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DNA Structure
DNA is a nucleic acid, building blocks are nucleotides, nucleotides are connected by a phosphodiester bond
Matthew Meselson & Franklin Stahl
Investigated the process of DNA replication, considered 3 possible mechanisms...DNA Replication. Concluded that the mechanism of DNA replication is the semiconservative model. Each strand of DNA acts as a template for the synthesis of a new strand.
DNA replication includes
Initiation, Elongation, and
Initiation
replication begins at an origin of replication
elongation
new strands of DNA are synthesized by DNA polymerase
termination
replication is terminated
Replication Fork
a Y-shaped region where the parental strands of DNA are being unwound
Initiation
Several kinds of proteins participate in the unwinding: helicases untwist the double helix at the replication forks, single-strand binding proteins bind to and stabilize single-stranded DNA Topoisomerase relieves the strain caused by tight twisting ahead of the replication fork by breaking, swiveling, and rejoining DNA strands
Elongation
DNA polymerase can only add nucleotides to an already existing chain base-paired with the template, need a short RNA primer, primase, starts an RNA chain with a single RNA nucleotide and adds RNA nucleotides one at a time using the parental DNA as a template, the primer is short (5-10 nucleotides long), DNA polymerases catalyze the elongation of new DNA at a replication fork, they add nucleotides to the 3′ end of a preexisting chain, and as each monomer nucleotide joins the DNA strand, it loses two phosphate groups as a molecule of pyrophosphate
DNA polymerases
Errors in the completed DNA molecule amount to only one in 10 billion, DNA polymerases proofread newly made DNA, replacing any incorrect nucleotides mismatch repair of DNA, other enzymes correct errors in base pairing, a hereditary defect in one such enzyme is associated with a form of colon cancer
Repairing DNA
DNA can be damaged by exposure to harmful chemical or, physical agents, such as X-rays, DNA bases can also undergo spontaneous changes
Base Excision Repair
A nitrogenous base can be replaced
Nucleotide Excision Repair
A nucleotide can be replaced
Telomeres in Eukaryotes
Ends of chromosomes with repetitive sequence (humans = TTAGGG), telomeres do not prevent the shortening of DNA molecules, but they do postpone it If chromosomes of germ cells became shorter in every cell cycle, essential genes would eventually be missing from the gametes they produce
Telomeres and Telomerase
Telomerase expressed and extends telomeres in: Germ line cells, Some stem cells, Cancer cells
Understanding DNA Structure and Replication Makes Genetic Engineering Possible
Complementary base pairing of DNA is the basis for nucleic acid hybridization, the base pairing of one strand of a nucleic acid to another, complementary sequence. Nucleic acid hybridization forms the foundation of virtually every technique used in genetic engineering, the direct manipulation of genes for practical purposes
DNA cloning
A process of preparing well-defined segments of DNA in identical copies; need many copies of a specific gene/region to work with in the lab.
Plasmids
small circular DNA molecules that replicate separately from the bacterial chromosome
Cloning 'foreign' DNA into plasmids
Combine plasmid and DNA from another source ("foreign DNA") = recombinant DNA
Bacteria can be transformed with a piece of DNA
Replicate the DNA in vivo, and produce the product of an engineered gene
Applications of Cloning DNA
Agriculture, Medicine, Genetics, and Development
Gene cloning
the production of multiple copies of a single gene; is used to make many copies of a gene and to produce a protein product
Cloning Vector
The plasmid that carries the cloned DNA
Restriction Endonucleases
enzymes that cleave DNA at specific sites
DNA ligase
an enzyme that facilitates the joining of DNA strands
Type II Restriction Endonucleases, 'Double stranded endodeoxyribonucleases'
Some bacteria resistant to bacteriophage infection; Enzymes responsible for viral DNA cleavage - RESTRICT host range of phages. Bacteria protect own genomes via methylation of restriction sites (restriction/modification systems)
Sticky Ends
enzymes cleave the DNA in a staggered manner, cleaved ends can bond with complementary cleaved ends of other fragments
Ligation
enzymatic process of joining two nucleic acid fragments, crucial for DNA replication, repair, and cloning
Manipulating DNA In Bacteria
DNA fragments of interest are introduced on plasmids; transformation is a critical step (bacteria will 'pick up' DNA easily)
Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)
Allows the amplification of a small DNA fragment using primers that flank the region. Useful to obtain enough of a certain gene for study: unknown genes and unculturable organisms. Can detect very small amounts of starting material: diagnostic tool (pathogens, 'cancer' genes), forensics. VERY specific: will only copy your gene of interest, and compare same genes within/between species (phylogenetics)
Critical Components of PCR
Template (target) DNA, Primers specific to target regions, Nucleotide building blocks (dNTP = dATP+dCTP+dGTP+dTTP), Taq DNA polymerase
Each PCR cycle involves three steps
Denaturation (high temperature), Annealing of primers (low temperature), DNA synthesis (intermediate temperature)
How Linkage Affects Inheritance Based on Morgan's experiment
Morgan crossed flies that differed in traits of body color and wing size, found body color and wing size are usually inherited together in specific combinations (parental phenotypes), he reasoned that since these genes did not assort independently, they were on the same chromosome
Linked Genes
Genes located on the same chromosome that tend to be inherited together
Nonparental Phenotypes Production
Genetic recombination!!! Offspring with nonparental phenotypes (new combinations) = recombinant types, or recombinants, and a 50% frequency of recombination is observed for any two genes on different chromosomes (Indep. Assort.)
