14.2 DNA Structure and Sequencing
14.2 DNA Structure and Sequencing
- You can see how science builds upon previous discoveries after reading the past few pages.
- The building blocks are called nucleotides.
- A nitrogenous base, a 5-carbon sugar, and a phosphate group are important components of the nucleotide.
- Depending on the nitrogenous base, the nucleotide is named.
- The nitrogenous base can be either a purine or apyrimidine.
- The purines have a double ring structure with a six-membered ring fused to a five-membered ring.
- Pyrimidines have a single six-membered ring structure.
- The five bases are shown in the images above.
- The purines have a double ring structure with a six-membered ring fused to a five-membered ring.
- Pyrimidines have a single six-membered ring structure.
- The sugar is found in the body.
- The five-carbon sugar's carbon atoms are numbered 1', 2', 3', 4', and 5'.
- The 5' carbon of the sugar is connected to the 5' OH group by the formation of an ester linkage between phosphoric acid and the 5' OH group.
- The 3' carbon of the sugar is attached to the OH group.
- The 2' carbon of the sugar ribose has a group in it.
- The base is attached to the sugar.
- The bonds are produced by the combination of the nucleotides and each other.
- The 5' carbon of the sugar of one nucleotide is attached to the 3' carbon of the sugar of the next nucleotide in order to form a second ester linkage.
- One end of a polynucleotide has a free 5'phosphate and the other has a free 3'-OH.
- The 5' and 3' ends of the chain are called the 5' and 3' ends.
- The structure of DNA was determined by Francis Crick and James Watson in the 1950s.
- Other scientists were exploring this field as well.
- Franklin was using X-ray methods to understand the structure of DNA.
- Crick studied X-ray diffraction and Franklin's data in order to piece together the puzzle of the DNA molecule.
- James, Francis, and Maurice Wilkins received the prize in 1962.
- Unfortunately, by Franklin's death, the prizes aren't awarded posthumously.
- Our present day understanding of DNA can be traced back to the work of James Watson, Francis Crick, and Maclyn McCarty.
- The X-ray pattern of DNA was discovered by scientist Rosalind Franklin.
- Chargaff's Rules suggest that base pairs are made between a purine and pyrimidine on opposite strands.
- Adenine and thymine are two of the complimentary base pairs.
- The base pairs are stable by hydrogen bonds.
- The 3' end of one strand faces the 5' end of the other strand in nature.
- The nitrogenous bases are stacked inside like the rungs of a ladder, whereas the sugar andphosphates form the backbone of the structure.
- Each base pair is separated from the next by a distance of less than a millimeter.
- 10 base pairs are present per turn of the helix.
- The diameter of the double-helix is 2 nm.
- The diameter can only be explained by the pairs of purine and pyrimidine and the antiparallel orientation of the two strands of DNA.
- The grooves are formed by the twisting of the strands around each other.
- A double helix structure and hydrogen bonds are found in DNA.
- The major and minor grooves are where the binding sites for the DNA binding proteins are located.
- The process of reading the sequence of DNA was long and expensive before the 1990s.
- The problem was compounded by using radiolabeled nucleotides.
- The method used for the human genome sequencing project was developed by Fred Sanger.
- There is a link to learning to watch a video about the sequence-reading technique that resulted from Sanger's work.
- The dideoxy chain terminated method is known as the sequencing method.
- The method is based on chain terminators.
- The chain cannot be extended further if a free 3' OH group is not available.
- It is possible to create different sized DNA fragments by using a ratio of de and dide.
- Frederick Sanger's dideoxy chain terminated method uses dye-labeled dideoxynucleotides to generate fragments that end at different points.
- The DNA is separated by capillary electrophoresis on the basis of size, and from the order of fragments formed, the sequence can be read.
- The laser scanned DNA sequence is shown on apherogram.
- The sample is separated into two strands by heating it to high temperatures.
- A primer, DNA polymerase, and all four nucleoside triphosphates (A, T, G, and C) are added to the DNA in four tubes.
