA Structure
Figure 96
Figure 97
19
20
DNA Structure
Nucleotides join via a bond between the 5rsquo-phosphate of one and the 3rsquo hydroxyl of another- This creates a continuous sugar-phosphate backbone
Figure 98
21
Polarity and anti-parallel nature of the two DNA strands (5rsquo and 3rsquo ends)
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
8
Figure 91
Discovery of Bacterial Transformation
Figure 91
9
History of DNA
Avery MacLeod and McCarty 1944- American physicians- DNA is the transforming material
(Can convert Type R bacteria into S)
10
Figure 91
The Transforming Principle (No)
Figure 92
11
History of DNAAlfred Hershey and Martha Chase 1953
bull American microbiologists
bull Viruses can infect E coli bacteria
bull A virus in not a cell it has protein ldquoheadrdquo and DNA core
bull Can replicate only using host living cells as host
bull DNA is the genetic material of these viruses
12
Discovering the Structure of DNAPhoebus Levine
- Russian-American biochemist
- Identified the 5-carbon sugars ribose in 1909 and deoxyribose in 1929
- Discovered that the three parts of a nucleotide are found in equal proportions
- Sugar- Phosphate- Nitrogen Base
13
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Erwin Chargaff 1951- Austrian-American biochemist
- Analyzed base composition of DNA from various species and observed regular relationships
- Adenine + Guanine = Thymine + Cytosine- A = T and C = G
14
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins 1952- English scientists- Used a technique called X-ray diffraction- It took Franklin 100 hours to obtain ldquophoto 51rdquo
15
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Franklin reasoned that the DNA is a helix with symmetrically organized subunits
Figure 94
16
Discovering the Structure of DNAJames Watson and Francis Crick- Did not perform any experiments
- Used results of others and cardboard cutouts to build a model of the structure of DNA
Figure 95
17
DNA Structure
A single building block is a nucleotide
Each nucleotide is composed of- A deoxyribose sugar- A phosphate group- A nitrogenous base one of four types
- Adenine (A) Guanine (G) = Purines- Cytosine (C) Thymine (T) = Pyrimidines
18
DNA Structure
Figure 96
Figure 97
19
20
DNA Structure
Nucleotides join via a bond between the 5rsquo-phosphate of one and the 3rsquo hydroxyl of another- This creates a continuous sugar-phosphate backbone
Figure 98
21
Polarity and anti-parallel nature of the two DNA strands (5rsquo and 3rsquo ends)
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
9
History of DNA
Avery MacLeod and McCarty 1944- American physicians- DNA is the transforming material
(Can convert Type R bacteria into S)
10
Figure 91
The Transforming Principle (No)
Figure 92
11
History of DNAAlfred Hershey and Martha Chase 1953
bull American microbiologists
bull Viruses can infect E coli bacteria
bull A virus in not a cell it has protein ldquoheadrdquo and DNA core
bull Can replicate only using host living cells as host
bull DNA is the genetic material of these viruses
12
Discovering the Structure of DNAPhoebus Levine
- Russian-American biochemist
- Identified the 5-carbon sugars ribose in 1909 and deoxyribose in 1929
- Discovered that the three parts of a nucleotide are found in equal proportions
- Sugar- Phosphate- Nitrogen Base
13
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Erwin Chargaff 1951- Austrian-American biochemist
- Analyzed base composition of DNA from various species and observed regular relationships
- Adenine + Guanine = Thymine + Cytosine- A = T and C = G
14
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins 1952- English scientists- Used a technique called X-ray diffraction- It took Franklin 100 hours to obtain ldquophoto 51rdquo
15
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Franklin reasoned that the DNA is a helix with symmetrically organized subunits
Figure 94
16
Discovering the Structure of DNAJames Watson and Francis Crick- Did not perform any experiments
- Used results of others and cardboard cutouts to build a model of the structure of DNA
Figure 95
17
DNA Structure
A single building block is a nucleotide
Each nucleotide is composed of- A deoxyribose sugar- A phosphate group- A nitrogenous base one of four types
- Adenine (A) Guanine (G) = Purines- Cytosine (C) Thymine (T) = Pyrimidines
18
DNA Structure
Figure 96
