Objective 11 Notes Tuesday Jan 17

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Transcript Objective 11 Notes Tuesday Jan 17

OBJECTIVE 11 NOTES
Explain the evolutionary
significance of a nearly universal
genetic code
The Central Dogma of Molecular
Biology
• What is it?
– This is the term used when DNA is
transcribed into RNA and RNA is translated
into a protein.
• Why does this work?
– Because of the common genetic code
What is the genetic code?
Think Pair Share
Talk to your classmates:
What is the result of the common coding
for amino acids?
How is this important in genetic
engineering /biotechnology?
What do we mean by a nearly
universal genetic code?
DNA Evidence for Evolution
Similarities
• Living organisms share a common
mechanism that copies and translates
heritable genetic information.
• All living organisms translate the genetic code
using ribosomes.
• They all translate it with the aid of small
molecules called transfer RNA.
• They all read it in the same direction, and they
all read it in the same way, translating the
code 3 letters at a time into sequences of
amino acids, the building blocks of proteins.
DNA Evidence for Evolution
Differences
• In some organisms, a handful of these 3-letter “words”
have different meanings. Our own cells, for example,
contain mitochondrial DNA in which 4 of the 64 words
have different meanings from the “standard” code. In
most organisms, these differences are so slight as to
be trivial.
• In common molds, for example, the sequence “UGA”
is translated into the amino acid tryptophan. In the
standard code, it's a “stop” signal. The other 63 words,
however, are identical between humans, elephants,
daisies, and molds.
Mitochondrial DNA differences in Red from
the Universal Code
What else?
• 48 of the 64 words are identical in all living
organisms, and only 16 are known to vary
across the enormous diversity of living
things.
• In fact, the entire biotechnology industry is
built upon the universality of the genetic
code.
How Does DNA Relate to
Evolution?
• Mutations (changes) in DNA provide a source of
genetic variation.
• Commonalities in DNA between all organisms on
Earth provide evidence for common descent.
• Slight differences in the genetic code reflect
branching evolutionary relationships.