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Introduction to DNA (Deoxyribonucleic acid). What do you know?

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Presentation on theme: "Introduction to DNA (Deoxyribonucleic acid). What do you know?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to DNA (Deoxyribonucleic acid)

2 What do you know?

3 Scientists

4 Phoebus Levene 1920 – Determined the basic structure of nucleotides that make up DNA 5-carbon sugar, phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base

5 Erwin Chargaff 1952 - Nitrogenous base composition % of adenine is equal to % of thymine % of guanine is equal to % cytosine Composition of DNA varies from species to species

6 Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin 1951 - Worked with a technique called X-ray diffraction Determined the helical nature of DNA

7 James Watson and Francis CrickWatson 1953 – Determined the structure of DNA using Chargaff’s and Franklin’s data A

8 What is DNA?

9 DNA (Deoxyribonucleic acid) Nucleic acid Consists of monomers called nucleotides Stores genetic information, determines an organisms traits by synthesizing proteins Each organisms genome is unique

10 Structure of DNA

11 Double helix Consists of a double strand of nucleotides Two strands are anti-parallel – 5’ to 3’ – 3’ to 5’

12

13 Nucleotide Three parts of a nucleotide – 5 carbon sugar called deoxyribose – Phosphate group – A single nitrogenous base

14

15 Four Nitrogenous Bases Purines (double ring) – Adenine (A) – Guanine (G) Pyrimidines (single ring) – Thymine (T) – Cytosine (C)

16 Chargaff’s Rules A-T (2 hydrogen bonds) C-G (3 hydrogen bonds)

17 Sides of molecule - Alternating sugars and phosphates held together by strong covalent bonds Center – two nitrogenous bases held together by weak hydrogen bonds

18 DNA Structure Click on the hyperlink above to watch a short animation about the structure of DNA A

19 Genes The sequence of nucleotides in an organisms genome is unique Genes consist of sequences of nucleotides

20 Human Genome 3164.7 million nucleotides Average gene length is 3000 base pairs Largest gene is 2.4 million base pairs Approximately 20,000 – 25,000 genes

21 DNA Replication

22 Why is DNA replication important?

23 Why replicate? Each new cell created through cell division must receive an exact copy of the original cells DNA Occurs in the nucleus of cells

24 DNA Replication Semi-conservative – new DNA molecules have one original template strand and one new strand Semi-conservative Follows complementary base pair rules “Leading strand” – continuously synthesized “Lagging strand” – synthesized in fragments A

25 Origins of Replication

26

27 Steps of DNA Replication 1. DNA helicase unzips the original DNA molecules by severing hydrogen bonds between nucleotides A

28 2. New nucleotides are added to the template strands using DNA polymerase enzymes (complementary base pairing)

29 3. Okazaki fragments are pieced together by DNA ligase

30 DNA Replication C C T A A C G G T A C G A A T A


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