DNA - Central Magnet School
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Transcript DNA - Central Magnet School
Mrs. Stewart
Biology I Honors
STANDARDS:
CLE 3210.4.1 Investigate how genetic
information is encoded in nucleic acids.
CLE 3210.4.2 Describe the relationships
among genes, chromosomes, proteins, and
hereditary traits.
OBJECTIVES: (today, I will…)
Evaluate the structure of nucleic acids
Determine how genetic information is
“coded” in nucleic acids
Create complementary DNA strands using
Chargaff’s rule
Nucleic Acids
Macromolecules containing :
Carbon
Hydrogen
Oxygen
Nitrogen
Phosphorus
Function: Store and transmit
genetic/hereditary information
Two types of Nucleic
Acids
DNA
RNA
DNA Stands for:
Deoxyribonucleic Acid
DNA Structure
DNA is made up of two strands that are arranged
into a twisted, ladder-like structure called a
Double Helix.
A strand of DNA is made up of millions of tiny
subunits called Nucleotides.
Each nucleotide consists of 3 parts:
1. Phosphate group
2. sugar
3. Nitrogenous base
Nucleotides
Phosphate
Nitrogenous
Base
Pentose
Sugar
DNA sugar
The 5 carbon sugar for DNA is Deoxyribose
That is where the name (Deoxyribo)nucleic
acid comes from
Nucleotides
The phosphate and sugar form the backbone
of the DNA molecule, whereas the bases form
the “rungs”.
There are four types of nitrogenous bases.
4 different Nitrogen bases
A
Adenine
C
Cytosine
T
Thymine
G
Guanine
Purines
A
Adenine
G
Guanine
Pyrimidines
T
Thymine
C
Cytosine
Chargaff’s rule
Erwin Chargaff observed that the percentage of
adenine equals the percentage of thymine, and
the percentage of cytosine equals the percentage
of guanine.
Example: in one strand of DNA the following
amounts may be found:
15% Adenine
15% Thymine
35% Cytosine
35% Guanine
Complementary base pairing:
Each base will only bond with one other
specific base. (Chargaff’s rule)
Adenine (A)
Thymine (T)
Cytosine (C)
Guanine (G)
Form a base pair.
Form a base pair.
DNA Structure
Because of this complementary base pairing,
the order of the bases in one strand
determines the order of the bases in the other
strand.
A
T
C
G
T
A
C
G
A
T
G
C
T
A
Practice:
Complete the complementary DNA strand for the
following sequence:
GTAACTCCT
CATAGAGGA
CTCCTAA AC
GAGGATTTG
TAGAATGCC
ATCTTACGG
DNA Structure
To crack the genetic code found in DNA we
need to look at the sequence of bases.
The bases are arranged in triplets (sets of 3)
called codons.
AGG-CTC-AAG-TCC-TAG
TCC-GAG-TTC-AGG-ATC
DNA Structure
A gene is a section of DNA that codes for a
protein.
Each unique gene has a unique sequence of
bases.
This unique sequence of bases will code for the
production of a unique protein.
It is these proteins and combination of proteins
that give us a unique phenotype.
DNA
Gene
Protein
Trait
Your Task
Draw a flow chart to
show how to get from:
DNA
Replication
Mrs. Stewart
Biology I Honors
STANDARDS:
CLE 3210.4.1 Investigate how genetic
information is encoded in nucleic acids.
CLE 3210.4.2 Describe the relationships
among genes, chromosomes, proteins, and
hereditary traits.
OBJECTIVES: (today, I will…)
Evaluate the structure of DNA and the need
for replication
Create complementary DNA strands to
simulate replication
DNA Double Helix
Made of 2 strands of nucleotides
These strands are joined together with
the pairing of the Nitrogen bases
(A, T, C, G)
The bases are joined by Hydrogen bonds
Think – Pair - Share
Look at the picture and try to figure out what
“antiparallel” means.
Did you notice that the strands of DNA run
in “opposite directions”?
5’ and 3’ ends of DNA
Refers to the orientation of the
carbon atoms on the
deoxyribose
Strands run in opposite
directions
One strand is “upside down”
Think – pair - share
Why does DNA need to replicate itself?
DNA Replication
DNA makes an exact copy of itself
Occurs during the S stage of interphase
Semi-conservative
Each strand of the double
helix will serve as a template
for the new strands that will
form
End result is two complete
DNA double helixes – each
containing one strand from
the original molecule and one
newly made complementary
strand
Helicase
Enzyme that “unzips” the
DNA double helix by
breaking the Hydrogen
bonds between the bases
to separate the strands in
preparation for replication
Creates a “replication
fork”
DNA Polymerase
Uses “free-floating” nucleotides in
the nucleus to build the
complementary strand of DNA
5‘ to 3‘ direction
The new DNA strands need to form in the 5
prime to 3 prime direction.
Leading strand: forms continuously because
it is forming in the 5’ to 3’ direction
Lagging strand: forms in short segments
called Okazaki fragments, so that it can also
form in the 5’ to 3’ direction
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