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Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Mar 26, 2015

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Page 1: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.
Page 2: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Replication of DNAReplication of DNA

• Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• The DNA in the chromosomes is copied in a process called DNA replication.

• Without DNA replication, new cells would have only half the DNA of their parents.

Page 3: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Replication of DNA

Replication of DNA

DNA

Replication

Replication

Page 4: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Replication of DNA

Replication of DNA

Click this image to view movie

Page 5: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• DNA is copied during interphase prior to mitosis and meiosis.

• It is important that the new copies are exactly like the original molecules.

Copying DNACopying DNA

Page 6: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Copying DNACopying DNA

Original DNA

Original DNA

Strand

Original DNA

Strand

Free Nucleotides New DNA

moleculeNew DNA

Strand

New DNA molecule

Page 7: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Question 2

Which of the following is NOT a component of DNA?

D. proteins

C. nitrogenous bases

B. phosphate groups

A. simple sugars

The answer is D.

Page 8: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Question 3

Which of the following correctly comprises a complimentary base pair?

D. cytosine – thymine

C. guanine – adenine

B. thymine – guanine

A. adenine – thymine

The answer is A.

Page 9: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Section Objectives

• Sequence the steps involved in protein synthesis.

• Relate the concept of the gene to the sequence of nucleotides in DNA.

Page 10: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• The sequence of nucleotides in DNA contain information.

Genes and ProteinsGenes and Proteins

• This information is put to work through the production of proteins.

• Proteins fold into complex, three- dimensional shapes to become key cell structures and regulators of cell functions.

Page 11: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• Some proteins become important structures, such as the filaments in muscle tissue.

• Other proteins, such as enzymes, control chemical reactions that perform key life functions—breaking down glucose molecules in cellular respiration, digesting food, or making spindle fibers during mitosis.

Genes and ProteinsGenes and Proteins

Page 12: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• Thus, by encoding the instructions for making proteins, DNA controls cells.

• In fact, enzymes control all the chemical reactions of an organism.

Genes and ProteinsGenes and Proteins

Page 13: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• You learned earlier that proteins are polymers of amino acids.

• The sequence of nucleotides in each gene contains information for assembling the string of amino acids that make up a single

protein.

Genes and ProteinsGenes and Proteins

Page 14: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• RNA like DNA, is a nucleic acid. RNA structure differs from DNA structure in three ways.

• First, RNA is single stranded—it looks like one-half of a zipper —whereas DNA is double stranded.

RNARNA

Page 15: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• The sugar in RNA is ribose; DNA’s sugar is deoxyribose.

Ribose

RNARNA

Page 16: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• Both DNA and RNA contain four nitrogenous bases, but rather than thymine, RNA contains a similar base called uracil (U).

• Uracil forms a base pair with adenine in RNA, just as thymine does in DNA.

Uracil

Hydrogen bonds Adenine

RNARNA

Page 17: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• DNA provides workers with the instructions for making the proteins, and workers build the proteins.

• The workers for protein synthesis are RNA molecules.

RNARNA

Page 18: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• DNA provides workers with the instructions for making the proteins, and workers build the proteins.

• The workers for protein synthesis are RNA molecules.

• They take from DNA the instructions on how the protein should be assembled, then—amino acid by amino acid—they assemble the protein.

RNARNA

Page 19: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• There are three types of RNA that help build proteins.

• Messenger RNA (mRNA), brings instructions from DNA in the nucleus to the cell’s factory floor, the cytoplasm.

• On the factory floor, mRNA moves to the assembly line, a ribosome.

RNARNA

Page 20: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• The ribosome, made of ribosomal RNA (rRNA), binds to the mRNA and uses the instructions to assemble the amino acids in the correct order.

RNARNA

Page 21: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• Transfer RNA (tRNA) is the supplier. Transfer RNA delivers amino acids to the ribosome to be assembled into a protein.

RNARNA

Click image to view movie

Page 22: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

TranscriptionTranscription

• In the nucleus, enzymes make an RNA copy of a portion of a DNA strand in a process called transcription.

