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DNA HISTORY, STRUCTURE, AND REPLICATION

DNA History, Structure, and Replication

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DNA History, Structure, and Replication. Bellwork. List as many things from memory as you can about the structure of DNA (example: it’s a long chain) What is the procedure for getting absent work & making up your BW points when you’re absent? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

DNA HISTORY, STRUCTURE, AND REPLICATION

Page 2: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Bellwork 1. List as many things from memory as you can about the

structure of DNA (example: it’s a long chain)

2. What is the procedure for getting absent work & making up your BW points when you’re absent?

3. Leave BW on desk to be stamped. Begin cutting your model pieces @ your lab table (15 minutes). Each person needs:

4 blue

4 yellow

1 green

1 white

1 pink

1 purple

Page 3: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

DNA Functions!

Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) has two major functions…

1)Store and use information to run the cell- the “brain”

2)To replicate (copy) itself for cell division

…and of course, to make you special!

Deoxyribonucleic acid

Page 4: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

DNA Structure1. DNA is 2 long chains twisted

around each other

This creates a “double helix” shape (aka twisted ladder)

Draw a picture of a double helix in your

notes

Page 5: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Rosalind Franklin1920-1958

Hey, I figured that out!

Page 6: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Rosalind Franklin1952

Crystallized the DNA molecule

Took an X-Ray Photo of it

•She concluded:

•DNA is helical

•DNA has “rungs”

Page 7: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Rosalind Franklin1952

Crystallized the DNA molecule

Took an X-Ray Photo of it

•She concluded:

•DNA is helical

•DNA has “rungs”

On the back of your note taker summarize

Rosalind Franklin’s contribution to our

knowledge about DNA

Page 8: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

DNA Paper Model

Can you arrange your pieces into 2 chains? Try it out! (think about what the flat/untwisted version of a double helix would look like)

Page 9: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

DNA Structure2. DNA is made of 4 similar, but

different subunits

Each subunit is called a nucleotide. Nucleotides have 3 parts:• Deoxyribose (sugar)• Phosphate• Nitrogenous Base (A, T, G or C)

Page 10: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

DNA Paper Model

Try to make 4 nucleotides out of your DNA pieces. Think about what 3 things must be in EACH nucleotide.

Page 11: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

A Nucleotide

Draw a picture of a nucleotide on your notes

Page 12: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Count

the

nucle

otide

s!

Page 13: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

• A nucleotide is three things that work as one unit. (sugar, phosphate, N-base)

• We think of a hub, spokes, and a rim as a wheel. You can separate these parts, and take them apart one by one, but usually you find them together in a unit called a wheel.

Page 14: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

DNA Structure

• Nucleotides are joined together with strong covalent bonds, forming long strands

Page 15: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Paper model

Make ONE strand of DNA down the left side of your paper (4 nucleotides long). Glue it into place once approved.

When you are finished, help someone else complete their paper model

Page 16: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Put your name on your paper model

• Circle ONE nucleotide

Page 17: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Closure

Write one complete sentence about what you learned for each letter:

D-

N-

A-

Page 18: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Sponge

• Nucleotide video (0:41): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PFYp9Gfg3Y4

• Rosalind Franklin video (2:24):

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y6k1jpQIlEU

Page 19: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Bellwork

1. What is the scientific name for the subunits of DNA?

2. What are the 3 parts of each subunit?

3. Describe a time in your life when you had to use a code. Why did you need a CODE and how did it help?

4. Begin cutting your model pieces. For today you need another 4 blue, 4 yellow, 1 green, 1 white, 1 pink, 1 purple (15 mins)

Page 20: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

DNA Structure3. The order of subunits on one strand

determines the order of subunits on the complementary strand

Chargaff’s Rule: On opposite strands, A always pairs with TC always pairs with G

Page 21: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Erwin Chargaff1905-2002

I got a rule named after me!

