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Must replicate faithfully: the process of copying DNA is highly accurate, genetic instructions are passed on new cells with no errors)
Must encode the phenotype: carry instructions to produce the organism’s observable traits (in charge of all the physical characteristics)
Must have the capacity to vary: DNA must be able to change overtime/create genetic diversity
90k years ago, human bones of a female hybrid (made of two different human breeds) were found in a cave
Damaged DNA, problems isolating it
you cannot understand genes without knowing about DNA, and that leads to understanding which genes encode for which proteins
Chromatin (through the study of white blood cells that have large nuclei, isolated it and discovered that chromatin was the substance inside the nucleus, which is made up of DNA and protein)
DNA contains four nitrogenous bases (and named them adenine, thymine, guanine, cytosine)
nucleotide-simple structure, less variation (sugar, phosphate base, nitrogenous base), identified that nucleotides are the units of nucleic acid, incorrectly thought that there was a definite arrangement of nucleotides
DNA varies in base pair composition, definite ratio in different nitrogenous bases. Discovered that adenine is always = to thymine, and guanine is always equal to cytosine (Chargaff’s rules)
If C = 20%, then G = 20%, adding to 40%. This would mean that T = 30% and A = 30% to add up to 100%.
Supporting all genetic info is encoded in the structure of DNA or RNA
Something in the virulent bacteria mixed with something in the rough type (non virulent bacteria) and ended up killing a mouse. The rough type bacteria was transformed.
Most important: tested two different strains of bacteria, smooth strain (IIIS) = virulent, and rough strain (IIS) = non-virulent. They then heated up the virulent (IIIS) strain which didn’t kill the mouse when injected (due to killing the enzymes). Then, they injected the heat killed (IIIS) strain with the non-virulent (IIS) strain and found that it killed the mouse.
revealed the transforming principle through the tests using RNase, protease, and DNase.
RNase was there to destroy any RNA in the sample
Protease to destroy any proteins in the sample
DNase cleaves any DNA.
Samples with the RNase and protease injected resulted in the transformed bacteria, but the sample with DNase injected resulted in the transformation not taking place.
DNA was the cause of transformation
Bacteriophage, a virus that infects bacteria (ex. It infects e. coli).
They radioactively labeled protein and DNA to track where they went.
They labeled protein with sulfur, and DNA with phosphorus, letting them sit in two jars with the bacteriophage present.
They blended and spun them and found that the bacteria did not have sulfur present, but had phosphorus present.
DNA is present in the virus, not protein. Therefore genetic material is DNA not protein
They couldn’t use radioactive carbon because it’s present in both DNA and protein
DNA was the source of genetic info
They did not conduct any experiments themselves, just used already available information
DNA: primary structure is deoxyribose is in DNA, double helix
Each nucleotide contains: a deoxyribose sugar, phosphate group, one of the four bases (adenine, guanine, thymine, cytosine)
Stores genetic info long term
ribose is in RNA, single stranded
Each nucleotide contains ribose sugar, phosphate group, one of the four bases (adenine, guanine, uracil, cytosine)
Carries instructions from DNA to build proteins
Double ring bases 6 and 5 carbon ring: Guanine, Adenine.
PO4- group at 5’ position, OH group at 3’ position.
Phosphodiester bonds linking adjacent nucleotides created from 5’ PO4- + 3’ OH, all covalent bonds
Single ring bases: Cytosine, Thymine, Uracil. At the 5’ position there is phosphorus attached to it, covalent bonds
Hydrogen bonds between complementary bases on antiparallel strands.