Page 23: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

TranscriptionTranscription

Page 24: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

TranscriptionTranscription

• The main difference between transcription and DNA replication is that transcription results in the formation of one single-stranded RNA molecule rather than a double-stranded DNA molecule.

Page 25: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• Not all the nucleotides in the DNA of eukaryotic cells carry instructions—or code—for making proteins.

• Genes usually contain many long noncoding nucleotide sequences, called introns, that are scattered among the coding sequences.

RNA ProcessingRNA Processing

Page 26: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

RNA ProcessingRNA Processing

• Regions that contain information are called exons because they are expressed.

• When mRNA is transcribed from DNA, both introns and exons are copied.

• The introns must be removed from the mRNA before it can function to make a protein.

Page 27: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• Enzymes in the nucleus cut out the intron segments and paste the mRNA back together.

• The mRNA then leaves the nucleus and travels to the ribosome.

RNA ProcessingRNA Processing

Page 28: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• The nucleotide sequence transcribed from DNA to a strand of messenger RNA acts as a genetic message, the complete information for the building of a protein.

• As you know, proteins contain chains of amino acids. You could say that the language of proteins uses an alphabet of amino acids.

The Genetic CodeThe Genetic Code

Page 29: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• Biochemists began to crack the genetic code when they discovered that a group of three nitrogenous bases in mRNA code for one amino acid. Each group is known as a codon.

• A code is needed to convert the language of mRNA into the language of proteins.

The Genetic CodeThe Genetic Code

Page 30: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• Sixty-four combinations are possible when a sequence of three bases is used; thus, 64 different mRNA codons are in the genetic code.

The Genetic CodeThe Genetic Code

Page 31: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

The Genetic CodeThe Genetic CodeThe Messenger RNA Genetic Code

First Letter Second Letter

UU C A G

Third Letter

UCAGUCAGUCAG

UCAG

C

A

G

Phenylalanine (UUU)

Phenylalanine (UUC)

Leucine (UUA)

Leucine (UUG)

Leucine (CUU)

Leucine (CUC)

Leucine (CUA)

Leucine (CUG)

Isoleucine (AUU)

Isoleucine (AUC)

Isoleucine (AUA)

Methionine;Start (AUG)

Valine (GUU)

Valine (GUC)

Valine (GUA)

Valine (GUG)

Serine (UCU)

Serine (UCC)

Serine (UCA)

Serine (UCG)

Proline (CCU)

Proline (CCC)

Proline (CCA)

Proline (CCG)

Threonine (ACU)

Threonine (ACC)

Threonine (ACA)

Threonine (ACG)

Alanine (GCU)

Alanine (GCC)

Alanine (GCA)

Alanine (GCG)

Tyrosine (UAU)

Tyrosine (UAC)

Stop (UAA)

Stop (UAG)

Histadine (CAU)

Histadine (CAC)

Glutamine (CAA)

Glutamine (CAG)

Asparagine (AAU)

Asparagine (AAC)

Lysine (AAA)

Lysine (AAG)

Aspartate (GAU)

Aspartate (GAC)

Glutamate (GAA)Glutamate (GAG)

Cysteine (UGU)

Cysteine (UGC)

Stop (UGA)

Tryptophan (UGG)

Arginine (CGU)

Arginine (CGC)

Arginine (CGA)

Arginine (CGG)

Serine (AGU)

Serine (AGC)

Arginine (AGA)Arginine (AGG)

Glycine (GGU)

Glycine (GGC)Glycine (GGC)

Glycine (GGA)

Glycine (GGG)

Page 32: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• Some codons do not code for amino acids; they provide instructions for making the protein.

• More than one codon can code for the same amino acid.

• However, for any one codon, there can be only one amino acid.

The Genetic CodeThe Genetic Code

Page 33: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• All organisms use the same genetic code.

• This provides evidence that all life on Earth evolved from a common origin.

