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LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company
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LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.

Dec 28, 2015

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Page 1: LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.

LECTURE CONNECTIONS

10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company

Page 2: LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.

10.2 All Genetic Information Is Encoded in the Structure of DNA or RNA

• Early Studies of DNA showed that

- the physical basis of hereditary lies in the nucleus;

- DNA contains 4 nitrogenous bases: A, C, G and T;

- DNA consists of a large number of linked, repeating untis, called nucleotides;

- Nucleotides contain a sugar, a phosphate and a base;

- Chargaff’s rule: the amount of A=T and the amount of C=G.

Page 3: LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.

• DNA as the Source of Genetic Information

• The discovery of the transforming principle:

•Dr. Griffith’s experiment with Streptococcus pneumonia

•The Hershey–Chase experiment (Figure 10.5)

10.2 All Genetic Information Is Encoded in the Structure of DNA or RNA

Page 4: LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.
Page 5: LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.
Page 6: LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.

• DNA as the source of Genetic Information

• Watson and Crick’s discovery of the three-dimensional structure of DNA

• X-ray diffraction image of DNA

10.2 All Genetic Information Is Encoded in the Structure of DNA or RNA

Page 7: LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.
Page 8: LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.

10.2 All Genetic Information Is Encoded in the Structure of DNA or RNA

• RNA as the Source of Genetic Information

- Few viruses such as the tobacco mosaic virus (TMV).

- TMV: single molecule of RNA surrounded by a helically arranged cylinder of protein molecules

Page 9: LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.
Page 10: LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.
Page 11: LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.

10.3 DNA Consists of Two Complementary and Antiparallel Nucleotide Strands That Form a

Double Helix

• Primary structure of DNA refers to its nucleotide structure and how the nucleotides are joined together.

• Secondary structure of DNA refers to DNA’s stable tree-dimensional configuration.

• Tertiary structure of DNA are complex packing arrangements of dsDNA in chromosomes (Chapter 11)

Page 12: LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.

The sugar of nuclei acids have 5 carbon atoms (pentoses).

DNA sugar (deoxyribose) and a hydrogen atom (-H) at the 2’-carbon atom.

Nitrogenous bases: purines (six-sided ring attached to a five sided ring -A and G); pyrimidines (six-sided ring only, C and T or U)

Phosphate: phosphorus atom bounded to 4 oxygen atoms

Page 13: LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.

10.3 DNA Consists of Two Complementary and Antiparallel Nucleotide Strands That Form a

Double Helix

• Secondary structure of DNA

• The double helix

• Hydrogen bond and base pairing

• Antiparallel complementary DNA strands

Page 14: LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.
Page 15: LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.
Page 16: LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.

10.3 DNA Consists of Two Complementary and Antiparallel Nucleotide Strands That Form a Double

Helix

• Secondary structure of DNA

• Different secondary structures

Page 17: LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.
Page 18: LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.

10.4 Special Structure Can Form in DNA and RNA

• Hairpin structure: In single strands of nucleotides, when sequences of nucleotides on the same strand are inverted complements, a hairpin structure will be formed.

Page 19: LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.
Page 20: LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.

10.4 Special Structure Can Form in DNA and RNA

• Inverted Repeats: in double-stranded DNA, sequences that are inverted replicas of each other

• Palindrome: If an inverted repeat is also complementary to itself, then it is called a palindrome.

• Cruciform: A hairpin forms within each of the two single-stranded sequences, which makes a cruciform.

Page 21: LECTURE CONNECTIONS 10 | DNA: The Chemical Nature of the Gene © 2009 W. H. Freeman and Company.