What about traits on the SAME chromosome?
When two genes were on the same chromosome, some recombinant phenotypes were still observed, some process must occasionally
break the physical connection between genes on the same chromosome, homologous crossing over
Mapping the Distance Between Genes Using Recombination Data
The farther apart two genes are, the higher the probability that a crossover will occur between them; therefore the higher the recombination frequency, the frequency of recombinant offspring used to construct an ordered list of the genetic loci along a particular chromosome = genetic map
The nucleosome
consists of DNA wound twice around a protein core of eight histones, two of each of the main histone types
Chromatin packaging is dynamic
At interphase, most of the chromatin is compacted into a 30-nm fiber, which is folded further in some areas by looping
Heterochromatin
Dense areas of chromatin
Euchromatin
more dispersed, less compacted chromatin
Frederick Griffith
studied Streptococcus pneumoniae, a pathogenic bacterium causing pneumonia. Griffith's conclusion: information specifying virulence passed from the dead S strain cells into the live R strain cells, and Griffith called the transfer of this information transformation
Hershey & Chase
investigated bacteriophages: viruses that infect bacteria, and the bacteriophage was composed of only DNA and protein, conclusion: DNA is the genetic material
Pleiotropy
One allele has more than one effect on phenotype
Epistasis
One gene can interact with the expression of another gene
Polygenic inheritance
Multiple genes control phenotype of a trait; these traits show continuous variation and are referred to as quantitative traits, ex) human height
Gene Expression Influenced by the Environment
ex) coat color in Himalayan rabbits and Siamese cats (an allele produces an enzyme that allows pigment production only at temperatures below 33C)
Pedigree analysis
Used to track inheritance patterns in families; some human traits are controlled by a single gene: some of these exhibit dominant inheritance and some of these exhibit recessive inheritance
Recessively Inherited Disorders
Many genetic disorders are inherited in a recessive manner; these range from relatively mild to life-threatening
Carriers
Heterozygous individuals who carry the recessive allele but phenotypically express the dominant characteristic
Inbreeding
Consanguineous (between close relatives) matings increase the chance of mating between two carriers of the same rare allele that may lead to increased risks of health issues
Sex-linked genes are those on either sex chromosome
Genes on Y = "Y-linked genes", there are few of these (~50), and they are important for determining biological sex (SRY gene). Genes on the X = "X-linked genes", there are many genes (~1000), and many are unrelated to biological sex determination.
Males are heterogametic (XY)
Properties considered "male" are associated with the inheritance of one X and one Y chromosome
Females homogametic (XX)
Individuals with two X chromosomes develop anatomy we associate with the female sex
X-linked genes follow specific patterns of inheritance
For recessive X-linked trait to be expressed, a female needs two copies of the allele (homozygous) and a male needs only one copy of the allele (hemizygous).X-linked recessive disorders are more common in males than in females. ex) Color blindness (mostly X-linked), Duchenne muscular dystrophy, and Hemophilia
Testcross
What if we don't know the genotype? (e.g., purple flower could be PP or Pp) Breed with a known recessive homozygote and if any offspring display the recessive phenotype, the mystery parent must be heterozygous
Dihybrid cross
Examination of 2 separate characteristics in a single cross
Law of Independent Assortment
In a dihybrid cross, each pair of alleles segregates independently of any other pair during gamete formation. This law applies to genes on
chromosomes that are not homologous, or those far apart on the same chromosome. Genes located near each other on the same chromosome tend to be inherited together ('linked genes')
Blood Types
Variations of proteins, antibodies, and antigens found in blood cells used to classify cells with similar traits
The 'Rh Factor'
A Protein on the surface of red blood cells that determines whether your blood type is positive or negative; genotypes: DD - Rh positive, Dd - Rh Positive, dd - Rh Negative
HDFN (Hemolytic Disease of the Fetus or Newborn)
Disorder where a mother's body produces antibodies in response to differences in blood type between her and her baby when the infant's blood enters her blood stream. The antibodies will try to destroy the babies' red blood cells and can result in severe health issues for the infant.