The Genetic CodeThe Genetic Code

Page 34: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Translation: From mRNA to ProteinTranslation: From mRNA to Protein

• The process of converting the information in a sequence of nitrogenous bases in mRNA into a sequence of amino acids in protein is known as translation.

• Translation takes place at the ribosomes in the cytoplasm.

• In prokaryotic cells, which have no nucleus, the mRNA is made in the cytoplasm.

Page 35: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Translation: From mRNA to ProteinTranslation: From mRNA to Protein

• In eukaryotic cells, mRNA is made in the nucleus and travels to the cytoplasm.

• In cytoplasm, a ribosome attaches to the strand of mRNA like a clothespin clamped onto a clothesline.

Page 36: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• For proteins to be built, the 20 different amino acids dissolved in the cytoplasm must be brought to the ribosomes.

• This is the role of transfer RNA.

The role of transfer RNAThe role of transfer RNA

Page 37: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• Each tRNA molecule attaches to only one type of amino acid.

Amino acid

Chain of RNA nucleotides

Transfer RNA molecule

Anticondon

The role of transfer RNAThe role of transfer RNA

Page 38: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

TranslationTranslation

Page 39: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

The role of transfer RNAThe role of transfer RNA

Ribosome

mRNA codon

Page 40: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• Usually, the first codon on mRNA is AUG, which codes for the amino acid methionine.

• AUG signals the start of protein synthesis.

• When this signal is given, the ribosome slides along the mRNA to the next codon.

The role of transfer RNAThe role of transfer RNA

Page 41: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

tRNA anticodon

Methionine

The role of transfer RNAThe role of transfer RNA

Page 42: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• A new tRNA molecule carrying an amino acid pairs with the second mRNA codon.

Alanine

The role of transfer RNAThe role of transfer RNA

Page 43: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• The amino acids are joined when a peptide bond is formed between them.

AlanineMethionine

Peptide bond

The role of transfer RNAThe role of transfer RNA

Page 44: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• A chain of amino acids is formed until the stop codon is reached on the mRNA strand.

Stop codon

The role of transfer RNAThe role of transfer RNA

Page 45: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

What are the three chemical differences between RNA and DNA?

Question 1

Answer

RNA consists of a single strand of nucleotides whereas DNA is a double strand. RNA contains ribose as its sugar and DNA contains deoxyribose as its sugar. Uracil in RNA replaces thymine in DNA as the nitrogenous base.

Page 46: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

What is the role of rRNA in protein synthesis?

Question 2

Answer

Ribosomal RNA binds to messenger RNA and assembles the amino acids in the order needed for the protein to be synthesized.

Page 47: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Which regions of the mRNA travel to the ribosome; introns, exons, or both?

Question 3

Answer

Only exons, which contain coding information, travel to the ribosome. Introns, noncoding nucleotide sequences, do not travel to the ribosome.

Page 48: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

What is an anticodon, and what does it represent?

Question 4

Answer

An anticodon is a sequence of three nucleotides on the tRNA molecule that binds to a codon of the mRNA strand.

Page 49: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• Categorize the different kinds of mutations that can occur in DNA.

Section Objectives:

• Compare the effects of different kinds of mutations on cells and organisms.

Page 50: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• Organisms have evolved many ways to protect their DNA from changes.

Mutations

• In spite of these mechanisms, however, changes in the DNA occasionally do occur.

• Any change in DNA sequence is called a mutation.

• Mutations can be caused by errors in replication, transcription, cell division, or by external agents.

Page 51: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• Mutations can affect the reproductive cells of an organism by changing the sequence of nucleotides within a gene in a sperm or an egg cell.

Mutations in reproductive cells

• If this cell takes part in fertilization, the altered gene would become part of the genetic makeup of the offspring.

Page 52: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Mutations in reproductive cells

• The mutation may produce a new trait or it may result in a protein that does not work correctly.

• Sometimes, the mutation results in a protein that is nonfunctional, and the embryo may not survive.

• In some rare cases a gene mutation may have positive effects.

Page 53: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• What happens if powerful radiation, such as gamma radiation, hits the DNA of a nonreproductive cell, a cell of the body such as in skin, muscle, or bone?

