1 / 32

Ch 12 DNA and RNA

Ch 12 DNA and RNA. What is DNA?. D NA ( d eoxyribo n ucleic a cid)- a nucleic acid which stores genetic traits in the proteins it codes for. All living things contain DNA. D NA is a n ucleic a cid. Nucleic acids are made of nucleotide subunits hooked together. Nucleotides.

lora
Télécharger la présentation

Ch 12 DNA and RNA

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ch 12 DNA and RNA

  2. What is DNA? • DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid)- a nucleic acid which stores genetic traits in the proteins it codes for. • All living things contain DNA. • DNA is a nucleic acid. • Nucleic acids are made of nucleotide subunits hooked together.

  3. Nucleotides • Nucleotides- subunits of DNA made of: 1. Phosphate (PO4) 2. Sugar (deoxyribose). 3. Nitrogen base.

  4. Nitrogen Bases • Four different nitrogen bases makes four different nucleotides: • Guanine • Cytosine • Adenine • Thymine • These four nucleotides make up the DNA of almost every single living thing.

  5. Nucleotides

  6. Chargaff’s Rule • He measured amounts of each base in various organisms and found: • % of adenine (A) = % thymine (T) % of cytosine (C) = % guanine (G) • Chargaff’s rule told us that A bonds to T and C bonds to G • If 20% of strand is A, what %T? %C?

  7. Structure of DNA • Discovered by Watson and Crick • Double helix- 2 spiral strands of nucleotides bonded together

  8. Structure of DNA • Siderail backbone is the sugar and phosphates of nucleotides • Rungs are the nitrogen bases of nucleotides • A----T • C----G • Hydrogen bonds between bases hold two strands together

  9. What is DNA Replication? • Replicate = make “exact” copies. • DNA replication- copying of DNA so that a cell made divide • All DNA must be replicated before a cell can divide. Why?

  10. Enzymes and Replication • Helicase- enzyme that unwinds DNA • DNA polymerase-enzyme that moves along each strand and brings in bases for new strand copy

  11. DNA Replication • Can be a mistake in replication • Mutations-change in DNA • Mutagens- substances that cause mutations • X-rays • Toxins • Drugs • UV light, etc.

  12. Mutations • 3 types of mutations that can occur during DNA replication: • Insertions -extra nucleotides • Deletions –missing nucleotides • Substitutions –placement of wrong nucleotides • Can be helpful or harmful mutations. Insertion Deletion Substitution

  13. Most Destructive Mutation? • The bases, A, C, G, and T can be equated to letters of a “DNA sentence” THE DOG WAS HOT IN THE SUN • Substitution: THE DOG WAS NOT IN THE SUN • Insertion? THE DOG NWA SHO TIN THE SUN • Deletion? THE DOG ASH OTI NTH ESU N • Why should I care?

  14. How Much DNA Is In OUR Cells? • Chromosome-strands of DNA coiled tightly • Human cell has 46 (23 pairs) • 23 from Mom • 23 from Dad • Other organisms have different numbers of chromosomes

  15. 2 Types of Cells • Somatic cells –all body cells except sex cells • Diploidchromosomes are in pairs • 46=23 pairs for humans • 1 set (23) from mom, 1 set (23) from dad • Gametes - sex cells • Egg & sperm • Haploid no pairs (only 23 single chromosomes)

  16. Human Chromosomes • If all body cells contain the same # of chromosomes, why are all cells so different? • Different cells make different proteins due to different “active” segments of DNA. • Heart cells make proteins needed for the heart to work properly • Brain cells make proteins needed for the brain to work properly

  17. What is the Purpose of DNA? • DNA stores the genetic information that codes for proteins. • ALL CELL FACTORIES MAKE PROTEINS!

  18. What is the Purpose of DNA? • Gene- a segment of DNA that codes for a protein. • DNA has 1000’s of genes to make many different types of proteins. • Why are proteins important? • Protein - polymer of amino acids aa—aa—aa—aa—aa—aa—aa—aa = protein

  19. What is the Purpose of DNA?

  20. RNA (Ribonucleic acid) _____DNA____ vs._____RNA___ Transmits the genetic code to the rest of the cell Single stranded Sugar of RNA nucleotides is ribose A, C, G, U (uracil) NO T! Different forms: mRNA, rRNA, tRNA Found all over cell Stores the genetic code in the nucleus Double stranded Sugar of DNA nucleotides = deoxyribose A, C, G, T “DNA is DNA” Found in nucleus only

  21. DNA vs. RNA

  22. Part 1of Protein Synthesis: Transcription • Transcription- copying of DNA to mRNA that occurs in the nucleus. • DNA complementary to mRNA • ATA-CGG-AAT (DNA) transcription in nucleus UAU-GCC-UUA (RNA)

  23. Transcription cytoplasm Translation

  24. Part 2 of Protein Synthesis: Translation: • Translation- converting mRNA to protein which occurs at ribosomes in the cytoplasm • mRNA codons translation by ribosomes a.a.---a.a---a.a (protein) cytoplasm

  25. Part 2 of Protein Synthesis: Translation: • Codon-three bases of mRNA that code for an amino acid • UAU-GCC-UUA (3 mRNA codons) translation by ribosomes a.a.---a.a---a.a. (protein) • mRNA needs the help of tRNA to bring in the amino acids to be hooked together cytoplasm

  26. Whole Process ATA-CGG-AAT (DNA) transcription in nucleus UAU-GCC-UUA (3 mRNA codons) translation in cytoplasm at ribosomes a.a.-a.a-a.a. (protein) How do we know what amino acid results? The Codon Wheel!!!

  27. Part #1 Transcription cytoplasm Part #2 Translation

  28. The Codon Wheel***How do we use the wheel? There are 2 clues.

  29. The Codon Wheel

  30. Whole Process DNA: ATA-CGG-AAT transcription in nucleus mRNA: UAU-GCC-UUA(3 codons) translation in cytoplasm protein: a.a.-a.a-a.a. tyrosine-alanine-leucine Protein Synthesis Animation! How do we know what amino acid results? The Codon Wheel!!!

  31. Amino Acids • Where do our cells get these amino acids to build the proteins? • From FOOD! • We eat proteins, then these proteins are broken down (metabolized) into amino acids in our stomach. • We reuse these amino acids to build other proteins.

More Related