chapters 8 & 9 dna and protein synthesis the central dogma

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CHAPTERS 8 & 9 DNA AND PROTEIN SYNTHESIS THE CENTRAL DOGMA

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Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma. Experiments on DNA. We did this yesterday. (Or at least tried) What to do with the post-it. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

CHAPTERS 8 & 9DNA AND PROTEIN SYNTHESIS

THE CENTRAL DOGMA

Page 2: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

Experiments on DNA We did this yesterday. (Or at least tried) What to do with the post-it.

On the door place the post-it based on how well you understand the results of the experiments and the basics of how they worked. Top= I’m good: Bottom=What experiments?

If you have a specific question, Write it on the post-it.

Page 3: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 4: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 5: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 6: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 7: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 8: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 9: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 10: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

Watson and Crick DNA Model Double Helix

Twisted ladder formed of nucleotides.Rungs of the ladder are nucleotide bases.

Base pairing rule:Adenine -> Thymine : Cytosine -> Guanine

Page 11: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 12: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 13: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 14: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 15: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

Watson and Crick continued… Sides of the ladder are alternating

deoxyribose sugars and phosphate groups

One page paper, the most important in biology since Darwin’s The Origin of Species.

Page 16: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 17: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

DNA Replication: Semi-conservative replication (3 main steps)1. DNA uncoils and unzips with help from

Helicase (enz.) and exposes unpaired bases on 2 separate strands @ the replication fork.

2. New DNA nucleotides bond to the existing old strands with help from DNA Polymerase according to base pair rules.

3. Result: 2 New double helices formed. Each old strand paired up with a new strand.

Page 18: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 19: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

Other DNA Replication Info After step 2, DNA “proofreads” the

strand to assure no mistakes are made. DNA Rep. takes place during S-phase of

Interphase, before cell division. DNA Rep. can only extend existing

DNA.

Page 20: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

How DNA controls all A trait (phenotype) is the physical

expression of a gene.Ex: visible characteristics, hair, height, etc.

A gene is a length of DNA which is the code to make a protein.

A chromosome is a whole series of genes (DNA segments) linked.

The nucleus contains all the chromosomes of the cell.

Page 21: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

The nucleus controls the cell by containing DNA. How?

The DNA determines which proteins (enz.) will be made.

The enzymes determine which activities the cell will perform.

Analogy: Boss (DNA) tells (codes) the workers (Proteins) to do their job (Function)

Page 22: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 23: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

Linkage Group Genes on the same chromosome

inherited together.

Ex: Everywhere A goes B goes too.

Page 24: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

Crossing Over An exchange of genes between

homologous chromosomes during meiosis when two adjacent chromosomes have parts break free and reattach themselves to the other chromosome.

Results in new genetic combinations and adds to diversity of life.

Page 25: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

A= ShortB= Blonde HairC= Blue Eyes

a= Tallb= Brown Hairc= Brown Eyes

1

2

1= Short, Blonde Hair, Brown Eyes2= Tall, Brown Hair, Blue Eyes

Page 26: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

Multiple Gene More than two genes are responsible for

a trait.AKA: Polygenic

Ex: Human skin color or eye color8 Genes are involved

Page 27: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 28: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

3 Forms of RNA rRNA- makes up part of the ribosome. tRNA- picks up specific aa in the

cytoplasm and transfers them to the working ribosome to become part of a growing protein.

mRNA- brings the DNA message into the cytoplasm where a ribosome binds to it to begin the process of translation.

Page 29: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 30: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

DNA vs. RNADNA RNA

Deoxyribose Sugar

Thymine nucleotide base

Double Stranded

Ribose Sugar

Uracil nucleotide base

Single Stranded

Page 31: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 32: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 33: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

Transcription DNA uncoils and one side of the two

strands is read by RNA Polymerase, which has helicase powers, to form a strand of mRNA.

The mRNA travels into the cytoplasm where ribosomes attach to it to start translation.

Page 34: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 35: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

RNA Processing Cap- Protective cap added to one end.

Poly A tail- add about 200-300 Adenines to the opposite end of the cap.

Splicing- cuts introns, leave exons (choose which exons to determine protein)

Page 36: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 37: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

Translation mRNA is read chemically by the

ribosome. In the process, tRNA is used to bring the

correct aa from the cytoplasm to attach to the ribosome-mRNA complex and begin forming the protein.

The protein grows as aa brought in by the tRNA are added together in a long strand.