RhoGAM
A response to HDFN which prevents the expecting mother's body to produce antibodies during pregnancy which could result in HDFN in her infant; reduces the risk of HDFN developing during the term of her pregnancy
Solving Complex Genetics Problems with the Rules of Probability
We can apply the rules of probability to predict the outcome of crosses involving multiple characters; a dihybrid or other multicharacter cross is equivalent to two or more independent monohybrid crosses occurring simultaneously, and in calculating the chances for various genotypes, each character is considered separately, and then the individual probabilities are multiplied
Codominance
A genetic phenomenon in which two different alleles at a single gene locus are both fully expressed in a heterozygous individual, resulting in a phenotype that displays traits of both alleles simultaneously, ex) blood types
Incomplete Dominance
When a dominant allele does not completely mask the effects of a recessive allele, ex) intermediate flower colors
Genetic Polymorphism
Genes often have more than 2 alleles (multiple alleles), ex) ABO blood type (3 alleles IA, IB, and i )
Early Ideas of Heredity
The "particulate" hypothesis is the idea that parents pass on discrete heritable units (genes)
Mendel's Group of Focus
Chose to study pea plants because he could produce pea hybrids, there were many pea varieties available, peas are small plants and easy to grow, and peas can self-fertilize or be cross-fertilized
Mendel's Experiments
Studied heritable features, or characters (such as flower color) and character variants (such as purple or white flowers) called traits, compared overt "Either/Or" traits for easy comparison and statistics
Monohybrid Cross
A cross between two organisms with different variations at one genetic locus of interest
Mendel's Explanation
Alternate versions of heritable 'factors' account for observed variation (we call these alleles now), the factor for white flowers was not diluted or destroyed because it reappeared in the F2 generation if 2 different alleles are involved one may be dominant over other - organisms appearance is determined by dominant factor (allele), and the other factor in this case is recessive
Mendel's Model
For each character, an organism inherits two alleles, one from each parent (Mendel made this deduction without knowing about the existence of chromosomes)
Law of Segregation
The two alleles for a heritable character separate (segregate) during gamete formation and end up in different gametes, thus, an egg or a sperm gets only one of the two alleles that are present in the organism; this segregation of alleles corresponds to the distribution of homologous chromosomes to different gametes in meiosis
Genotype
Total set of alleles of an individual ex) PP = homozygous dominant, Pp = heterozygous, pp = homozygous recessive
Homozygous
Having two identical alleles of a particular gene or genes
Heterozygous
Having two different alleles for a particular gene or trait, one inherited from each parent
Phenotype
Outward appearance of an individual
Punnett Square
Possible combinations of sperm and egg can be shown using a specific style of chart to predict the results of a genetic cross between individuals of known genetic makeup
Heredity
The transmission of traits from one generation to the next
Variation
Demonstrated by the differences in appearance that offspring show from parents and siblings
Genetics
The scientific study of heredity and variation
Genes
The units of heredity and are made up of segments of DNA, packaged in chromosomes
Locus
The specific location of genes on a certain chromosome
Somatic cells
cells of the body except for gametes and their precursors
Homologous pair
The homologs of a chromosome have the same length and shape and carry genes controlling the same inherited characters
Gametes
In sexually reproducing organisms, genes are passed to the next generation via reproductive cells, eggs and sperms, as a result of meiosis, and are produced by germ line cells.
Asexual Reproduction
a single individual passes genes to its offspring without the fusion of gametes
Clone
a group of genetically identical individuals from the same parent, produced asexually
Sexual Reproduction
Two parents give rise to offspring that have unique combinations of genes inherited from the two parents
Haploid
Contains a single set of chromosomes (n), Humans (n=23), ex) a gamete (sperm or egg)
Diploid cell
(2n) has two sets of chromosomes (humans 46, 2n = 46)
Sex Chromosomes
Determine the biological sex of the individual in human
Autosomes
The remaining 22 pairs of chromosomes in humans that are not sex chromosomes
Fertilization
The union of gametes (the sperm and the egg)
Zygote
The fertilized egg, or ____ has one set of chromosomes from each parent and is diploid
Meiosis
includes two rounds of division: meiosis I and meiosis II
Meiosis I
homologous chromosomes (homologues) become closely associated with each other
Interphase
the active phase of the cell cycle in which a cell grows, replicates its DNA, and prepares for division; occurs before meiosis I and ensures each daughter cell receives a complete set of genetic material