Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Nucleotides, Nucleic Acids and Heredity. Nucleic Acids  Introduction –Each cell has thousands of different proteins –Proteins made up from about 20 AA.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Nucleotides, Nucleic Acids and Heredity. Nucleic Acids  Introduction –Each cell has thousands of different proteins –Proteins made up from about 20 AA."— Presentation transcript:

1 Nucleotides, Nucleic Acids and Heredity

2 Nucleic Acids  Introduction –Each cell has thousands of different proteins –Proteins made up from about 20 AA –Information for protein comes from parent organism - “heredity” –This information is contained in the chromosomes in the nucleus of the cell –Genes inside the chromosomes carry specific information

3 Genes  Genes –Carry specific information regarding how to construct proteins –Lie in sequences along the chromosomes Genes are made up of Nuceic Acids: There are Two types of Nucelic Acids »DNA »RNA –The information that tells the cell which proteins to manufacture is carried in the molecules of DNA

4 Nucleic Acids  Components of Nucleic Acids –RNA or ribonucleic acid »NOT found in chromosomes »6 types of RNA »polymeric nucleotides –DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid »present in chromosomes »polymeric nucleotides

5 Nucleic Acids  Nucleotides are composed of: –a base –a sugar –a phosphate

6 Bases  Bases found in DNA and RNA –All basic because they are heterocyclic amines –Uracil (U) found only in RNA –Thymine (T) found only in DNA  DNA = A, G, C, T  RNA = A, G, C, U

7 Bases  Bases found in DNA and RNA Purines Pyrimidines

8 Sugars  RNA contains D -ribose  DNA contains D -deoxyribose Found in DNAFound in RNA CH 2 OH O HO D -ribose

9 Nucleosides  Nucleoside = sugar + base A Nucleoside

10 Nucleosides  Nucleoside = sugar + base A Nucleoside

11 Nucleosides  Nucleoside = sugar + base A Nucleoside

12 Nucleosides Base + Sugar = Nucleoside  AdenineAdenosine  GuanineGuanosine  ThymineThymidine  CytosineCytidine  UracilUridine

13 Phosphate  AMP, ADP, ATP

14 Nucleotides  BASESUGARPO 4 3- adenineribosemonophosphate

15 Nucleotides  BASESUGARPO 4 3- adenineribosemonophosphate NucleoSIDE ugar adenosine

16 Nucleotides  BASESUGARPO 4 3- adenineribosemonophosphate NucleoTIDE hree parts NucleoSIDE ugar adenosine adenosine monophosphate

17 Nucleotides Nucleoside + PO 4 3- = Nucleotide  Adenosine Deoxyadenosine 5’-monophosphate (dAMP)  Cytidine Deoxycytidine 5’-monophosphate (dCMP)  Uridine (in RNA) Uridine 5’-monophosphate (UMP) - or -  Thymidine (+ 2 PO 4 3- ) Deoxythymidine 5’-diphosphate (dTDP)  Guanosine (+ 3 PO 4 3- ) Deoxyguanosine 5’-triphosphate (dGTP)

18 DNA - Primary Structure  The primary structure is based on the sequence of nuclotides –1) The Backbone is made from Ribose (sugar) and Phosphate »PO 4 3- connected at Ribose 3’ and 5’ –2) The Bases (AGTC, AGUC) are side-chains and are what makes each monomer unit different. »Bases connected at Ribose 1’

19 DNA - Primary Structure

20

21

22  S P S P S P S P S P T G C A T Where: S = ribose P = phosphate G,T,A,C = bases

23 DNA - Primary Structure  The order of the bases (-ATTGAC-) provides the primary structure of DNA.  The backbone of both DNA and RNA consists of alternating sugar and phosphate groups –there is a 3’ end and a 5’ end –the backbone adds stability to the structure

24 DNA - Primary Structure  Erwin Chargaff (1905- ) DNA always had ratios constant: moles adenine = moles thymine moles guanine = moles cytosine  Base Pairing of: –A-T or T-A –G-C or C-G S P S P S P S P S P T G C A T