• If the cell’s DNA is changed, this mutation would not be passed on to offspring.

• However, the mutation may cause problems for the individual.

Mutations in body cells

Page 54: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Mutations in body cells

• Damage to a gene may impair the function of the cell.

• When that cell divides, the new cells also will have the same mutation.

• Some mutations of DNA in body cells affect genes that control cell division.

• This can result in the cells growing and dividing rapidly, producing cancer.

Page 55: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• A point mutation is a change in a single base pair in DNA.

• A change in a single nitrogenous base can change the entire structure of a protein because a change in a single amino acid can affect the shape of the protein.

The effects of point mutations

Page 56: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

The effects of point mutations

Normal

Point mutation

mRNA

ProteinStop

Stop

mRNA

Protein

Replace G with A

Page 57: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Frameshift mutations

• What would happen if a single base were lost from a DNA strand?

• This new sequence with the deleted base would be transcribed into mRNA. But then, the mRNA would be out of position by one base.

• As a result, every codon after the deleted base would be different.

Page 58: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Frameshift mutations

mRNA

Protein

Frameshift mutation

Deletion of U

Page 59: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Frameshift mutations

• This mutation would cause nearly every amino acid in the protein after the deletion to be changed.

• A mutation in which a single base is added or deleted from DNA is called a frameshift mutation because it shifts the reading of codons by one base.

Page 60: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• Changes may occur in chromosomes as well as in genes.

• Alterations to chromosomes may occur in a variety of ways.

• Structural changes in chromosomes are called chromosomal mutations.

Chromosomal Alterations

Page 61: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• Chromosomal mutations occur in all living organisms, but they are especially common in plants.

• Few chromosomal mutations are passed on to the next generation because the zygote usually dies.

Chromosomal Alterations

Page 62: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• In cases where the zygote lives and develops, the mature organism is often sterile and thus incapable of producing offspring.

• When a part of a chromosome is left out, a deletion occurs.

Deletion

A B C D E F G H A B C E F G H

Chromosomal Alterations

Page 63: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• When part of a chromatid breaks off and attaches to its sister chromatid, an insertion occurs.

• The result is a duplication of genes on the same chromosome.

Insertion

A B C D E F G H A B C B C D E F G H

Chromosomal Alterations

Page 64: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• When part of a chromosome breaks off and reattaches backwards, an inversion occurs.

Inversion

A B C D E F G H A D C B E F G H

Chromosomal Alterations

Page 65: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• When part of one chromosome breaks off and is added to a different chromosome, a translocation occurs.

A B E FDCBX AWC HGGE HD F

W X Y Z Y ZTranslocation

Chromosomal Alterations

Page 66: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• Some mutations seem to just happen, perhaps as a mistake in base pairing during DNA replication.

• These mutations are said to be spontaneous.

• However, many mutations are caused by factors in the environment.

Causes of Mutations

Page 67: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• Any agent that can cause a change in DNA is called a mutagen.

• Mutagens include radiation, chemicals, and even high temperatures.

• Forms of radiation, such as X rays, cosmic rays, ultraviolet light, and nuclear radiation, are dangerous mutagens because the energy they contain can damage or break apart DNA.

Causes of Mutations

Page 68: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Causes of Mutations• The breaking and reforming of a double-

stranded DNA molecule can result in deletions.

• Chemical mutagens include dioxins, asbestos, benzene, and formaldehyde, substances that are commonly found in buildings and in the environment.

• Chemical mutagens usually cause substitution mutations.

Page 69: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Repairing DNA• Repair mechanisms that fix mutations in cells

have evolved.

• Enzymes proofread the DNA and replace incorrect nucleotides with correct nucleotides.

• These repair mechanisms work extremely well, but they are not perfect.

• The greater the exposure to a mutagen such as UV light, the more likely is the chance that a mistake will not be corrected.

Page 70: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Any change in DNA sequences is called a _______.

