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Molecular Basis of Inheritance Chapter 16 Deciphering DNA The Search for Genetic Material  Known  Genes on chromosomes  Chromosomes made of DNA and protein  Unknown  Which chromosomal component was the genetic material  Protein  Heterogeneous class of macromolecules with specific functions  Case stronger initially  Nucleic acids  Physical and chemical properties too uniform for amount of variation  Experimentation gradually changed perceptions  DNA’s role clarified by studying bacteria and their viruses Frederick Griffith o Streptococcus pneumoniae model o S encapsulated and virulent; R nonencapsulated and nonvirulent o Heat killed S cells mixed with R cells created S cells o Concluded that S cells have a chemical component that can transform other cells Oswald Avery  Identified the transforming substance from Griffith’s work as DNA  Focused on DNA, RNA, and protein  Extract components from pathogenic bacteria  Each individually inactivated and tested for transformation ability  Degradation of DNA only substance to prevent  Not uniformly supported  Proteins better candidates  Doubted bacterial DNA similar to that of complex organisms  Little still known about DNA Alfred Hershey and Martha Chase o Tracked protein and DNA of E. coli phage T2 o Bacteriophage is a virus that infects bacteria o Radioactive isotopes to label cells o Determined that DNA entered bacteria and directed virus reproduction not protein Existing Knowledge of DNA  Polymer of nucleotides with 3 components  Pentose sugar (deoxyribose) and a phosphate group  Purines = two rings  Adenine (A)  Guanine (G)  Pyrimidines = one ring  Thymine (T)  Cytosine (C) Erwin Chargaff  The amount of A, T, G, and C in the DNA vary from species to species  Evidence of molecular diversity to increase DNA credibility  Chargaff ’s rules  In each species, the amount of A = T while the amount of C = G  Importance unknown until discovery of double helix Organism A T C G Human 30.3% 30.3% 19.9% 19.5% Chicken 28.8% 29.2% 20.5% 21.5% Grasshopper 29.3% 29.3% 20.5% 20.7% Sea Urchin 32.8% 32.1% 17.7% 17.3% Wheat 27.3% 27.1% 22.7% 22.8% Yeast 31.3% 32.9% 18.7% 17.1% E. coli 24.7% 23.6% 26.0% 25.7% Rosalind Franklin  X-ray diffraction image of DNA  DNA is helical in structure  Uniform in width and spacing between bases  Suggested that there were 2 strands = double helix  Concluded that sugar- phosphate backbones were on the outside  Evidence was groundwork for Watson and Crick James Watson and Francis Crick  Double helix with anti-parallel strands  Sugar-phosphate backbone on outside  Paired nitrogenous bases on inside  Complimentary hydrogen binding of a purine and a pyrimidine  A with T form 2 bonds, G with C form 3 bonds  Consistent with Chargoff and Franklin  Awarded the Nobel Prize DNA Double-Helix Structure DNA Replication DNA Replication  Each strand of original DNA serves as a template  Nucleotides match to template according to base pairing rules  1 ‘parent’ DNA strand produces 2 new ‘daughter’ strands DNA Replication Models  A) Two parent strands eventually come back together  B) Watson and Crick: each daughter strand with 1 old parent strand  C) All four strands have a mixture of new and old DNA  Matthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl’s work confirmed the semiconservative model Replication Efficiency  E. coli with 4.6 million nucleotide pairs replicates in less than an hour  Humans with 6 billion pairs a few hours, with only about 1 error every 10 billion nucleotides  Enzymes and proteins are responsible  Better understood in prokaryotes than eukaryotes  Process is fundamentally similar Origins of Replication  Short specific nucleotides sequences  Prokaryotes with 1, eukaryotes with multiple  Proteins recognize and attach  Separates strands and opens them up to form a replication bubble  Proceeds in both directions until fully copied Overall DNA Replication COMPONENTS (Table 16.1) • Helicase • Single-strand binding protein • Topoisomerase • Primer and primase • DNA pol III and I • Leading and lagging strands • Okazaki fragments • DNA ligase KEY POINTS: • DNA pol binds to 3’ end • Strands grow 5’ 3’ only Proofreading and Repairing DNA  DNA polymerases also proofread each nucleotide  Incorrect pairs are removed  Mismatch pairs result from those that evaded the polymerases  Alternate enzymes remove and replace  Nucleases cut out damaged DNA  Polymerases and ligases fill gap with nucleotides  Skin cell repair from UV light damage