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Introduction to DNA and Chromosomes, Study notes of Cell Biology

An overview of DNA and chromosomes, including their composition, structure, and functions. It covers topics such as the nucleotide building blocks of DNA, the double helix structure, the genetic code, genes, eukaryotic chromosomes, and specialized DNA sequences for cell division. The document also includes diagrams and images to aid in understanding.

Typology: Study notes

2022/2023

Available from 01/23/2024

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CYTOGENETICS
Lesson
9
[TRANS] LESSON 09: DNA & CHROMOSOMES
WHAT IS DNA MADE OF?
COMPOSED OF:
Sugar (deoxyribose) + phosphate
Nitrogen base attached to sugar
Adenine (A)
Cytosine ©
Guanine (G)
Thymine (T)
- DNA is made of four nucleotide building blocks.
(A) Each nucleotide is composed of a sugar
phosphate covalently linked to a base—guanine (G) in
this figure.
(B) The nucleotides are covalently linked
together into polynucleotide chains, with a
sugar–phosphate backbone from which the
bases—adenine, cytosine, guanine, and thymine (A, C,
G, and T)—extend.
(C) A DNA molecule is composed of two
polynucleotide chains (DNA strands) held together by
hydrogen bonds between
the paired bases. The arrows on the DNA strands
indicate the polarities of the two strands, which run
antiparallel to each other (with opposite chemical
polarities) in the DNA molecule.
(D) Although the DNA is shown straightened out
in (C), in reality, it is wound into a double helix, as shown
here.
POLARITY OF DNA
Sugar phosphate backbone held together by
phosphodiester bonds
5’ end fifth C in deoxyribose
Phosphate end
3’ end third C in deoxyribose
“The nucleotide subunits within a DNA
strand are held together by phosphodiester
bonds. These bonds connect one sugar to the
next. The chemical differences in the ester
linkages—between the carbon of one sugar
and the carbon of the other—give rise to the
polarity of the resulting DNA strand. For
simplicity, only two nucleotides are shown here.”
DOUBLE HELIX AND COMPLEMENTARY
Two strands held together by hydrogen bonds
between bases
Purine - G and A
Pyrimidine - C and T
Complementary base pairs
C and G
T and A
Strands are antiparallel to each other
10 base pairs per helical turn
1
pf3
pf4
pf5

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CYTOGENETICS

Lesson

[TRANS] LESSON 09: DNA & CHROMOSOMES

WHAT IS DNA MADE OF?

COMPOSED OF:

● Sugar (deoxyribose) + phosphate

● Nitrogen base – attached to sugar

○ Adenine (A)

○ Cytosine ©

○ Guanine (G)

○ Thymine (T)

- DNA is made of four nucleotide building blocks.

(A) Each nucleotide is composed of a sugar

phosphate covalently linked to a base—guanine (G) in

this figure.

(B) The nucleotides are covalently linked

together into polynucleotide chains, with a

sugar–phosphate backbone from which the

bases—adenine, cytosine, guanine, and thymine (A, C,

G, and T)—extend.

(C) A DNA molecule is composed of two

polynucleotide chains (DNA strands) held together by

hydrogen bonds between

the paired bases. The arrows on the DNA strands

indicate the polarities of the two strands, which run

antiparallel to each other (with opposite chemical

polarities) in the DNA molecule.

(D) Although the DNA is shown straightened out

in (C), in reality, it is wound into a double helix, as shown

here.

POLARITY OF DNA

● Sugar phosphate backbone held together by

phosphodiester bonds

● 5’ end – fifth C in deoxyribose

○ Phosphate end

● 3’ end – third C in deoxyribose

● “The nucleotide subunits within a DNA

strand are held together by phosphodiester

bonds. These bonds connect one sugar to the

next. The chemical differences in the ester

linkages—between the 5ʹ carbon of one sugar

and the 3ʹ carbon of the other—give rise to the

polarity of the resulting DNA strand. For

simplicity, only two nucleotides are shown here.”

DOUBLE HELIX AND COMPLEMENTARY

● Two strands held together by hydrogen bonds

between bases ○ Purine - G and A ○ Pyrimidine - C and T

● Complementary base pairs

○ C and G

○ T and A

● Strands are antiparallel to each other

● 10 base pairs per helical turn

● “The two strands of the DNA double helix are held

together by hydrogen bonds between complementary base pairs.” ● 10 base pairs per helical turn ○ Major groove ■ Where most proteins can attach ○ Minor groove

■ Provides a unique chemical

environment

DNA IS THE MECHANISMS FOR HEREDITY

GENETIC CODE

● Combinations of DNA correspond to amino acid

● Dna is read and converted into amino acids “The nucleotide sequence of an mRNA is translated into the amino acid sequence of a protein via the genetic code. All of the three-nucleotide codons in mRNAs that specify a given amino acid are listed below that amino acid, which is given in both its three-letter and one-letter abbreviations.”

GENES

● Regions in DNA that contain information to make a

protein or other molecules

● “ Most genes contain information to make

proteins. Protein-coding genes each produce a set of RNA molecules, which then direct the production of a specific protein molecule. Note that for a minority of genes, the final product is the RNA molecule itself, as shown here for gene C. In these cases, gene expression is complete once the nucleotide sequence of the DNA has been transcribed into the nucleotide sequence of its RNA.

