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The Structure and Function of Macromolecules Chapter 5 2 – Nucleic Acids Macromolecules: The Molecules of Life  Carbohydrates  Nucleic Acids  Proteins  Lipids 2 The Structure of Nucleic Acid Monomers  Nucleotide -- nitrogenous base, a pentose sugar, and a phosphate group  Nucleoside -- portion of a nucleotide without the phosphate group 3 4 Nucleotide Monomers  There are two families of nitrogenous bases:  Pyrimidines have a single six-membered ring  Purines have a six-membered ring fused to a five-membered ring 5 5 end Nitrogenous bases Pyrimidines Cytosine C Nucleoside Thymine (in DNA) Uracil (in RNA) U T Nitrogenous base Purines Adenine A Guanine G Phosphate group Pentose sugars Nucleotide 3 end Deoxyribose (in DNA) Nucleoside components Ribose (in RNA) Polynucleotide, or nucleic acid Pentose sugar Purines vs Pyrimidines  King CUT lives in a Pyramid!  CUT = Cytosine, Uracil, Thymine  Cytosine, Uracil, Thymine are Pyrimidines  Pyrimidines are CUT from Purines  Pyrimidines are single-ring compounds, Purines are double ring compounds 7 Non-polymer Nucleotides  not large molecules or polymers  Intracellular messengers  Energy carriers  Enzyme assistants 8 Other Nucleotides Nucleotides as intracellular messengers  Cyclic nucleotides (e.g. cyclic AMP) carry chemical signals between molecule 9 Other Nucleotides  Nucleotides as energy carriers  Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) carries energy stored in bonds between phosphate groups 10 NAD+: Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide Vitamin B3 11 NADP+: Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide Phosphate 12 FAD: Flavin Adenine Dinucleotide 13 Other Nucleotides  Nucleotides as enzyme assistants  Coenzymes help enzymes promote and guide chemical reactions 14 Nucleotide Polymers  Nucleotide monomers – build polynucleotide  Covalent bonds  –OH group on the 3´ carbon of one nucleotide  phosphate on the 5´ carbon on the next  Backbone of sugar-phosphate units  nitrogenous bases as appendages 15 LE 5-26a 5 end Nucleoside Nitrogenous base Phosphate group Nucleotide 3 end Polynucleotide, or nucleic acid Pentose sugar Nucleotide Polymers  Two types: Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)  Ribonucleic acid (RNA)   DNA antiparallel  Backbones in opposite 5´ to 3´ directions  DNA makes more DNA  DNA directs synthesis of messenger RNA (mRNA)  mRNA controls protein synthesis  Occurs in ribosomes 17 DNA vs RNA  DNA is double-stranded; RNA single  In DNA, the sugar is deoxyribose; in RNA ribose  Pyrimidine in DNA is Thymine; RNA uracil  DNA directs hereditary information; RNA directs protein synthesis  DNA is DNA; RNA comes in 3 forms  messenger RNA (mRNA)– protein structure from DNA to ribosome  ribosomal RNA (rRNA) – makes up ribosomes  transfer RNA (tRNA) – carries amino acids to the ribosome/mRNA 18 Types of RNA  DNA is DNA; RNA comes in 3 forms  messenger RNA (mRNA)– protein structure from DNA to ribosome  ribosomal RNA (rRNA) – makes up ribosomes  transfer RNA (tRNA) – carries amino acids to the ribosome/mRNA  …. not exactly! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_RNAs 19 DNA Sugar–phosphate backbone LE 16-5 5 end  Most celebrated molecule of our time  Hereditary information  Directs the development of biochemical, anatomical, physiological, and (to some extent) behavioral traits Nitrogenous bases Thymine (T) Adenine (A) Cytosine (C) Phosphate Sugar (deoxyribose) 3 end DNA nucleotide Guanine (G) Variation and Diversity  Slight differences between closely related individuals  Distantly related individuals – greater differences © 2009 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 4/e 21 The Search for Genetic Material  It needed to:  Contain information  Be easy to copy  Be variable, to account for diversity 22 DNA or Protein?  Nucleic Acids  First isolated 1869 -- Friedrich Miescher  Proteins  Recognized in 18th C.  First described -- Gerardus Johannes Mulder  Named -- Jöns Jacob Berzelius in 1838. 23 DNA or Protein?  Thomas Hunt Morgan – 1911  Chromosomes carried genes  Composed of DNA and protein  Which is the genetic material?  