25 How we Depict DNA

26

27 DNA – Secondary Structure  James Watson (1928- ) and Francis Crick (1916-2004 )  Established 3-D structure of DNA  Bases on adjacent strands PAIRED so that Hydrogen bonds formed: Complementary Base Pairing

28 DNA - Secondary Structure  Complementary Base Pairing –Adenine pairs with Thymine –Position of H bonds and distance match

29 DNA - Secondary Structure  Complementary Base Pairing –Guanine pairs with Cytosine –Position of H bonds and distance match

30

31 DNA - Secondary Structure  Complementary Base Pairing

32 DNA - Secondary Structure DNA structure led to explanation of the transmission of heredity

33 DNA vs. RNA  DNA and RNA differences: 1) DNA 4 bases AGCT RNA 4 basesAGCU 2)DNA sugardeoxyribose RNA sugarribose 3) DNA is almost always double stranded RNA is single stranded A pairs with U (not T)

34 DNA Replication  Each gene is a section of DNA –1000-2000 base sequences –Each gene codes for 1 protein molecule –Each cell contains ALL of the info for the organism –Replication is the process of copying all genetic information on the DNA to new DNA

35 DNA Replication Steps 1. Opening of the superstructure 2. Relaxing the higher order structure 3. Unwinding the DNA double helix 4. Primer/Primase – initiate the replication 5. DNA polymerase – enzyme that adds the nucleotides to the chain – Pairing A-T G-C 6. Ligation – Joining of Okazaki fragments and completion of the molecule

36 DNA Replication  View animations………  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4PKjF7 OumYo http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4PKjF7 OumYo  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hfZ8o9 D1tus http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hfZ8o9 D1tus  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Luw5_z 8mIrI http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Luw5_z 8mIrI  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nIwu5M evZyg http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nIwu5M evZyg

37 DNA Replication  Semiconservative Replication –The result is 4 strands of DNA –Only half of each helix is “new” –Semiconservative since one half of each new helix is a daughter strand and half a parent

38 DNA Replication 

39

40 Okazaki fragments

41 DNA Replication  Okazaki fragments

42 Types of RNA  mRNA - Messenger RNA  tRNA - Transfer RNA  rRNA - Ribosomal RNA  snRNA – Small nuclear RNA  miRNA – Micro RNA  siRNA – Small interfering RNA (1933)

43 mRNA  Messenger RNA  Carries info from DNA to cytoplasm  Not stable (not long lasting)  Info is for single protein synthesis  Exactly complementary to one DNA strand

44 tRNA  Transfer RNA (tRNA)  Transfers amino acids to the point of protein synthesis  Small (73-93 nucleotides)  About 20 exist (one for each AA!)  “L-shaped”  Contain some “other” modified Nucleic Acids

45 Transfer RNA

46 rRNA  Ribosomal RNA (rRNA)  Found in ribosomes  35% protein, 65% rRNA make up ribosomes  Large molecules with MW=1,000,000  Protein synthesis takes place on ribosomes

47  snRNA – Small nuclear RNA –Helps with the processing of the mRNA transcribed from DNA  miRNA – Micro RNA –Important in the timing of organism development  siRNA – Small interfering RNA –Help control Gene expression RNA

48 Transmission of Information  Step 1 - Transcription –Copying the “code” from DNA to to mRNA –The mRNA then moves to the ribosome  Step 2 - Translation –Deciphering the “code” from mRNA into protein –Each 3 nucleotides code for a specific AA  Next Chapter Discussion!!!!!!!!!!

49 Transmission of Information  SUMMARY DNA REPLICATION mRNA TRANSCRIPTION protein ! TRANSLATION amino acids


Download ppt "Nucleotides, Nucleic Acids and Heredity. Nucleic Acids  Introduction –Each cell has thousands of different proteins –Proteins made up from about 20 AA."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google