Question 1

D. translation

C. transcription

B. mutation

A. replication

The answer is B.

Page 71: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Which is more serious, a point mutation or a frameshift mutation? Why?

Question 2

Answer

A frameshift mutation is more serious than a point mutation because it disrupts more codons than a point mutation.

Page 72: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Why are chromosomal mutations rarely passed on to the next generation?

Question 3

Answer

Few chromosomal changes are passed on to the next generation because the zygote usually dies. If the zygote survives, it is often sterile and incapable of producing offspring.

Page 73: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• Alfred Hershey and Martha Chase demonstrated that DNA is the genetic material.

DNA: The Molecule of Heredity

• Because adenine can pair only with thymine, and guanine can pair only with cytosine, DNA can replicate itself with great accuracy.

Page 74: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

DNA: The Molecule of Heredity

• DNA, the genetic material of organisms, is composed of four kinds of nucleotides. A DNA molecule consists of two strands of nucleotides with sugars and phosphates on the outside and bases paired by hydrogen bonding on the inside. The paired strands form a twisted-zipper shape called a double helix.

Page 75: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

• Genes are small sections of DNA. Most sequences of three bases in the DNA of a gene code for a single amino acid in a protein.

From DNA to Protein

• Messenger RNA is made in a process called transcription. The order of nucleotides in DNA determines the order of nucleotides in messenger RNA.

Page 76: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

From DNA to Protein

• Translation is a process through which the order of bases in messenger RNA codes for the order of amino acids in a protein.

Page 77: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Genetic Changes

• A mutation is a change in the base sequence of DNA. Mutations may affect only one gene, or they may affect whole chromosomes.

• Mutations in eggs or sperm affect future generations by producing offspring with new characteristics. Mutations in body cells affect only the individual and may result in cancer.

Page 78: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Question 1

How does DNA control the structures and functions of a cell?

Answer

DNA determines the structure of proteins. Some proteins become important cell structures. Other proteins, such as enzymes, control chemical reactions that perform key life functions.

Page 79: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Question 2The process through which the order of bases in messenger RNA codes for the order of amino acids in a protein is:

D. point mutation

C. replication

B. translation

A. transcription

The answer is B.

Page 80: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Question 3

Why would scientists use nucleotide sequences to identify bodies of crime victims?

Answer

In comparing nucleotide sequences in the DNA of a crime victim with nucleotide sequences from a possible close relative of the crime victim, scientists can determine if the two are related.

Page 81: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Question 4

What happens when a stop codon is reached during translation?

Answer

When a stop codon is reached, translation ends and the amino acid strand is released from the ribosome.

Page 82: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Question 5

A ________ bond forms between adjacent amino acids during translation.

D. peptide

C. hydrogen

B. phosphate

A. nucleotide

The answer is D.

Page 83: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Question 6

What is the difference between a purine and a pyrimidine?

Answer

A purine is a double-ringed nitrogenous base. A pyrimidine is a single-ringed nitrogenous base.

Page 84: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Question 7

Why is DNA replication important to cell division?

Answer

Without DNA replication, new cells would have only half the DNA of their parents. Species could not survive and individuals could not grow or reproduce successfully.

Page 85: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Question 8At the beginning and end of replication, which of the following are instrumental in breaking and bonding the hydrogen bonds between bases?

D. enzymes

C. nucleotides

B. purines

A. pyrimidines

The answer is D.

Page 86: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Question 9

What is the role of mRNA in protein synthesis?

Answer

The messenger RNA acts as a genetic message, providing the complete information, in sequences of codons, for the building of a protein.

Page 87: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

Question 10The DNA sequences of a parrot _________.

D. contain exactly the same nucleotides as those of a beetle

C. are exactly the same as those of a human

B. are more similar to a fern than a dog

A. are more similar to those of a clam than a robin

The answer is D.

Page 88: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

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Page 89: Section 11.1 Summary – pages 281 - 287 Replication of DNA Before a cell can divide by mitosis or meiosis, it must first make a copy of its chromosomes.

End of Chapter 11 Show