transforming principle is heat killed smoth strain trasnformed rough strain to s strain and killed mouse
dna is high in P where protein coat is high in s
after infection, blending and centrifugation what stayed behind in the progeny is the phosphorous (radioactivie)--> the dna stayed.
-storage and decoding genetic information
- enzymes
1. nitrogenous bases
2. sugar (ribose or deoxy)
3. phosphate groups
DNA or RNA. phosphate of one nucleotide bonds to the 3 'OH of the sugar in another nucleotide( sugar phosphate backbone)
can remain as high energy molcules: ATP and GTP (NTPS)
ex. atp has 3 phosphate groups linked by phosphoanhydride bonds which are unstable bc the negative charges on phosphate repel each other (bond strain) when broken relieves this repulsion and releases energy.
can also be modified to carry and transfer electrons during redox (NADH, FADH2, FMNH2, NADPH)
adenine, cytosine, guanine, thymine, uracil
deoxyribose and ribose
did u do it
resonance occurs when electrons can flow through neighbouring pi (doouble) bonds- delocalize. these lone pairs cannot accept hydrogen bonds
in terms of hydrogen bonding they are the same the only difference is a methyl group on c5 in thymine
pyrimidines: N1
Purine: N9
carbon 2
ribose: atoms C1-C4
deoxyribose: C5 and C2 are NOT chiral
nucleoside is only base and sugar
purines: ine --> becomes osine. if deoxy sugar add deoxy at start
ex. adenosine, deoxyadenosine
pyrimidnes: end in idine. if deoxy sugar add deoxy at start. ex. cytidine, deoxycytidine
usally c5 (particulary in NTPs), can also attach at c2, c3
deoxyadenosine 5' triphosphate (dATP)
ribothymidine 5' monophsophate (rTMP)
a short lived dna intermediate- the deoxy form of uracil used to make thymine during dna synthesis
nucleic acids are polymers of nucleotides linked by 3'-5' phosphodiester bonds
phosphoesters link carbons to phopshate groups where as a phosphodiester links two different carbon atoms to one phosphate group
links two phosphates to each other
they are written from 5' left to 3' right
phosphodiester bonds
the exact order of nucleotide residues- the sequence of the bases joined by phosphodiester bonds from 5' to 3'
negatively charged moclules at physiological pH bc each nucleotide in the backbone has a phosphate group and a t neutral pH the phosphates are deprotonated (have a negative charge)
the backbones of both are made of alternating sugar and phosphate groups linked by phosodiester bonds.
phosphate groups: polar and - charge
sugar: polar due to OH
Rna is more polar and less stable because of extra OH on its sugar
for just dna or rna, optional to classify d prefix or direction
when working witha mixed ysstem classify direction and d prefix or d prefix with (dna) at the end
it is an enzyme that hydrolyzes phosphodiester bond (breaking a bond by adding water), it cuts one o f the ester linkages to produce a 5' phosphate and a 3'Oh + H+ from water
RNA's 2-OH group attacks the adjacent phosphate in basic conditions causing self clevage of the phosphodiester bond. dna lacks this 2'-OH so no nucleophilic attacks occurs making DNA alkali stable
first the 2'OH is deprotonated and attacks the phosphorous, now the bond between the phosphorous and one of the ozygens must break to release this strain. usually the 3'O-P breaks (major favoured pathway--> forms a stable cyclic phosphate)--> produces a 2'3' cylic phosphate intermediate and 5'OH fragment. after this hydrolsis can can open the ring at either 2' or 3' position
Cytosine deamination loss of an amino group (NH2) (from added water). its a spontaneous uncatalyzed reaction that happens naturally over time.
because uracil pairs with adenine instead of guanine. so if the uracil remains during replication the G-C base pair becomes an A-T base pair- a point mutation (transition)
so that uracil generated by cytosine deamination can be recognized as an error. if DNA used uracil normally repair enzymes couldnt tell which U's are real and which came from cytosine damage . Thymine (a methylated uracil) makes it easy to spot and fix deamination errors
single ring, heterocyclic, aromatic compounds.
planar and electron delocalized (pi system over the ring)
nitrogens and carbonyl groups make them capable of h bonding
found in c u t
double ring system
aromatic with electron delocalization over both rings
mostly planar but can have a slight pucker due to steric strain
largely hydrophobic but contain some polar groups (N and O) that allow h bonding
A and G
poorly soluble in water (hydrophobic aromatic rings)
can form hydrogen bonds through N and O atoms (important for base pairing)
stacking interaction (pi-pi interaction) between aromatic rings stabilize DNA and RNA structure
pyrimidines are slightly better since they are smaller
because their nitrogenous bases are aromatic with delocalized pi electrons that absorb strongly at 260 nm
DNA/RNA: max at 260 nm (typical A260/A280 ratio for pure dna 1.95, RNA= 2.0)
proteins: max at 280 due to aromatic amino acids
the ratio decreases because
dna absorbs stronly at 260 nm
protein absorb strongly at 280 nm
so contamination adds more 280 nm absorbance which lower the ratio
280 increases in the fraction so the ratio decreases
a solutions absorance to its concerntain and path length. absorbance is directly proportional to both the concentration of the absorbing species and the path length.
