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10 Minutes to Study for your Quiz …if you are quiet.

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Presentation on theme: "10 Minutes to Study for your Quiz …if you are quiet."— Presentation transcript:

1 10 Minutes to Study for your Quiz …if you are quiet.

2 Pop-Quiz (2/3/2010) Answer the following on a piece of paper (be sure to include your name, date, and class) 1.What are the 4 Macromolecules 2.Which Macromolecule carries an organism’s genetic information? 3.Where can this macromolecule be located? 4.During which phase of the cell cycle is this molecule doubled?

3 Bellwork There once was a man by the name of Bob, homozygous dominant for white hair. He married a beautiful woman by the name of Sue who had black hair, which is a recessive trait. They had two beautiful children, Jack and Jane. One day a virus spread around the world killing almost everyone, leaving only Jack and Jane alive. These 2 were left to repopulate the planet. What would be the new generation’s genotypic ratio?

4

5 DNA: Replication

6 DNA  Deoxyribonucleic acid, a chemical found in the nucleus of cells. DNA carries the instructions for making all the structures and materials the body needs to function.

7 DNA: Replication DNA Structure  Nucleotides  Consist of a sugar, a phosphate, and a nitrogen base.

8 DNA: Replication Chargaff’s Rule  %G=%C and %A=%T  The amount of guanine (G) is equal to cytosine (C) and the amount of adenine (A) is equal to thymine (T).

9 DNA: Replication X-ray Diffraction  Using x-ray diffraction, Rosalind Franklin was able to obtain a clear visible representation that the structure of the DNA was a double helix.

10 DNA: Replication Watson and Crick  Built a model of the double helix that conformed to Franklin’s research.  Two outside strands consist of alternating deoxyribose (sugar) and phosphate  Cytosine and guanine bases pair to each other by three hydrogen bonds  Thymine and adenine bases pair to each other by two hydrogen bonds

11 DNA: Replication DNA Structure  DNA often is compared to a twisted ladder.  Rails of the ladder are represented by the alternating deoxyribose and phosphate.  The pairs of bases (cytosine–guanine or thymine–adenine) form the steps.

12 DNA: Replication Orientation  On the top rail, the strand is said to be oriented 5′ to 3′.  The strand on the bottom runs in the opposite direction and is oriented 3′ to 5′.

13 DNA: Replication Replication  Parent strands of DNA separate, serve as templates, and produce DNA molecules that have one strand of the parent DNA and one strand of new DNA. This is called semi- conservative replication.

14 DNA: Replication Unwinding  DNA helicase, an enzyme, is responsible for unwinding and unzipping the double helix.  RNA primase adds a short segment of RNA, called an RNA primer, on each DNA strand.

15 DNA: Replication Base Pairing  DNA polymerase continues adding nucleotides to the chain by adding to the 3′ end of the new DNA strand.

16 DNA: Replication Base Pairing  One strand is called the leading strand (3’ – 5’) and is elongated as the DNA unwinds.  The other strand of DNA, called the lagging strand (5’ – 3’), elongates away from the replication fork.  The lagging strand is synthesized discontinuously into small segments, called Okazaki fragments.

17 DNA: Replication

18 Joining  DNA polymerase removes the RNA primer and fills in the place with DNA nucleotides.  DNA ligase links the two sections.

19 Article Star important information Write a 4-5sentance summary about the author’s purpose Is this narrative, informational, or argumentative writing? How do you know? Imagine you are the teacher grading this. What score would you give it? (1-10)

20 Summary Watson and Crick were not the discoverers of DNA, but rather the first scientists to formulate an accurate description of this molecule's complex, double-helical structure. Moreover, Watson and Crick's work was directly dependent on the research of numerous scientists before them, including Friedrich Miescher, Phoebus Levene, and Erwin Chargaff. Thanks to researchers such as these, we now know a great deal about genetic structure, and we continue to make great strides in understanding the human genome and the importance of DNA to life and health.


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