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Nucleic Acids & Protein Synthesis DNA (Deoxyribonucleic acid)  The primary function of DNA in organisms is to store & transmit genetic information for the synthesis of proteins  Group of macromolecules called nucleic acids  Organic compound  Made up of repeating subunits called nucleotides  Consists of 2 long chains of nucleotides Nucleotides  Made up of three parts 1. Sugar molecule called deoxyribose 2. Phosphate group 3. Nitrogen-containing base Nitrogen-containing Bases  There are 4 different bases which are classified by their size: o Purines (larger in size having 2 carbon rings): Adenine (A) and Guanine (G) o Pyrimidines (smaller in size having 1 carbon ring): Thymine (T) and Cytosine (C) History of DNA  Johann Friedrich Miescher (1869), a Swiss biochemist, isolated DNA  Because the molecules were acidic in nature and found in the nucleus Miescher called them nucleic acids  Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins developed X- ray photographs of DNA  The photographs indicated that DNA was a helix with a sugar-phosphate backbone  In 1953, James Watson (an American biologist) and Francis Crick (a British physicist) suggested a model of DNA  They proposed that DNA was composed of 2 long chains of nucleotides coiled around each other to form a spiral staircase called a Double Helix Watson & Crick’s DNA Model  It can be compared to a twisted ladder  The sides of the ladder are made of alternating deoxyribose sugar & phosphate groups connected by covalent bonds  The rungs of the ladder are made of paired nitrogen- containing bases connected by weak hydrogen bonds  Erwin Chargoff, an American chemist, determined how the nitrogen-containing bases paired up  Pairs of bases are called Complementary Base Pairs  Base pairing rules 1. 2. Cytosine bonds with Guanine Thymine bonds with Adenine  Cytosine and Guanine form three hydrogen bonds  Thymine and Adenine form two hydrogen bonds  If one strand of DNA has a nitrogen base sequence of T-A-G-C-A-T, what would be the sequence of bases for the complementary strand?  The sequence of nitrogen-containing bases in DNA make up the codes for specific amino acids and amino acids make up proteins  In order for a new cell to function properly, it must contain a complete set of genetic instructions. Every new cell must receive an exact copy of the DNA. Replication of DNA  Replication is the process of copying DNA in a cell  During replication, the two nucleotide chains separate by unwinding and each chain serves as a template for a new nucleotide chain Steps of Replication 1. The separation of the two nucleotide chains  The point at which the chains separate is called the Replication Fork  Enzymes called Helicases move along the DNA molecule and break the weak hydrogen bonds between the complementary nitrogencontaining bases 2. New chains of DNA are assembled  Enzymes called DNA polymerases bind to the separated chains of DNA  As they move along the chain, complementary nucleotides are joined together to assemble new DNA 3. The DNA strands twist back together creating two identical DNA molecules (double helixes)  Each DNA molecule is made of one chain from the original DNA and one newly replicated chain  The replication process occurs at many points along the DNA molecule  This allows the copying of DNA to be completed faster  The cell is now ready to undergo cell division (Mitosis or Meiosis) Accuracy and Repair  DNA replication if highly accurate  1 error in every 10,000 paired nucleotides  A change in the nucleotide sequence called a Mutation can occur at any spot along the DNA molecule  Cells contain proofreading enzymes and repair processes that can detect and fix errors in the complementary base-pairing of DNA  Not all errors are detected or can be fixed by enzymes in the cell, therefore mutations can occur  Mutations can either be genetic or environmental in nature