Page 22: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Erwin Chargaff 1950

Took DNA samples & broke them apart

Analyzed the amount of each nitrogenous base (A,T,G,C)

•He concluded:

A = T

G = C

Page 23: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Erwin Chargaff 1950

Took DNA samples & broke them apart

Analyzed the amount of each nitrogenous base (A,T,G,C)

•He concluded:

A = T

G = C

On the back of your note taker summarize Erwin Chargaff’s contribution to our knowledge about

DNA

Page 24: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Come up with a memory strategy for Chargaff’s Rule

A-T

C-G

Page 25: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Practice Chargaff’s Rule

On your note taker, complete the second strand of DNA using Chargaff’s Rule

Page 26: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Chargaff’s Rule

• Label the deoxyribose sugars with “D”

• Label the phosphates with “P”

• Circle one nucleotide

D D

D

D

D

D

D

D D

D

D

D

D

D

DD

P

P

P

P

P

P

P

P

P

P

P

P

P

P

P

P

Page 27: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

DNA StructureThe two strands are held together by

weak hydrogen bonds between the nitrogenous base-pairs.

•Label one of the

hydrogen bonds on

your Chargaff’s

Rule picture

Page 28: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Paper model

Use Chargraff’s rule to make a complementary strand of DNA & connect it to the first strand.

Glue it down once approved. After you finish, help other students finish their models.

• What do you notice about

the complementar

y strands?

Page 29: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

James Watson and Francis Crick 1953

We won the Nobel

Prize!

Page 30: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Watson and Crick 1953

-Used all info & Franklin’s photograph & Chargaff’s Rule to accurately model the structure of DNA (just like you did!)

-Included double helix with “rungs”

-“Rungs” held together by Hydrogen Bonds

Page 31: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Watson & Crick shared the Nobel Prize for the discovery of DNA structure

On the back of your note taker summarize James

Watson & Francis Crick’s contribution to our knowledge of DNA

Page 32: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Closure: How is DNA like a piece of yarn?

Write a PIE paragraph response in your notebook.

Give specific examples.

Page 33: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Bellwork Have slate, marker & eraser on desk

1. What is the scientific name for the “subunits” of DNA?

1. What are the 3 parts of each subunit?

2. What is Chargraff’s Rule?

3. Copy the strand of DNA on the right and write the complementary strand next to it, using to Chagfraff’s Rule.

4. Write one note about each of the following scientist’s contributions: Franklin, Chargaff, Watson & Crick

AGTCAATGCG

TCAGTTACGC

Page 34: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

DNA Replication

Page 35: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

DNA Replication

DNA copies itself in 3 steps

Page 36: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Step 1- DNA Unzips• DNA Helicase (enzyme) splits apart

the two chains of DNA

Draw a picture of step 1 on

your note taker

Page 37: DNA History, Structure, and Replication
Page 38: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

• What is the first step of replication?

• Please unzip the two chains of your DNA model

• What did the scissors represent while we unzipped the model?– DNA Helicase

Page 39: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

• Each strand acts as a pattern or template for the new strands

• DNA Polymerase takes free nucleotides makes new strands using Chargaff’s Rules

Step 2- Bases Pair Up

Draw a picture of step 2 on

your note taker

Page 40: DNA History, Structure, and Replication
Page 41: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

• What is the second step of replication?

• Please draw the complementary strands for each of the parent chains

• What does parent chain mean?

• What could we call the new chains if the original ones are called “parents”?

• What represented the DNA polymerase enzyme when we made the new strands?

Page 42: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

• Enzymes double check new daughter strands for errors, & fix if needed

• Sugar-phosphate backbone bonds tightly

Step 3- Check & Bond

Draw a picture of step 3 on

your note taker

Page 43: DNA History, Structure, and Replication
Page 44: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

• What is the third step of replication?

• Please glue the strands together and double check for errors in your 2 new sets of DNA

• What represented the enzymes that double check for errors in your model?

Page 45: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

• This DNA replication process is so accurate that errors are rare (1 in a billion) and when errors do occur they are often corrected by special repair enzymes. This repair allows for accurate replication as organisms grow and reproduce generation after generation.

• If you did a task once every minute for the rest of your life, and made that few mistakes, you would only make one mistake every 30 years!

Page 46: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Label your model

• Put your name at the top of your two new sets of DNA

• Label the parent strand, and label the daughter strand

• Circle and label a nucleotide on one of the daughter strands

Page 47: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Homework- due Friday

1. Replicate the other parent strand using the 3 steps

2. Label the parent strand & daughter strand

3. Label a nucleotide on the daughter strand

Page 48: DNA History, Structure, and Replication

Closure

How would you explain the process of DNA replication to a 1st grader?

Write out a short paragraph in simple language and include simplified drawings (little kids often understand drawings better than words).