3’ end
5' end
phosphodiester bond
3 (triple) bonds (more stable, therefore more resistant to heat)
2 bonds, less stable
A - U = 2 bonds
G - C = 3 bonds
Occurs between single stranded nucleic acids as long as they share a region that can complementary base-pair and they are antiparallel
Right-handed helix with less H2O present and shorter and wider
Unlikely to physiologically exist
Right-handed helix with lots of H2O present and most stable physiologically
Most predominant form in cell
Left-handed helix with zigzag sugar phosphate backbone
Stretches of DNA sequences (GCGCGC)
Associated with transcriptionally active regions of DNA
DNA appears in a clump called the nucleoid
Supercoiled DNA is overwound or underwound, causing it to twist on itself
Positive supercoil is when the DNA is overrotated, the helix twists on itself, negative supercoiling is when the DNA is underrotated, the helix twists on itself in the other direction
100bp = 10 complete rotations in relaxed dna
Example: if there are 300 bp and 20 rotations, it would be negatively supercoiled
Made up of DNA + protein
Present in euchromatin or heterochromatin
Can be changed through methylation, when a methyl group is added to the DNA, affecting phenotypic expression of the gene
methylation, when a methyl group is added to the DNA, affecting phenotypic expression of the gene
Mice test: more methylation, more different colour
Arms of the chromosome
Crossing over happens more often
Centromere
Consists of eight histone proteins which the DNA wraps 1.65 times
Attached to each other by the Linker DNA
Made up of chains of amino acids, have primary, secondary, and tertiary structure
Act as enzymes, build and repair tissues, transport oxygen
Not able to replicate like DNA
Doubling of DNA
Has to be incredibly accurate, one error per million base pairs would lead to 6000 mistakes every time a cell divides
All of the DNA from the parent is intact, and another new set of DNA is produced in the first doubling. In the second doubling, the identical parent strand conserves itself and makes another strand whereas the new strand makes identical copies of itself (25% conserved, 75% new)
The DNA breaks into segments and each segment serves as a template for new DNA to build on it
Half of each strand is the parent one, other half is the new one
They used two isotopes of Nitrogen (N14, more common, and N15, more rare)
Centrifuged both of them to see if they settled at the bottom or not
N15 is heavier, so it settled at the bottom when DNA was added
Daughter strands were neither N14 or N15 and settled in the middle
After the 2nd replication, one strand was lighter and one was heavier
Semi conservable model
Semi-conservative
units of replication, segment of DNA where replication happens, 200,000-300,000bp in length
the particular base pair where replication begins on the segment (replicon)
Circular DNA, takes place in E. coli
Where two replication forks move in different directions
place where the unwinding of DNA takes place
unidirectionally as well as bidirectionally (mostly bidirectional in e.coli)
connects Okazaki fragments by sealing nicks in the sugar–phosphate backbone
b. (epsilon); translesion DNA synthesis
a. RNA only
c. Different genes may be transcribed from different strands of DNA.
c. The 5' end of a prokaryotic mRNA can be translated while the 3' end is still being transcribed.
e. The third base pairing between the tRNA and mRNA is relaxed.
a. 5' AGU 3' and 5' AGC 3'
The nucleotides in the Shine–Dalgarno sequence of the mRNA pair with their complementary nucleotides in the 16S rRNA.
b. specific rRNA base pairs with a sequence in mRNA to position a ribosome at the start codon.
a. negative inducible.
1.Double stranded DNA unwinds at replication origin
2. Single stranded templates are created for synthesis of new DNA, this is where the replication bubble appears, with a replication fork at each end.
3. The forks proceed around the circle
4. Two circular DNA molecules are produced
Linear replication, multiple points of origin where replication bubbles appear
DNA synthesis takes place on both strands at the end of the bubble as the replication forks proceed outwards.
Eventually, the forks of adjacent bubbles run into each other resulting in the fusion of the DNA segments
This produces two identical linear DNA molecules
One
5’ to 3’
the strand that continuously is made in the 5’ to 3’ direction towards the replication fork
produces fragments
discontinuously synthesized short DNA fragments forming the lagging strand
Initiator protein
Relieves strain ahead of replication fork
Synthesizes new DNA molecules by adding nucleotides one by one
an existing group of RNA nucleotides with a 3′–OH group to which a new nucleotide can be added; they are usually 10–12 nucleotides long. – Primase: RNA polymerase
Okazaki fragment
DNA polymerase III
1. Helicase to unwind the DNA
2. Single-strand-binding proteins to protect the single nucleotide strands and prevent secondary structures
3. DNA gyrase to remove strain ahead of the replication fork
4. Primase to synthesize primers with a 3′–OH group at the beginning of each DNA fragment
5. DNA polymerase to synthesize the leading and lagging nucleotide strands
Template strand
Raw material: nucleotides (unit of DNA, made up of a sugar, phosphate, and base)
Enzymes (to catalyze reactions) and other proteins
causes single strands to break
causes a double strand to break (gyrase)
Doubling of DNA, RNA formation caused by DNA polymerase
Replication is faster because replication process involves doubling the entire DNA, where the transcription process only happens at a relatively slower speed to pieces and fragments of DNA.
Primary: Straight strand, has base pairs and Uracil instead of Thymine
Has OH group, unlike DNA
Secondary: Folded structure with base pairs labelled
making of ribosomes
coding information transcribed from DNA
link between messenger and ribosome, brings amino acids to add to the polypeptide chain (how protein synthesis takes place)
ability to make bonds with small ribonuclear proteins
is only present in prokaryotes and helps with getting rid of foreign DNA.
siRNA (small interfering RNA)
pirRNA
Synthesis of RNA molecule from a DNA template
One DNA template is required, also
Ribonucleic material/bases (ribonucleotide triphosphates)
Transcription apparatus (enzymes along with supporting proteins)
complementary and antiparallel to the template strand
5’ to 3’
Any sequence that is present before RNA coding
Any sequence after the gene
transcribed
Template strand is being used for transcription of the gene
The non template strand is not copied
3 nucleotides
The substrate for transcription – Ribonucleoside triphosphates—rNTPs added to the 3′–OH group of the growing RNA molecule
The sigma (σ) factor: binding to the promoter when transcription starts, the transcription will not take place if there is no sigma factor
Since RNA synthesis doesn’t require a primer, new nucleotides are added to the 3’ end of the RNA molecule, and DNA unwinds at the front of the transcription bubble, and then rewinds