a phosphoester bond joins phosphate to sugar while phosphodiester bonds join two sugars via phosphate in nucliec acids (3' carbon to the 5' carbon.)
through hydrogen bonds between the bases (non covalent)
A=T, G=C, purines=pyrimidines. helped watson and crick deuce the double helical structure of DNA
because water itself forms strong hydrogen bonds, it can compete with and disrupt hydrogen bonds inside or between macromolecules. to stay stable intramoclule or intermolecular h bonds must be shielded from water usually by being buried in hydrophobic regions.
the free ends of a nucleic acid are structurally and chemically distinct from one another
a-T: can from 2 hydrogen bonds, A's N-H with T's O and A's N with T's N-H
G-c: 3 hydrogen bonds, G's O and N-H's and C's N-H, N and O.
stablized by base stracking and hydrogen bonds.
base stacking (primary stabilsing force): mostly vanderwaals and also hydrophobic forces
strands are antiparallel with an overall right handed twist
ribose.deoxyribose and phosphates exposted to h20
hydrophobic core/polar exterior
bases largely excluded from h20
10 bp per turn
the polar sugar/phosphate backbone is found on the outside while hte more hydrophobic bases stack in the core of the structure
bp requires specfic h bonding between complementary bases on the two strands. the remaining h bonding groups on the bases that are not used in pairing are exposed to the major and minor grooves of the double helix where they can interact with water, ions or proteins (dna protein recognition/solvent interaction)
direction comes from the asymmetry of the sugar phosphate backbone 5'phospahte to 3' hydroxyl
28 bp --> 56 bases
a=t --> 14
g=c 56-14= 42/2= 21
seperation of strands, and the breaking of hydrogen bonds between complementary bases without breaking covalent bonds in the backbone happens when heat, high pH or chemical agens disrupt these bonds and base stacking interactiosn that stabilize the double helix
denaturation happens when conditions overcome the stabilizing forces of base pairing. its reversible and biologically necessary in processes like replication and transcription where strands must separate to serve as templates for new synthesis
Tm is the temp at which half of the DNA is single stranded it depends on base compositon (midpoint of melting)
higher Tm with higher GC content (since more h bonds/stacking interactions)
this is asigmoidal relationship, cooperative process, and the temp range is relatively small
absorbance at 260 nm increases this is called the hyperchromic effect. unstacking/broken hydrogen bonds--> pi electrons more exposed--> greater absorption of uv light
because single stranded dna has a higher absorance than double stranded
hyper--> relatively high absorbance (SS DNA)
hypo--> low absorbance (DS DNA)
denaturation: heat or high ph break h bonds--> seperate
renaturation (reannealing): cooling or neutralization allows complementary strands to realign and reform base pairs
1. nucleation (slow): random complementary sequences find eachother and form a small region of correct base pairing
2. zippering (fast): once a short double stranded region forms, the rest of the strand rapidly "zips up" through succesive base pairing
sequence complexity: simple (repetitive) sequences reanneal faster; complex genomes reanneal slower
temperature: optimal renaturation occurs just below the melting temp (25c below tm), too low slows diffusion, too high prevents pairing
concentration: higher dna conc increases collision frequency--> faster nucleationg
GC pairs have an elevated Tm as they have stronger base stacking interactions
one with the highest gc content or the lowest at content
extreme ph (high or low)--> lowers tm
high ph (alkaline): deprotonates bases--> breaks hydrogen bonds
low ph (acidic) protonates bases--> disrupts base pairing
both conditons destablize the double helix causing dentauration at lower temps
increasing salt conc (Na+, K+)--> increases Tm--> stabilizes the double helix. postive ions (mg2+/ postive proteins-histones) shield the negative charges on the phosphate backbone reducing electrostatic repulsion between strands
low salt or no salt--> decreases tm bc repuslion between phosphate groups makes the strands easier to seperate
1. A pairs with U
2. often single stranded
3. intrastrand (within one strand) base pairing--> creates loops, hairpins, complex 3d shapes, making rnas structures highly dependent on its nucleotide sequence
vs dna which is interstrand--> forms a stable double helix that is relatively independent of sequence
use high salt conc-> higher tm/stabilize imperfect duplex
can also do low temp, second option, less energy available to break mismatched bps
rna folds into complex secondary structures (hairpins, loops, bulges) stabilized by:
w-c pairs:
G=C (3 h bonds)
A=U (2 h bonds)
non w-c pairs:
(wobble) G=U: forms 2 h bonds, slightly weaker but stable
sequence-->structure (spontaneous)-->function
no
A=U
T=A
G=C
antiparallel also, right handed also, base stacking interactions also
false, partially ds so can melt but differently than dna
stability not signifcantly different
3' to 5'
