Transcript DNA
DNA
History
Structure
Replication
History of DNA
Scientists thought protein was the
heredity material
Several Scientists disproved this and
proved it was DNA:
Griffith
Worked with virulent S and nonvirulent R strain of
pneumococcus bacteria
Made the harmless R strain transform into S strain
when it took in DNA from the killed S strain.
Hershey & Chase
Worked with
radioactively traced
bacteriophages
(viruses that attack
bacteria).
Further proof that
DNA was the cell’s
genetic material.
Radioactive
32P
was injected into bacteria!
Chargaff
Developed the base
pairing rule by
comparing the
amounts of A, T, C,
G in the cell.
Nucleotide pairing:
Nucleotide Bases in Somatic Cells
% Present
35.00%
30.3 30.3
30.00%
25.00%
19.5 19.9
20.00%
A
T
15.00%
G
– Adenine Thymine
10.00%
C
– Guanine Cytosine
5.00%
0.00%
Franklin
Took x-ray
photographs
of DNA
Determined
double-helix
structure
Watson & Crick
Watson and Crick
used Franklin’s x-rays,
Chargraff’s rule and
developed their model
of the DNA molecule
(for which they won a
Nobel Prize).
Structure of DNA
Shape of DNA
Double stranded,
twisted helix, called
a double helix
Shape similar to a
twisted ladder
Nucleotide Monomers
DNA
Nucleotide is the basic unit
(monomer)
Made of:
Sugar – Deoxyribose
Phosphate group (PO4)
Base – A T C G (Adenine, Thymine,
Cytosine, Guanine)
DNA Nucleotide
(glue picture provided in NB)
Phosphate
Group
O
O=P-O
O
5
CH2
O
N
C1
C4
Sugar
(deoxyribose)
C3
C2
Nitrogenous base
(A, G, C, or T)
Polymer Structure
Sides made of phosphate group and
deoxyribose sugar
Center (rungs) made of nitrogen bases
bonded by hydrogen bonds (A = T
and C = G)
Direction of Nucleotides
Each carbon in the sugar is given a
number 1’ – 5’
Sides are antiparallel – one side goes 5’
to 3’ and the other 3’ to 5’
This determines the direction that it is
“read” by enzymes
DNA Structure
(glue picture provided in NB)
5
P
O
3
3
5
O 5
O
C
G
1
4
P
5
P
2
3
O
T
3
2
1
4
5
O
A
3
O
3
P
5
P
P
Location of DNA
DNA is a large
(macro) molecule,
and stays in the
nucleus
DNA Replication
S Phase of Cell Cycle
DNA must be
copied before the
cell can divide
Occurs during the
synthesis (S) part of
cell cycle (before
mitosis).
S
phase
G1
interphase
Mitosis
-prophase
-metaphase
-anaphase
-telophase
G2
Helicase enzyme
DNA unwinds and unzips with help of DNA
helicases
These enzymes break the hydrogen bonds
between base pairs.
This point is called the replication fork.
5’ Parental DNA Molecule
3’
3’
Replication
Fork
5’
Polymerase Enzyme
DNA polymerase moves in new nucleotides
Can only add to 3’ end of nucleotide
Follows the base-pairing rule
Two identical DNA strands are formed
5’
Nucleotide
DNA Polymerase
Direction of Replication
RNA
Primer
3’
5’
Proofreading enzymes
Other enzymes
“proofread” the
replicated strand
looking for errors
(mutations).
Incorrect
nucleotides are
removed and
replaced