Figure 97
19
20
DNA Structure
Nucleotides join via a bond between the 5rsquo-phosphate of one and the 3rsquo hydroxyl of another- This creates a continuous sugar-phosphate backbone
Figure 98
21
Polarity and anti-parallel nature of the two DNA strands (5rsquo and 3rsquo ends)
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
10
Figure 91
The Transforming Principle (No)
Figure 92
11
History of DNAAlfred Hershey and Martha Chase 1953
bull American microbiologists
bull Viruses can infect E coli bacteria
bull A virus in not a cell it has protein ldquoheadrdquo and DNA core
bull Can replicate only using host living cells as host
bull DNA is the genetic material of these viruses
12
Discovering the Structure of DNAPhoebus Levine
- Russian-American biochemist
- Identified the 5-carbon sugars ribose in 1909 and deoxyribose in 1929
- Discovered that the three parts of a nucleotide are found in equal proportions
- Sugar- Phosphate- Nitrogen Base
13
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Erwin Chargaff 1951- Austrian-American biochemist
- Analyzed base composition of DNA from various species and observed regular relationships
- Adenine + Guanine = Thymine + Cytosine- A = T and C = G
14
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins 1952- English scientists- Used a technique called X-ray diffraction- It took Franklin 100 hours to obtain ldquophoto 51rdquo
15
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Franklin reasoned that the DNA is a helix with symmetrically organized subunits
Figure 94
16
Discovering the Structure of DNAJames Watson and Francis Crick- Did not perform any experiments
- Used results of others and cardboard cutouts to build a model of the structure of DNA
Figure 95
17
DNA Structure
A single building block is a nucleotide
Each nucleotide is composed of- A deoxyribose sugar- A phosphate group- A nitrogenous base one of four types
- Adenine (A) Guanine (G) = Purines- Cytosine (C) Thymine (T) = Pyrimidines
18
DNA Structure
Figure 96
Figure 97
19
20
DNA Structure
Nucleotides join via a bond between the 5rsquo-phosphate of one and the 3rsquo hydroxyl of another- This creates a continuous sugar-phosphate backbone
Figure 98
21
Polarity and anti-parallel nature of the two DNA strands (5rsquo and 3rsquo ends)
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
11
History of DNAAlfred Hershey and Martha Chase 1953
bull American microbiologists
bull Viruses can infect E coli bacteria
bull A virus in not a cell it has protein ldquoheadrdquo and DNA core
bull Can replicate only using host living cells as host
bull DNA is the genetic material of these viruses
12
Discovering the Structure of DNAPhoebus Levine
- Russian-American biochemist
- Identified the 5-carbon sugars ribose in 1909 and deoxyribose in 1929
- Discovered that the three parts of a nucleotide are found in equal proportions
- Sugar- Phosphate- Nitrogen Base
13
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Erwin Chargaff 1951- Austrian-American biochemist
- Analyzed base composition of DNA from various species and observed regular relationships
- Adenine + Guanine = Thymine + Cytosine- A = T and C = G
14
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins 1952- English scientists- Used a technique called X-ray diffraction- It took Franklin 100 hours to obtain ldquophoto 51rdquo
15
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Franklin reasoned that the DNA is a helix with symmetrically organized subunits
Figure 94
16
Discovering the Structure of DNAJames Watson and Francis Crick- Did not perform any experiments
- Used results of others and cardboard cutouts to build a model of the structure of DNA
Figure 95
17
DNA Structure
A single building block is a nucleotide
Each nucleotide is composed of- A deoxyribose sugar- A phosphate group- A nitrogenous base one of four types
- Adenine (A) Guanine (G) = Purines- Cytosine (C) Thymine (T) = Pyrimidines
18
DNA Structure
Figure 96
Figure 97
19
20
DNA Structure
Nucleotides join via a bond between the 5rsquo-phosphate of one and the 3rsquo hydroxyl of another- This creates a continuous sugar-phosphate backbone
Figure 98
21
Polarity and anti-parallel nature of the two DNA strands (5rsquo and 3rsquo ends)
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
12
Discovering the Structure of DNAPhoebus Levine
- Russian-American biochemist
