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DNA:

Structure and Function


Chapter
12
Section 1

The
First
threeLife
Instruction
Manual
Deoxyribose
Nucleic
The Molecule
Blueprint
of
LifeAcid
The
of
dimensional
Heredity
The
Architect of Life
xerox machine

DNA

Why Study DNA?


To truly understand genetics, biologists first had
to discover the chemical structure of the gene
This would then help them understand how genes
control the inherited characteristics of living things
Gene expression is what
enables cells of the same
organism to take on so many
different sizes, shapes and
functions
(even though just about every
cell in an individual contains
the same DNA)

Review
1. What organelle is known as the
control center of the cell?
nucleus
2. What structures are found in the nucleus?
chromosomes
3. What are short segments of chromosomes?
genes
4. What are genes/chromosomes composed of?
DNA
5. How do genes/chromosomes control the
activity of the cell? produce proteins that
regulate cell functions and become cell structures

Review

History
1869 - Friedrich Miescher discovered DNA in
nucleus
1928 - Frederick Griffith Identified DNA as source of
genetic material using bacteria
1930s - Oswald Avery, Colin MacLeod and Maclyn
McCarty - Confirmed that genes made of DNA
1950 - Alfred Hershey and Martha Chase confirmed
DNA is the biochemical of heredity using
radioactive markers bacteriophages
1952- Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin X-rayed
DNA to show repeatingX-ray
nucleotide
structure
of double
helix
1953- James Watson and Francis Crick combined data
Oswald Avery
Maclyn McCarty
to
create
a
3-D
model
of
structure
called the
Rosalind Franklin
Alfred Hershey
double helix
Martha
Chase
James
Watson
Francis Crick

Frederick Griffith

Watson-Crick
Model

DNA Structure
Is a polymer of 1000s of
nucleotide monomers
Is a double strand of
covalently bonded
nucleotides in twisted ladder shape
twisted ladder shape = double helix

DNA Shape
Double helix: 2 spirals wound around
each other

But joined in
the middle

DNA Structure
Is a polymer of 1000s of
nucleotide monomers
Is a double strand of Sugar
Phosphat
e
covalently bonded
Backbone
nucleotides in twisted ladder shape
twisted ladder shape = double helix
Rungs of ladder = nitrogen bases
Sides of ladder = sugar & phosphate
groups (also called the DNA backbone)

Nucleotide
Nucleotide- Individual unit of DNA.
Made of three parts:
Deoxyribose (5-carbon sugar)
Phosphate group
A nitrogen-containing base

Bases
Four nitrogen-containing bases
Adenine
Guanine
Cytosine
Thymine
sugar
(deoxyribose)

adenine
A
base with a
double-ring
structure

guanine
(G)
base with a
double-ring
structure

thymine
(T)
base with a
single-ring
structure

cytosine
(C)
base with a
single-ring
structure

Bases

Adenine

Guanine

Thymine

Cytosine

double ringed = purines

single ringed = pyrimidines

Nucleotide
P
Deoxyribose (like ribose)
base
is a sugar with 5 carbon
atoms in a ring
sugar
Oxygen is one of the ring
members
In Deoxyribose, one of the OH groups is missing
and replaced with hydrogen
Thus deoxy =
- 1 oxygen

OH

Nucleotide
P - the Phosphate group
P
Is important because it
links the sugar on one
sugar
nucleotide with the phosphate
of the next nucleotide to make
a polynucleotide
Nucleotides are connected to each other
via a covalent bond

base

Base Pairing Rule


Bases are paired together in specific
manner
Because of chemical structure and shape
Adenine only pairs with Thymine
Guanine only pairs with Cytosine
Exactly enough room for only one purine
and one pyramide base between the
two strands of DNA

Base Pairing Rule


Bases held together in rungs by
weak hydrogen bonds
2 hydrogen bonds between A & T
3 hydrogen bonds between C & G

DNA

DNA Function
Scientists wondered how DNA worked.
They knew genes do these critical things:
Carry information from one generation to
another
Put information to work to determine an
organisms characteristics
Can be easily copied
Store and transmit genetic information
needed for all cell functions
In order to do these things it had to be a
special molecule!

Understanding DNA
Our knowledge of DNA put to use:
Inheritance/ Genetic Counseling
Cell function/protein synthesis
Embryonic development/gene regulation
Evolution/ phylogenetic relationships
Medicine/genetic diseases
Genetic engineering/ recombinant DNA

Structure of DNA Review


Nucleotide
Hydrogen
bonds

Sugar-phosphate
backbone
Key
Adenine (A)
Thymine (T)
Cytosine (C)
Guanine (G)

Structure of DNA Review


Pyrimidines

Purines
Adenine

Guanine

Cytosine

Thymine

Base
s

Phosphate group

Deoxyribose

DNAs Size
To get an idea of the size of the human genome
present in each of our cells, consider the following
analogy: If the DNA sequence of the human
genome were compiled in books, the equivalent
of 200 volumes the size of a Manhattan telephone
book (at 1,000 pages each) would be needed to
hold it all. It would take about 9.5 years to read
out loud (without stopping) the 3 billion bases in
one person's genome sequence, calculated on
a reading rate of 10 bases per second, equaling
600 bases/minute, 36,000 bases/hour,
864,000 bases/day, 315,360,000 bases/year.
Human Genome Project

A
C

DNA

How Am I
Packaged?
Nitrogen bases
1. Are like letters in the
code
2. Put them in different
order
make a different gene

DNA
Package

CAT

HA
T

DOG

Genes

1. Are like words made up of


letters
2. A group of nitrogen bases
that
makes sense
3. Tells the cell to do something

The cat
sat.
DNA One dog
Package ate.
The big
hat.
DNA strand
1. Are like sentences made up of
words
2. A long line of genes on each
DNA
strand

DNA
Package
Chromosomes
1. Are like books full of sentences
2. DNA strand twists around and
around itself

DNA
Package

Nucleus
1. Is like a bookcase
2. Inside the cell, where all the
chromosomes are stored

DNA
Package

So what would a library full of rows


and
rows of bookcases represent?
many cells together
which is a tissue

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