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DNA Deoxyribonucleic Acid

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Presentation on theme: "DNA Deoxyribonucleic Acid"— Presentation transcript:

1 DNA Deoxyribonucleic Acid

2 Identifying the Genetic Material
1. Frederick Griffith (1928) – was working with S. pneumonia in mice when he showed that harmless bacteria could turn virulent (able to cause disease) when mixed with heat killed bacteria that cause disease; this showed that genetic material could be transferred between dead bacteria and living bacteria

3 Griffith’s Experiment:
Griffith showed that genetic material was transferred from the heat-killed cells of the S strain into the live cells of the R strain changing the harmless bacteria into a disease-causing bacteria. He called this process transformation because one type of bacteria was changed (or transformed) into another.

4 2. Avery’s Experiment (1944) – he demonstrated that the genetic material was composed of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) 3. Hershey and Chase (1952) – used a bacteriophage and radioactive labels to show that viral genes are made of DNA, not protein

5 The Structure of DNA The discovery of the structure of DNA can be attributed to the following scientists: Erwin Chargaff (1949) Maurice Wilkins & Rosalind Franklin (1952) James Watson & Francis Crick (1953)

6 X-ray Diffraction Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin developed X-ray diffraction photographs of strands of DNA that suggested that the DNA molecule resembled a tightly coiled helix and was composed of at least two or three chains of nucleotides.

7 The DNA Model: Watson & Crick determined that the structure of the DNA molecule was a “double helix”. It was made of two strands of nucleotides, running in opposite directions, and they were held together by hydrogen bonds.

8 Each strand is made of linked nucleotides
Each strand is made of linked nucleotides. Nucleotides are the subunits that make up DNA. Each nucleotide is made of three parts: a phosphate group, a 5-carbon sugar (deoxyribose), and a nitrogen-base.

9 Four Possible Nucleotides:
Adenine Purines Guanine (two rings of carbon) Thymine Pyrimidines Cytosine (one ring of carbon)

10 Complimentary Base Pairs:
Watson and Crick determined that a purine on one strand always paired with a pyrimidine on the opposite strand Ex: T – A C – G G – C A – T

11 Finding the Complimentary Strand
Add the complimentary nucleotide according to the base pairing rules T G C T A

12 Erwin Chargaff– showed that different species have different amounts of the four nucleotides that make up DNA, but that the amount of A (adenine) always equaled the amount of T (thymine), and likewise, the amount of C (cytosine) always equaled the amount of G (guanine).

13 The Double Helix Model DNA resembles a twisted “ladder”
“Rails” or sides are made up of a sugar- phosphate backbone “Rungs” or steps are nitrogenous bases


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