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A Glance on A Glance on Genetics - Genetics - II II
23

A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

Dec 22, 2015

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Page 1: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

A Glance on A Glance on Genetics - IIGenetics - II

Page 2: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

In this presentation……

Part 1 – DNA

Part 2 – RNA

Part 3 – Operations on Genes

Page 3: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

Part

1

DNADNA

Page 4: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

• Some DNA can jump• DNA responds to signals from outside the cell• DNA is only the beginning for understanding the human genome• DNA and proteins are key molecules of the cell nucleus• One gene makes one protein• A gene is made of DNA• Bacteria and viruses have DNA too• DNA is packaged in a chromosome• A gene is a discrete sequence of DNA nucleotides• There is a phosphate group in nucleotide along with sugar

molecule whereas no phosphate group exists in nucleoside

Page 5: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

This is an example of a gel electrophoresis run.. Each column was loaded with a different mixture. The mixtures are then separated vertically by their charge and size. The gel is then stained, producing dark bands where a molecule of a given size or charge is present in a mixture. In this gel, the columns marked with a - are a control group. The band marked with an arrow is filled only in the + columns.

Page 6: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

Electron microscope

view of human

chromosomes

Page 7: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

Human chromosomes

Page 8: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.
Page 9: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

Structure of DNA

Page 10: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

The DNA molecule is shaped like a twisted ladder, is a double helix, was found in 1953 by Watson and Crick

Page 11: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

Alpha Helix

Page 12: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

Beta Sheet/Strand

Page 13: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

A half DNA ladder is a template for copying the whole

Page 14: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

Forms of DNA structure

Page 15: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

DNA is a linear polymer of four nucleotides viz., deoxy Adenosine monophosphate (abbreviated A), deoxy Thymidine monophosphate (abbreviated T), deoxy Guanosine monophosphate (abbreviated G), and deoxy Cytidine monophosphate (abbreviated C)

Page 16: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

Double helix maintains a constant width because purines always face pyrimidines in the complementary A-T and G-C base pairs. The sequence in the figure isT-AC-GA-TG-C

Page 17: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

Base pairing provides the mechanism for replicating DNA

Page 18: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

Part

2

RNARNA

Page 19: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

• Some viruses store genetic information in RNA• RNA was the first genetic molecule• RNA is a very similar polymer of Adenosine monophosphate,

Guanosine monophosphate, Cytidine monophosphate, and Uridine monophosphate

• Uridine monophosphate, abbreviated U, is a nucleotide functionally equivalent to Thymidine monophosphate

• RNA is an intermediary between DNA and protein• The RNA message is sometimes edited• RNA was discovered after DNA• RNA occurs in the nucleus as well as in the cytoplasm• Ribosomes are 2/3 RNA (a type of RNA known as ribosomal RNA or

rRNA) and 1/3 protein

Page 20: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

• Cells of developing embryos contain high levels of RNA

• RNA has ribose sugar instead of deoxyribose sugar. The base uracil (U) replaces thymine (T) in RNA

• Most RNA is single stranded, although tRNA forms a “cloverleaf” structure due to complementary base pairing

• There are 61 different tRNAs, each having a different binding site for the amino acid and a different anticodon. For instance, for the codon UUU, the anticodon is AAA

• Energy for binding the amino acid to tRNA comes from ATP conversion to adenosine monophosphate (AMP)

• mRNA molecules are long containing 500-10,000 nucleotides

Page 21: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

Part

3

Operations Operations on Geneson Genes

Page 22: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

• Biochemical reactions are controlled by enzymes, and often are organized into chains of reactions known as metabolic pathways

• Genes undergo different operations called mutation, cross over, local twist and variation

• Mutations are changes in genetic information, usually only one bit

• Variation modifies the encoded value by a small increment or decrement

• Crossover exchanges a contiguous fragment of an individual• There could be single crossover, two point crossover or

uniform crossover

Page 23: A Glance on Genetics - II. In this presentation…… Part 1 – DNA Part 2 – RNA Part 3 – Operations on Genes.

• Some types of mutations are automatically repaired• Replication is of three types viz., conservative, semi-

conservative and dispersive• In conservative replication, an entirely new DNA strand is

produced• In semi-conservative replication, two DNA molecules are

produced, each of which is composed of one-half of the parental DNA along with an entirely new complementary strand

• In dispersive replication, the parental strands are broken and a mix of old and new fragments of each stand of DNA are reassembled