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Chapter 11.4.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 11.4."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 11.4

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3 Genotype: Genetic Make-up. The nucleotide sequence in DNA.
Phenotype - Expressed trait. The organisms specific traits lies in protein and their wide variety of functions. Genotype - DNA Phenotype - Protein & environmental influences

4 One gene, One polypeptide
Hypothesis - Beadle & Tatum The function of an individual gene is to dictate the production of a specific enzyme. Genes dictate the production of a polypeptide Information flow - DNA to RNA to Protein Gene - sequence of bases Bases - “Language Letters” Many genes - “Sentence”

5 RNA: Ribonucleic Acid - On the molecular level - the sugar is a ribose instead of a deoxyribose  Contains nitrogenous base called Uracil (U) instead of Thymine (T)  A - T for DNA  A - U for RNA  Is a single twisted strand -not a double like DNA **Responsible for traveling outside the cell to make proteins in the ribosomes

6 3 RNA Types Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) – Makes up part of a ridosome
Messenger RNA (mRNA) – Serves as a messenger Transfer RNA (tRNA) – Read codons and Transfers amino acids

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8 Transcription – DNA nucleotide sequences are converted to a single strand of mRNA Then, the RNA (transcribed messages) leaves the nucleus and goes to the cytoplasm where it directs the ribosomes to make proteins **What happens is the “nucleic acid language” is now written in an “amino acid language” so the ribosomes can understand it…that is the transcription.

9 The CODING regions are called EXONS
In Eukaryotes some DNA does not code so a message needs to be “edited” so only the coding information is sent out. NON-coding regions are called INTRONS The CODING regions are called EXONS Only 3-5% of your DNA is coded for protein synthesis


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