Utilisateur
A transcription termination signal (terminator)
A stop codon (UAA, UAG, or UGA)
The 5′ cap and the poly-A tail
3 introns
The 5′ untranslated region (5′ UTR)
It means “colored bodies” because they stain strongly in cells (discovered in the 1800s).
Genes are located on chromosomes, and chromosomes explain Mendel’s inheritance patterns.
(Boveri & Sutton ~1900; confirmed by Stevens & Morgan ~1910)
All the DNA in an organism’s cells (nuclear + mitochondrial).
The amount of DNA in a haploid G1 cell — the smallest amount of DNA in a species.
Examples:
E. coli = 5 Mb
Drosophila = 180 Mb
Humans = 3,100 Mb
Paris japonica = 150,000 Mb (huge!)
Genome size does NOT correlate with organism complexity.
Plants can have far more DNA than humans.
To measure how repetitive a genome is by seeing how fast DNA strands find partners again.
Steps:
Isolate DNA
Shear it
Heat → single strands
Cool → strands re-anneal
The time when 50% of DNA has re-annealed — a measure of repetition.
Because it is mostly unique DNA, so each piece has only one partner.
Highly repetitive (satellite DNA)
Moderately repetitive
Non-repetitive (single-copy genes)
Fast → medium → slow reannealing
Plants (like corn) and mammals have far more repetitive DNA than bacteria.
It includes transposable elements and multi-copy genes.
DNA sequences that copy and insert themselves into new locations.
To make large amounts of:
rRNA
tRNA
histone proteins
Cells need huge amounts of histones to package DNA into nucleosomes.
Histones: H1, H2A, H2B, H3, H4
Dispersed (C. elegans)
Clustered (Humans)
Tandem arrays (Drosophila)
In clusters, mainly at:
6p21 (54 genes)
1q21 (6 genes)
It makes 18S, 5.8S, and 28S rRNAs after cleavage.
Multiple copies in tandem arrays (hundreds of copies per cluster).
Highly repetitive tandem repeats (2–200 bp units, up to 1000 repeats).
Centromeres
Telomeres
(TTAGGG)n repeated thousands of times.
DNA with unusual GC content forms separate bands in CsCl gradients.
Highly repetitive
Type What it contains
Non-repetitive Single-copy genes
Moderately repetitive TEs + multi-copy genes
Highly repetitive Satellite DNA (centromeres, telomeres)
Whether chromosomes disappear during interphase.
The same chromosomes seen in telophase reappear in prophase of the next division.
Chromosomes persist through interphase — they are not destroyed and re-formed. It proved chromosomes are continuous physical structures, not temporary.
Sea urchin embryos with different numbers of chromosomes.
Only embryos with the correct chromosome number developed normally. All chromosomes are required for normal development. It showed chromosomes carry essential information (genes), not just DNA mass.
Grasshopper chromosomes during meiosis.
Adults have pairs of chromosomes
Gametes have one of each pair
Chromosome behavior matches Mendel’s laws → chromosomes carry genes.
Sex is determined by chromosomes (X and Y).
XX = female, XY = male
This was the first proof that a specific chromosome controls a trait
The eye-color gene is on the X chromosome. It proved genes are physically located on chromosomes.
In the image:
One chromosome is large
One is small
That matches the X and Y chromosomes separating.
In Anaphase I:
Homologous chromosomes separate
X and Y go to opposite poles
In oogenesis, both sex chromosomes are X and equal in size → you would not see a big and small chromosome.
So it must be male meiosis (spermatogenesis) and Anaphase I.
Cesium chloride (CsCl) → makes a density gradient
Ethidium bromide (EtBr) → makes DNA fluoresce
DNA separates into bands based on base composition.
Fragments with different G+C content form satellite bands.
Mouse DNA formed bands around:
~30% GC
~42% GC
DNA with unusual GC% separates from the main band.
Satellite DNA = DNA that formed a separate band because it has a different base composition.
A. Highly repetitive
Because it re-annealed very fast in Cot-curve experiments.
It means they can copy themselves and insert into new DNA locations without needing the host cell to copy them.
They are self-replicating DNA parasites inside the genome.
Copies are scattered throughout the genome with no pattern.
Example: C. elegans histone genes
How to identify:
Copies appear on different chromosomes or far apart
No repeating block
Copies are close together in one region but not in a repeating order.
Example: Human histone genes
54 genes at 6p21
6 genes at 1q21
How to identify:
Many copies in one location
Random order (H2A, H4, H3, H2B mixed)
Copies are arranged back-to-back in repeating units.
Example: Drosophila histone genes, human rRNA genes
How to identify:
Same sequence repeated:
ABC ABC ABC ABC
Looks like cloned blocks
An 80S ribosome made of:
4 rRNAs
~80 ribosomal proteins
They are multiple-copy tandem arrays.
Two types:
45S rRNA genes → make 18S, 5.8S, 28S
5S rRNA genes → separate tandem array
So humans use:
Multiple copy – tandem array
Color Meaning
Yellow Genes = euchromatin
Blue Satellite DNA =. heterochromatin