- Identified the 5-carbon sugars ribose in 1909 and deoxyribose in 1929
- Discovered that the three parts of a nucleotide are found in equal proportions
- Sugar- Phosphate- Nitrogen Base
13
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Erwin Chargaff 1951- Austrian-American biochemist
- Analyzed base composition of DNA from various species and observed regular relationships
- Adenine + Guanine = Thymine + Cytosine- A = T and C = G
14
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins 1952- English scientists- Used a technique called X-ray diffraction- It took Franklin 100 hours to obtain ldquophoto 51rdquo
15
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Franklin reasoned that the DNA is a helix with symmetrically organized subunits
Figure 94
16
Discovering the Structure of DNAJames Watson and Francis Crick- Did not perform any experiments
- Used results of others and cardboard cutouts to build a model of the structure of DNA
Figure 95
17
DNA Structure
A single building block is a nucleotide
Each nucleotide is composed of- A deoxyribose sugar- A phosphate group- A nitrogenous base one of four types
- Adenine (A) Guanine (G) = Purines- Cytosine (C) Thymine (T) = Pyrimidines
18
DNA Structure
Figure 96
Figure 97
19
20
DNA Structure
Nucleotides join via a bond between the 5rsquo-phosphate of one and the 3rsquo hydroxyl of another- This creates a continuous sugar-phosphate backbone
Figure 98
21
Polarity and anti-parallel nature of the two DNA strands (5rsquo and 3rsquo ends)
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
13
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Erwin Chargaff 1951- Austrian-American biochemist
- Analyzed base composition of DNA from various species and observed regular relationships
- Adenine + Guanine = Thymine + Cytosine- A = T and C = G
14
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins 1952- English scientists- Used a technique called X-ray diffraction- It took Franklin 100 hours to obtain ldquophoto 51rdquo
15
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Franklin reasoned that the DNA is a helix with symmetrically organized subunits
Figure 94
16
Discovering the Structure of DNAJames Watson and Francis Crick- Did not perform any experiments
- Used results of others and cardboard cutouts to build a model of the structure of DNA
Figure 95
17
DNA Structure
A single building block is a nucleotide
Each nucleotide is composed of- A deoxyribose sugar- A phosphate group- A nitrogenous base one of four types
- Adenine (A) Guanine (G) = Purines- Cytosine (C) Thymine (T) = Pyrimidines
18
DNA Structure
Figure 96
Figure 97
19
20
DNA Structure
Nucleotides join via a bond between the 5rsquo-phosphate of one and the 3rsquo hydroxyl of another- This creates a continuous sugar-phosphate backbone
Figure 98
21
Polarity and anti-parallel nature of the two DNA strands (5rsquo and 3rsquo ends)
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
14
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins 1952- English scientists- Used a technique called X-ray diffraction- It took Franklin 100 hours to obtain ldquophoto 51rdquo
15
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Franklin reasoned that the DNA is a helix with symmetrically organized subunits
Figure 94
16
Discovering the Structure of DNAJames Watson and Francis Crick- Did not perform any experiments
- Used results of others and cardboard cutouts to build a model of the structure of DNA
Figure 95
17
DNA Structure
A single building block is a nucleotide
Each nucleotide is composed of- A deoxyribose sugar- A phosphate group- A nitrogenous base one of four types
- Adenine (A) Guanine (G) = Purines- Cytosine (C) Thymine (T) = Pyrimidines
18
DNA Structure
Figure 96
Figure 97
19
20
DNA Structure
Nucleotides join via a bond between the 5rsquo-phosphate of one and the 3rsquo hydroxyl of another- This creates a continuous sugar-phosphate backbone
Figure 98
21
Polarity and anti-parallel nature of the two DNA strands (5rsquo and 3rsquo ends)
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
15
Discovering the Structure of DNA
Franklin reasoned that the DNA is a helix with symmetrically organized subunits
Figure 94
16
Discovering the Structure of DNAJames Watson and Francis Crick- Did not perform any experiments
- Used results of others and cardboard cutouts to build a model of the structure of DNA
