it’s the dna! the information is in the dna!. dna history griffith (1928)– experimented on mice...

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It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!

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Page 1: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change

It’s the DNA!

The information is in the DNA!

Page 2: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change

DNA History

• Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change into harmful strains. He called this transformation.

Page 3: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change
Page 4: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change

DNA History

• Avery (1944) – Discovered that DNA is the nucleic acid that stores and transmits the genetic information from one generation to the next.

Page 5: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change

The Avery Experiment (1944)

Purified DNA extracted from the smooth pneumonia bacteria could ‘transform’ rough pneumonia bacteria into the smooth form.

Page 6: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change

The Hershey-Chase experiment (1952)

Viruses called bacteriophages can infect bacterial cells and change the characteristics of the cells.Bacteriophages are only made of two materials… protein and DNA.

Page 7: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change
Page 8: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change

DNA Nucleotide

OO=P-O O

Phosphate Group

CH2

O

C1C4

C3 C2

5

Sugar(deoxyribose)

N

Nitrogenous base (A, G, C, or T)

Page 9: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change

DNA’s StructureDNA contains four nucleotide bases: –adenine (A) –cytosine (C) –guanine (G)–thymine (T)

Page 10: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change

Nitrogenous Bases

PURINES1. Adenine (A)

2. Guanine (G)

PYRIMIDINES3. Thymine (T)

4. Cytosine (C) T or C

A or G

Page 11: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change

Chargaff’s Rules (1950)• Chargaff discovered

how the nitrogenous bases bond together.

• He discovered that the amount of Adenine equals the amount of Thymine ,and that the amount of Cytosine equals the amount of Guanine.

Page 12: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change

Chargaff’s Rule

Adenine pairs with Thymine

Guanine pairs with Cytosine

Their amounts in a given DNA molecule will be about the same.

G CT A

Page 13: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change

P

P

P

O

O

O

1

23

4

5

5

3

3

5

P

P

PO

O

O

1

2 3

4

5

5

3

5

3

G C

T A

Page 14: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change

More DNA History

• Watson & Crick created the double helix model of DNA.

Page 15: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change

DNA Double Helix

Page 16: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change

How does all this DNA fit into a cell?

• In Eukaryotes, DNA is located in the nucleus in the form of chromosomes.

• Chromosomes are DNA wound tightly around proteins called histones.

Page 17: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change

Semi-Conservative Replication

One-half of each new molecule of DNA is old (template strand)One-half of new molecule of DNA is new (complementary strand)

Page 18: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change

DNA Replication

• During DNA replication, the DNA molecule separates into two strands, then produces two new complimentary strands following the rules of base pairing

(Chargaff Rules).

Page 19: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change
Page 20: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change

DNA Replication

• Each strand of DNA serves as a template, or model, for the new strand.

Page 21: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change

How It Occurs

• Complimentary bases are added to the strands, for example a strand of DNA with the bases

ATTCGAG would have a complimentary strand of

• TAAGCTC

Page 22: It’s the DNA! The information is in the DNA!. DNA History Griffith (1928)– Experimented on mice and observed some harmless strains of bacteria could change

How It Occurs

•DNA replication is carried out by a series of enzymes.