Protein is large, complex, and stores info  DNA seemed too small and unlikely 24 Griffith Experiment -- 1928  Transformation of one strain by another  Two strains of bacteria   R—harmless S—deadly  Heat-killed S is also harmless  Heat-killed S makes R deadly 25 Avery, MacLeod, & McCarty 1944  Used the same assay system  Isolated compounds from Strain S  Added these to Strain R  Only DNA transformed Strain R 26 Additional Evidence  1947 -- Erwin Chargaff: DNA composition varies from one species to the next  Makes DNA more credible  By 1950s -- DNA composition known but not structure LE 16-3 Hershey and Chase -- 1952 Phage head Tail DNA Bacterial cell 100 nm Tail fiber Hershey and Chase -- 1952  DNA, not protein, is genetic material 29 LE 16-6 Rosalind Franklin Franklin’s X-ray diffraction photograph of DNA Watson & Crick  Determined the 3D structure of DNA  Structure revealed its function  Franklin’s X-ray crystallographic studies  Double helix  Ladder twisted into a spiral coil  Uniform diameter 31 LE 16-UN298 Purine + purine: too wide Pyrimidine + pyrimidine: too narrow Purine + pyrimidine: width consistent with X-ray data Base-Pairing Rules  Strands held together by hydrogen bonds  Strict base-pairing rules followed  Purine to Pyrimidine   A binds to T G binds to C  Makes copying sequence possible 33 34 LE 5-27 5 end 3 end Sugar-phosphate backbone Base pair (joined by hydrogen bonding) Old strands Nucleotide about to be added to a new strand 5 end New strands 5 end 3 end 5 end 3 end 36 DNA Structure Explains Function  Easily copied  Each strand is a template for the other  DNA sequence is information  Information contained in the order of the four bases  Millions of bases in length  Accounts for diversity  Alleles have different DNA sequences 37 Replication Models  Meselson & Stahl (1958) Labeled strand -heavy isotope of nitrogen  Labeled free nucleotides -lighter isotope of nitrogen  Parent cell Conservative model. The two parental strands reassociate after acting as templates for new strands, thus restoring the parental double helix. Semiconservative model. The two strands of the parental molecule separate, and each functions as a template for synthesis of a new, complementary strand. Dispersive model. Each strand of both daughter molecules contains a mixture of old and newly synthesized DNA. First replication Second replication LE 16-11 Bacteria cultured in medium containing 15N Bacteria transferred to medium containing 14N DNA sample centrifuged after 20 min (after first replication) DNA sample centrifuged after 40 min (after second replication) First replication Conservative model Semiconservative model Dispersive model Less dense More dense Second replication DNA Replication: A Closer Look  Quick and accurate  More than a dozen enzymes and other proteins participate 40 Replication  Origins of Replication  Eukaryotic chromosome -- hundreds to thousands  Replication proceeds in both directions  Replication fork – ends of each replication bubble 41 LE 16-12 Parental (template) strand Origin of replication Bubble Daughter (new) strand 0.25 µm Replication fork Two daughter DNA molecules In eukaryotes, DNA replication begins at may sites along the giant DNA molecule of each chromosome. In this micrograph, three replication bubbles are visible along the DNA of a cultured Chinese hamster cell (TEM). DNA Replication  DNA Polymerase  Catalyze elongation at a replication fork  Many enzymes and proteins are involved  Initiate replication  Unwind the DNA  Stabilize the open strands  Connect bases -- nucleoside triphosphate  Process takes about 8 hours in humans 43 LE 16-13 New strand 5 end Template strand 3 end 5 end 3 end Sugar Base Phosphate DNA polymerase 3 end Pyrophosphate Nucleoside triphosphate 5 end 3 end 5 end Antiparallel Elongation  The antiparallel structure of the double helix (two strands oriented in opposite directions) affects replication  DNA polymerases add nucleotides only to the free 3end of a growing strand DNA elongates only in the 5 to 3direction  45 The DNA Replication Machine   Complex -probably stationary DNA polymerase  “reels in” parental DNA  “extrude” daughter DNA 46
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            