Figure 95
17
DNA Structure
A single building block is a nucleotide
Each nucleotide is composed of- A deoxyribose sugar- A phosphate group- A nitrogenous base one of four types
- Adenine (A) Guanine (G) = Purines- Cytosine (C) Thymine (T) = Pyrimidines
18
DNA Structure
Figure 96
Figure 97
19
20
DNA Structure
Nucleotides join via a bond between the 5rsquo-phosphate of one and the 3rsquo hydroxyl of another- This creates a continuous sugar-phosphate backbone
Figure 98
21
Polarity and anti-parallel nature of the two DNA strands (5rsquo and 3rsquo ends)
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
16
Discovering the Structure of DNAJames Watson and Francis Crick- Did not perform any experiments
- Used results of others and cardboard cutouts to build a model of the structure of DNA
Figure 95
17
DNA Structure
A single building block is a nucleotide
Each nucleotide is composed of- A deoxyribose sugar- A phosphate group- A nitrogenous base one of four types
- Adenine (A) Guanine (G) = Purines- Cytosine (C) Thymine (T) = Pyrimidines
18
DNA Structure
Figure 96
Figure 97
19
20
DNA Structure
Nucleotides join via a bond between the 5rsquo-phosphate of one and the 3rsquo hydroxyl of another- This creates a continuous sugar-phosphate backbone
Figure 98
21
Polarity and anti-parallel nature of the two DNA strands (5rsquo and 3rsquo ends)
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
17
DNA Structure
A single building block is a nucleotide
Each nucleotide is composed of- A deoxyribose sugar- A phosphate group- A nitrogenous base one of four types
- Adenine (A) Guanine (G) = Purines- Cytosine (C) Thymine (T) = Pyrimidines
18
DNA Structure
Figure 96
Figure 97
19
20
DNA Structure
Nucleotides join via a bond between the 5rsquo-phosphate of one and the 3rsquo hydroxyl of another- This creates a continuous sugar-phosphate backbone
Figure 98
21
Polarity and anti-parallel nature of the two DNA strands (5rsquo and 3rsquo ends)
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
18
DNA Structure
Figure 96
Figure 97
19
20
DNA Structure
Nucleotides join via a bond between the 5rsquo-phosphate of one and the 3rsquo hydroxyl of another- This creates a continuous sugar-phosphate backbone
Figure 98
21
Polarity and anti-parallel nature of the two DNA strands (5rsquo and 3rsquo ends)
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
19
20
DNA Structure
Nucleotides join via a bond between the 5rsquo-phosphate of one and the 3rsquo hydroxyl of another- This creates a continuous sugar-phosphate backbone
Figure 98
21
Polarity and anti-parallel nature of the two DNA strands (5rsquo and 3rsquo ends)
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
20
DNA Structure
Nucleotides join via a bond between the 5rsquo-phosphate of one and the 3rsquo hydroxyl of another- This creates a continuous sugar-phosphate backbone
Figure 98
21
Polarity and anti-parallel nature of the two DNA strands (5rsquo and 3rsquo ends)
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
21
Polarity and anti-parallel nature of the two DNA strands (5rsquo and 3rsquo ends)
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
22
Two polynucleotide chains align forming a double helix- The opposing orientation (head-to-toe) is called antiparallelism
Figure 99
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
23
One strand of the double-helix runs in a 5rsquo to 3rsquo direction and the other strand runs in a 3rsquoto 5rsquo direction
Figure 911
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
24
DNA StructureThe key to the constant width of the double helix is the
specific pairing of its complementary bases via hydrogen bonds
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
25
DNA is Highly Condensed
The DNA coils around proteins called histones forming a bead-on-a-string-like structure
The bead part is called the nucleosomeThe nucleosome in turn winds tighter forming
chromatinChromatin fibers attach in loops to scaffold proteins
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
26
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
27
Figure 913
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
28
Molecular Definition of a Gene
A gene is a segment of DNA that directs the formation of RNA to produce protein
The protein (or functional RNA) creates the phenotype
Information is conveyed by the sequence of the nucleotides