- There are limited quantities of one of the four dideoxynucleoside triphosphates added to each tube.
- The tubes are labeled as A, T, G, and C. Each of the four dideoxynucleotides has a different fluorescent label.
- After a fluorescent dideoxy nucleotide is incorporated, there is no further chain elongation.
- electrophoresis is performed after the reaction is over.
- There is a difference in length of a base.
- The sequence is read from a laser scanning device.
- In 1980, he received a Nobel Prize for his work on genetics.
- A race to sequence human genomes has led to a link to learning.
- You can learn more by watching the animation here.
- The gel is usually made of a chemical called agarose that is high in galactose.
- The Agarose powder is heated.
- The gel solution is poured into a casting tray after cooling.
- The electric current is applied after the gel has solidified.
- The DNA has a negative charge and moves to the positive side.
- The electric current can be applied for enough time to allow the DNA to be separated according to size, and the heavier fragments will be closest to the well.
- The gel is stained with a DNA-specific dye after it is separated.
- The size of the DNA can be separated using gel electrophoresis.
- The first draft of the Neanderthal genome was published.
- They were known to have lived in Europe and Western Asia tens of thousands of years ago.
- Green's team studied fossil remains from all over the world.
- Because of the fragile nature of the bones, very sophisticated means of sample preparation were used.
- The scientists were able to sequence four billion base pairs.
- The Neanderthal sequence was compared with the present-day humans from all over the world.
- The researchers found that the Neanderthal genome had more similarity to people living outside of Africa than to people in Africa.
- Current theories suggest that all humans are descended from a small population in Africa, but the data from the Neanderthal genome suggest some interbreeding between Neanderthals and early modern humans.
- Green and his colleagues discovered that people in Europe and Asia have the same genes as Neanderthals.
- Neanderthals are as closely related to people from Australia as to those from China or France.
- Neanderthal fossils have only been found in Europe and West Asia.
- Neanderthals and modern humans are most likely to have had a genetic exchange before modern humans emerged out of Africa.
- Several genes seem to have changed during the evolution of humans.
- The genes are involved in metabolism and cognitive development.
- One of the genes that is of particular interest is RunX2, which is different in modern day humans and Neanderthals.
- Neanderthals had bell-shaped rib cage, prominent frontal bone, and dental differences.
- The upper body and cranium are thought to have been affected by an evolutionary change in RUNX2.
- The Neanderthal genome research is explained in a talk by Svante Paabo at the annual TED conference.
- Eukaryotes have a lot of features that are simpler than prokaryotes.
- The nucleus of most prokaryotes contains a single, circular chromosome.
- The nucleus of a eukaryote is well-defined, whereas the nucleus of a prokaryote is not.
- Both processes occur in prokaryotic cells.
- If cut and stretched out, the size of the E.coli genome is approximately 1.1 million base pairs.
- Supercoiling is when the DNA is twisted.
- Supercoiling suggests that DNA is either "under-wound" (less than one turn of the helix per 10 base pairs) or "over-wound" (more than 1 turn per 10 base pairs) from its normal relaxed state.
- Some genes are involved in the supercoiling and other genes are involved in maintaining the structure.
- Eukaryotes use different packing strategies to fit their DNA inside the nucleus.
- The histones are composed of two molecules of each of four different histones and are evolutionarily conserved.
- The histone core is wrapped around the negatively charged DNA.
- The next one is linked with the help of a linker DNA.
- The beads on a string structure is also known as this.
- A string of nucleosomes is further compressed into a 30-nanometer fiber with the help of a fifth histone.
- Metaphase chromosomes are further reduced by association with scaffolding proteins.
- The chromosomes are at their most compact at the metaphase stage.
- There are two distinct regions that can be distinguished by staining.
- The less dense region is known as euchromatin, while the tightly packaged region is known as Heterochromatin.
- Heterochromatin usually contains genes that are not expressed, and is found in the centromere and telomeres.
- The genes that are transcribed are packaged around the nucleosomes.