EUKARYOTIC CHROMOSOMES

● Long DNA strands that are packaged using proteins

● In humans – 46 chromosomes divided into 23 pairs

○ 22 pairs – homologous (homologs)

○ 2 sex chromosomes – nonhomologous

in males (XY)

● Genome

○ Full set of chromosomes

● “ Each human chromosome can be “painted” a

different color to allow its unambiguous identification. The chromosomes shown here were isolated from a cell undergoing nuclear division (mitosis) and are therefore in a highly compact (condensed) state. Chromosome painting is carried out by exposing the chromosomes to a collection of single- stranded DNA molecules that have been coupled to a combination of fluorescent dyes. For example, single-stranded DNA molecules that match sequences in chromosome 1 are labeled with one specific dye combination, those that match sequences in chromosome 2 with another, and so on. Because the labeled DNA can form base pairs (hybridize) only with its specific chromosome (discussed in Chapter 10), each chromosome is differently colored. For such experiments, the chromosomes are treated so that the individual strands of its double-helical DNA partly separate to enable base-pairing with the labeled, single-stranded DNA.”“(A) Micrograph showing the array of chromosomes as they originally spilled from the lysed cell. (B) The same chromosomes are artificially lined up in their numerical order. This arrangement of the full chromosome set is called a karyotype.”

WHAT ARE CHROMOSOMES MADE OF?

● Genes – code for proteins

○ Coding regions ● Non-coding regions ○ Other biological functions ○ Unknown functions

SPECIALIZED DNA SEQUENCES FOR CELL

DIVISION

● Replication origin

○ Starting points for DNA replication

CHROMATIN

● A long string of nucleosomes and other

DNA-associated proteins ● Chromatin is tightly compacted by a “linker” histone ○ Histone H ● Chromatin isolated directly from an interphase nucleus can appear in the electron microscope as a chromatin fiber, composed of packed nucleosomes.

LOOPED DOMAINS

● Uses special nonhistone chromosomal proteins

● “ The chromatin in human chromosomes is folded

into looped domains. These loops are established by special nonhistone chromosomal proteins that bind to specific DNA sequences, creating a clamp at the base of each loop.”

ORGANIZATION OF DNA

● DNA packing occurs on several levels in chromosomes ○ Mitotic chromosomes – up to 10,000 times shorter DNA packing occurs on several levels in chromosomes. This schematic drawing shows some of the levels thought to give rise to the highly condensed mitotic chromosome. Both histone H1 and a set of specialized nonhistone chromosomal proteins are known to help drive these condensations, including the chromosome loop-forming clamp proteins and the abundant non-histone protein condensin”

WAYS TO ALTER NUCLEOSOME

● Used to make DNA more accessible

● Main mechanisms: ○ Chromatin-remodeling complexes ■ Locally alter nucleosome arrangement ○ Histone-modifying enzymes ■ Allow for attachment of other proteins ● Chromatin-remodeling complexes locally reposition the DNA wrapped around nucleosomes.

CHROMATIN IN THE INTERPHASE

EUCHROMATIN

● More extended DNA Regions

● Contain actively expressed genes ● Regions that are actively being used by the cell ● Controlled by histone modifications

HETEROCHROMATIN

● More condensed chromatin

● Causes genes to be silenced ● Controlled by histone modifications

TAKEAWAYS

● Life depends on the stable storage,

maintenance, and inheritance of genetic

information.

● Genetic information is carried by very long DNA

molecules and is encoded in the linear

sequence of four nucleotides: A, T, G, and C.

● Each molecule of DNA is a double helix

composed of a pair of antiparallel,

complementary DNA strands, which are held

together by hydrogen bonds between G-C and

A-T base pairs.

● The genetic material of a eukaryotic cell—its

genome—is contained in a set of chromosomes,

each formed from a single, enormously long

DNA molecule that contains many genes.

● When a gene is expressed, part of its nucleotide

sequence is transcribed into RNA molecules,

most of which are translated to produce a

protein.

● The DNA that forms each eukaryotic

chromosome contains, in addi- tion to genes,

many replication origins, one centromere, and

two telomeres. These special DNA sequences

ensure that, before cell division, each

chromosome can be duplicated efficiently, and

that the resulting daughter chromosomes can be

parceled out equally to the two daughter cells.

● In eukaryotic chromosomes, the DNA is tightly

folded by binding to a set of histone and

nonhistone chromosomal proteins. This complex

of DNA and protein is called chromatin.

● Histones pack the DNA into a repeating array of

DNA–protein particles called nucleosomes,

which further fold up into even more compact

chromatin structures.

● A cell can regulate its chromatin

structure—temporarily decondens- ing or

condensing particular regions of its

chromosomes—using chromatin-remodeling

complexes and enzymes that covalently modify

histone tails in various ways.

● The loosening of chromatin to a more

decondensed state allows pro- teins involved in

gene expression, DNA replication, and DNA

repair to gain access to the necessary DNA

sequences.

● Some forms of chromatin have a pattern of

histone tail modification that causes the DNA to

become so highly condensed that its genes

cannot be expressed to produce RNA; a high

degree of condensation occurs on all

chromosomes during mitosis and in the

heterochromatin of interphase chromosomes.