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
29
DNA ReplicationAt first researchers suggested that DNA
might replicate in any of 3 possible ways
Model of DNA Replication
Organization of DNA Strand
1 Conservative oldold + newnew
2 Semi-conservative oldnew + newold
3 Dispersive mixed old amp new
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
30
DNA ReplicationMatthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl 1957
- Grew E coli on media containing 15N for several generations
DNA with 15N is heavy- Moved bacteria to media containing 14N- Then traced replicating DNA - Determined that DNA replication is semi-conservative
httpwwwsumanasinccomwebcontentanimationscontentmeselsonhtml
httphigheredmheducationcomolcdl120076bio22swf
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
31
Figure 914
Meselson-Stahl Experiment
Figure 914
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
32
Overview of DNA Replication
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle prior to cell division
Human DNA replicates about 50 basessecA human chromosome replicates
simultaneously at hundred points along its length
A site where DNA is locally opened is called a replication fork
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
33
Overview of DNA Replication
Figure 915
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
34
Enzymes in DNA Replication
Figure 916
httphigheredmcgraw-hillcomsites0072437316student_view0chapter14animationshtml
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
35
Activities at the Replication Fork
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
36
Activities at the Replication Fork
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
37
Activities at the Replication Fork
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
38
Activities at the Replication Fork
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
39
Current Connections to
DNA structure and replication
Q Why are we mortal with a limited life span
A Our cells have a limited life span ( of cell divisions)
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
40
Telomerase- an enzyme (riboprotein) that extends the 3rsquo end of the DNA strand by adding a repeated sequence of 6-nucleotides typically TTAGGG (100-1000 times)
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=AJNoTmWsE0s
httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=vtXrehpCPEE
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
41
Ends of linear chromosomes have special DNA sequences and are known as telomeres
added by an enzyme known as telomerase after DNA replication is completed
1
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
42Figure 23
Life span of dividing cellsbull Telomerase is active in sperm eggs stem cells (bone
marrow) and cancer cells but not in somatic tissuesbull Most cells lose 50-200 endmost bases after each cell
divisionbull After about 50 divisions shortened telomeres signal the
cell to stop dividing
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-
43
Fidelity of DNA replication amp maintaining DNA integrity
Maintained by
1 Proof-reading function of DNA polymerase2 DNA repair systemshttpwwwhhmiorgbiointeractivemediamismatch_repair-lgmov
DNA damage and repair in general httpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=y16w-CGAa0Yampfeature=relatedhttpwwwyoutubecomwatchv=nPS2jBq1k48
- Slide Number 1
- Genetic Material
- The Road to the Double Helix
- History leading to establishing DNA as the genetic material
- History of DNA
- History of DNA
- Frederick Griffith
- Slide Number 8
- History of DNA
- Slide Number 10
- History of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- Discovering the Structure of DNA
- DNA Structure
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 19
- DNA Structure
- Slide Number 21
- Slide Number 22
- Slide Number 23
- DNA Structure
- DNA is Highly Condensed
- Slide Number 26
- Slide Number 27
- Molecular Definition of a Gene
- DNA Replication
- DNA Replication
- Slide Number 31
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Overview of DNA Replication
- Enzymes in DNA Replication
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Activities at the Replication Fork
- Current Connections to DNA structure and replication
- Slide Number 40
- Slide Number 41
- Slide Number 42
- Slide Number 43
-