Page 38: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 39: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

The tRNA bonds to a specific aa at one end and to a specific 3 base sequence on the mRNA called the codon on the other end.

This is the codon - anticodon pairing that ensures a maintenance of message from DNA to protein.

Codon- 3 consecutive mRNA bases that encode a specific aa. Cannot be 1-1 because we have 20 aa.

Page 40: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

Understanding how DNA makes RNA Start with a strand of DNA segment and

turn it into an mRNA segment.

ATCGATGAGTGCGTAGCT = DNA StrandUAGCUACUCACGCAUCGA =RNA Strand

created from the DNA

StrandInstead of bringing in a T to pair with the A, a U would be brought in instead. All the other base pairing combinations stay the same.

Page 41: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

How RNA makes Protein We need to start by knowing the

different parts.

UAGCUACUCACGCAUCGA = mRNAThis needs to be broken down into 3

consecutive bases that we call a codon. UAG-CUA-CUC-ACG-CAU-CGA

This are the codon we would look up on the mRNA chart.

Page 42: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

How the tRNA works The tRNA contains an anti-codon stretch

at one end of it’s structure. This binds to the codon on the mRNA. The tRNA anti-codon is the compliment of the mRNA.

You never look up the anti-codons on a chart.

UAG-CUA-CUC-ACG-CAU-CGA = mRNA AUC-GAU-GAG-UGC-GUA-GCU= tRNA

Page 43: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 44: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 45: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 46: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

Gene Expression Prokaryotes- operon system

Its only on when its needed.Read 190-191.

Eukaryotes The same general principle as Prokaryotes.Read 192-193

Page 47: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

Lac Operon The operon makes the enz. Lactase

Lactase digests the sugar lactose

When lactose is present the operon turns on. When not, it is turned off.

Page 48: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 49: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

Homeotic and Oncogenes Homeotic- master genes that control

embryonic development. Which parts of body from what parts

Oncogenes- genes that cause cancerWe may all have some we inherited.

Page 50: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 51: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

“The Guardian Angel gene” p53 Anti-cancer gene and works in the

following way…1. Activates DNA repair proteins when

DNA is damaged.2. Has the ability to hold cell cycle @ G1/S

phases to repair.3. Will kill the cell if DNA is beyond repair.

Page 52: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

RNAi- RNA Silencing It then has the power to bind to an

mRNA and can shut down any gene that was going to be translated.

Page 53: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

Environment and Gene Expression Genes are like blueprints however on

occasion the environment alters it.

The environment can have a good or bad effect on the gene expression.

Ex: Fox’s coat turns white in winter and brown in summer.

Page 54: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

Chromosome Mutations Translocation- piece breaks off and joins

a different chromosome

Inversion- breaks than pulls a 180.

Addition- sequence reoccurs, duplication

Deletion- lose a piece of a chromosome

Page 55: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 56: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 57: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

Other Chromosome Mutations Nondisjunction- a whole chromosome is

in the wrong place. Homologs do not separate right during

Anaphase.

Polyploidy- a whole set of chromosome is wrong.Typically happens in plants b/c asexual.

Page 58: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 59: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma
Page 60: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

Gene Mutations Substitution- replace base with another

Deletion- gets rid of a baseShifts reading frame down

Addition- adds a baseShifts reading frame up

Page 61: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

Effects of a mutation Good/Beneficial- Arisen a new trait that

aids in survival.

Bad/Harmful- Very lethal, death, short life span.

No effect or neutral- No real change visible in current environment.

Page 62: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

Good Example In Uganda, 15% of elephants are born

without tusks. This is inherited as a mutation that prevents tusk formation.

Normally, less tan 4% are affected with his defect.

Why would this happen? Natural Selection. Elephants with tusks get poached, so it is

more favorable now to not have tusks so they don’t get shot.

Page 63: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

Bad and Neutral Bad: Sickle-cell anemia is an example of

a bad mutation. Even though it provides some protection against malaria, the condition is not recommended. Sickle cell assaults the way the blood flows.

Neutral: Shows no effect. Most mutations are categorized as having no effect on an organism at that time.

Page 64: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma

Causes of Mutations Mutagens

Radiation: UV light, X raysChemicals: mustard gas, chloroform

Transposons- Jumping GenesDiscovered by Barbara McClintockNobel Prize in 1983“Cut and paste” or “Copy and Paste”

Page 65: Chapters 8 & 9 DNA and Protein Synthesis The Central Dogma