BIOLOGY CH13 POWERPOINT OUTLINE PART 1 NAME______

PLEASE FILL IN THE BLANKS AND ANSWER THE NUMBERED QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 13: DNA, RNA, and Proteins

Essential Questions:

What is DNA?

How is DNA related to traits?

What is the Central Dogma of Biology?

Who discovered DNA?

DNA- The Genetic Material

Why should I care about DNA?

DNA stores the information that tells cells which ______to make

Your proteins give you your physical & ______identity

Your DNA is different from everyone else’s DNA on earth

1. HOW COULD YOUR DNA BE USED TO IDENTIFY YOU??

Does DNA have anything to do with why I am so special?

Yes, it’s the variability of DNA that makes us all different!

2. HOW SIMILAR (%) IS YOUR DNA FROM THE PERSON SITTING NEXT TO YOU?

A CHIMPANZEE? A FLY?

The Central Dogma of Biology

DNA is transcribed into RNA->RNA is translated into Proteins

Proteins give you your traits or Phenotype

3. GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A PROTEIN THAT GIVES YOU AN IDENTIFIABLE TRAIT

Searching for the Genetic Material

Griffith - Discovered the transformation of harmless R strain Bacteria by heat killed S bacteria

Avery – Identified DNA as the transformative agent

Hershey & Chase –Studied bacteriophages and proved ______was the source of hereditary information

4. HOW DO VIRUSES INFECT CELLS?

Who Discovered the Structure of DNA?

James Watson & Francis Crick discovered the structure of DNA after observing an X-ray picture of it taken by Rosalind Franklin

5. WHICH SCIENTISTS EARNED THE NOBEL PRIZE FOR THIS DISCOVERY?

The Structure of DNA

DNA is an Alpha Double Helix

Composed of two strands of ______

Joined like a twisted ladder by hydrogen bonds

6. DRAW A SIMPLE DIAGRAM OF DNA

The Structure of DNA

The Structure of DNA is both complex and simply elegant

DNA is a polymer of Nucleotides- remember a ______is like a chain of beads-

DNA is made of 2 chains

There are 4 different Nucleotides (beads) abbreviated as A, T G, or C

The Base on one chain “complements” and makes a bond with the base on the opposite chain

The bases are bound together by hydrogen bonds.

The two strands are twisted together

DNA Structure

DNA is a polymer of nucleotides (the ______on the chain)

Each Nucleotide contains 1 Nitrogenous base + 1 phosphate group + 1 sugar

In DNA the sugar is deoxyribose

7. DRAW A SIMPLE DIAGRAM OF A NUCLEOTIDE

The Structure of DNA

There are 4 different Nucleotides identified by their Nitrogenous Bases:

Adenine Guanine (the purines)

Cytosine Thymine (the pyrimidines)

The Bases are said to “______” one another - A bonds to T, G bonds to C according to the base pairing rules (also called Chargraffs Rules)

The bases are bound to each other by hydrogen bonds.

8. IF 1 STRAND OF DNA HAS THE SEQUENCE AAATATCATCCT WHAT IS THE COMPLIMENT STRAND SEQUENCE?

The Structure of DNA

The DNA Double Helix is composed of 2 interconnected nucleotide chains

The nucleotide chains are composed of a Sugar-Phosphate ______, with bases in the middle

The Nucleotides are joined by Phospho-diester bonds

The two strands are twisted together and joined by ______bonds between the bases

DNA Replication

Why does DNA replicate?

Cells get worn out, new cells must be made (REMEMBER ______)

New cells must make exact copies of themselves

Copies of replicated genes can be passed on to offspring (______TOO!)

9. How long is DNA in base pairs (bp)??

How is DNA Replicated?10. Diagram DNA REPLICATION here

  1. Helicase breaks hydrogen bonds in the middle of the strand, creating a replication ______
  2. Unpaired bases form new bonds with free nucleotides in the cell
  1. New strand is rewound together by ______Polymerase, creating 2 identical DNA molecules

FUN FACTS

  • Sometimes replication errors occur

(A bonds to a ______)

  • There are 3 x 109bp in the average cell
  • Takes about 4 hours for a cell to replicate its DNA-Multiple ______start simultaneously
  • The process is SEMI-Conservative, I.E. each new DNA molecule has one ______strand

11. How many Genes are on your DNA approximately?

Transcription

DNA is located in the ______of the cell

DNA CANNOT leave the nucleus of the cell because it is ______.

Mr. Dougherty! I am afraid for the DNA, it can’t get to the ribosome to be translated! What will it do?

Relax, RNA is the key!

Imagine the nucleus is like a library,

where each book is a gene.

…but you can’t take any books out!

You could make copies of the books…

That’s how RNA works….

Check out this cool video to help you understand..

What is RNA?

A nucleic acid that is similar to DNA

Ribose is the sugarin stead of ______

The nitrogenous base Uracil is found in place of Thymine

Single stranded

12. How is Uracil diferent from Thymine?

Steps of Transcription

1. DNA strand unwinds via RNAPolymerase (not helicase)

2. Free nucleotides bond to bases, except U in RNA bonds to A from DNA

3. RNA polymerase joins single stranded RNA together

4.Messenger RNA (mRNA) moves to the ______in the cytoplasm (or on the Rough ER)

13. If the DNA strand is TAC CAT GAT CTT GTT what is the mRNA sequence?

Translation (Protein Synthesis) ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS

What is protein synthesis?

The Conversion of RNA to Amino ______which make up proteins

Why is it called translation?

The genetic code (ATCG) is translated into a protein

Where does it occur? At the ______in the cytoplasm

Why is it called translation?The genetic code (ATCG) is translated into a protein

14. How old are my Genes?

Translation and the Genetic Code

RNA is composed of 3 letter “words” called CODONS

Each codon of RNA represents a specific Amino Acid

For instance AUG is the start codon, and UUU represents the amino acid Phe (______)

Translation and the Genetic Code

Genetic Code Problem

15. If the DNA code is

AAT GCG TTT CGC ATA TAT

Then the RNA compliment is

______

and the Amino Acid sequence that results is

______

How Does Translation Occur?

The 3 Steps of Translation

1. Initiation

A. Ribosome attaches to mRNA (each 3 bases is called a codon)

B. tRNA brings anticodon and AA to ribosome

2. Elongation

A. More tRNA’s bring more AA’s to ribosome

B. AA’s connected together to make polypeptides (by peptide bonds)

3. Termination

A. Ribosome reaches a STOP signal on mRNA

B. Polypeptide (protein) is broken off and becomes part of the human body

C. Golgi apparatus modifies completed protein; ER transports it in/out of cell

The processes of transcription and translation are the same in all living organisms!