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Essential Cell Biology - The Structure of DNA PDF

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MindBlowingLagoon

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DNA structure cell biology genetics molecular biology

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This document provides an overview of the structure of DNA. It explains that DNA is a double helix composed of nucleotides, and describes how these nucleotides are organized. The document also discusses the historical context of DNA discovery and its importance in biology.

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The Structure of DNA 10/14/23, 9:02 AM Essential Cell Biology THE STRUCTURE OF DNA Long before biologists understood the structure of DNA, they had recognized that inherited traits and the genes that determine them were associated with chromosomes. Chromosomes (named from the Greek chroma, “color,...

The Structure of DNA 10/14/23, 9:02 AM Essential Cell Biology THE STRUCTURE OF DNA Long before biologists understood the structure of DNA, they had recognized that inherited traits and the genes that determine them were associated with chromosomes. Chromosomes (named from the Greek chroma, “color,” because of their staining properties) were discovered in the nineteenth century as threadlike structures in the nucleus of eukaryotic cells that become visible as the cells begin to divide (Figure 5–1). As biochemical analyses became possible, researchers learned that chromosomes contain both DNA and protein. But which of these components encoded the organism’s genetic information was not immediately clear. https://nerd.wwnorton.com/nerd/231302/r/goto/cfi/86!/4?lti=true Page 1 of 10 The Structure of DNA https://nerd.wwnorton.com/nerd/231302/r/goto/cfi/86!/4?lti=true 10/14/23, 9:02 AM Page 2 of 10 The Structure of DNA 10/14/23, 9:02 AM Figure 5–1 Chromosomes become visible as eukaryotic cells prepare to divide. (A) Two adjacent plant cells photographed using a fluorescence microscope. The DNA, which is labeled with a fluorescent dye, is packaged into multiple chromosomes; these become visible as distinct structures only when they condense in preparation for cell division, as can be seen in the cell on the left. For clarity, a single chromosome has been shaded (brown) in the dividing cell. The cell on the right, which is not dividing, contains the identical chromosomes, but they cannot be distinguished as individual entities because the DNA is in a much more extended conformation at this phase in the cell’s division cycle. (B) Schematic diagram of the outlines of the two cells and their chromosomes. (A, courtesy of Peter Shaw.) We now know that the DNA carries the genetic information of the cell and that the protein components of chromosomes function largely to package and control the enormously long DNA molecules. But biologists in the 1940s had https://nerd.wwnorton.com/nerd/231302/r/goto/cfi/86!/4?lti=true Page 3 of 10 The Structure of DNA 10/14/23, 9:02 AM difficulty accepting DNA as the genetic material because of the apparent simplicity of its chemistry (see How We Know, pp. 203–205). DNA, after all, is simply a long polymer composed of only four types of nucleotide subunits that are chemically very similar to one another. Then, early in the 1950s, Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin examined DNA using x-ray diffraction analysis, a technique for determining the threedimensional atomic structure of a molecule (see Panel 4–6, pp. 174–175). Their results provided one of the crucial pieces of evidence that led, in 1953, to Watson and Crick’s model of the double-helical structure of DNA. This structure—in which two strands of DNA are wound around each other to form a helix—immediately suggested both how DNA could encode the instructions necessary for life, and how these instructions could be copied and passed along when cells divide. In this section, we examine the structure of DNA and explain in general terms how it is able to store hereditary information. A DNA Molecule Consists of Two Complementary Chains of Nucleotides A molecule of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) consists of two long polynucleotide chains. Each chain, or strand, is composed of four types of nucleotide subunits, and the two strands are held together by hydrogen bonds between the base portions of the nucleotides (Figure 5–2). https://nerd.wwnorton.com/nerd/231302/r/goto/cfi/86!/4?lti=true Page 4 of 10 The Structure of DNA 10/14/23, 9:02 AM Figure 5–2 DNA is made using four nucleotide building blocks. (A) Each nucleotide is composed of a sugar https://nerd.wwnorton.com/nerd/231302/r/goto/cfi/86!/4?lti=true Page 5 of 10 The Structure of DNA 10/14/23, 9:02 AM 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 extend the bases: adenine, cytosine, guanine, and thymine (A, C, G, and T). (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. As we saw in Chapter 2 (see Panel 2–7, pp. 82–83), nucleotides are composed of a nitrogen-containing base and a five-carbon sugar, to which a phosphate group is attached. For the nucleotides in DNA, the sugar is deoxyribose (hence the name deoxyribonucleic acid) and the base can be either adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G), or thymine (T). The nucleotides are covalently linked together in a chain through the sugars and phosphates, which form a backbone of alternating sugar–phosphate–sugar–phosphate (see Figure 5–2B). Because only the base differs in each of the four types of subunits, each polynucleotide chain resembles a necklace: a sugar–phosphate backbone strung with four types of tiny beads (the four bases A, C, G, and T). These same symbols (A, C, G, and T) are also commonly used to denote the four different nucleotides—that is, the bases with their attached sugar and phosphate groups. The nucleotide subunits within a DNA strand are held together by phosphodiester bonds that link the 5ʹ end (pronounced “5 prime end”) of one sugar with the 3ʹ end of the next (Figure 5–3). Because the ester linkages to the sugar molecules on either side of the bond are different, each DNA strand has a chemical polarity. If we imagine that each nucleotide has a phosphate “knob” and a hydroxyl “hole” (see Figure 5–2A), each strand, formed by interlocking knobs with holes, will have all of its subunits lined up in the same orientation. Moreover, the two ends of the strand can be easily distinguished, as one will have a hole (the 3ʹ hydroxyl) and the other a knob (the 5ʹ phosphate). This polarity in a DNA strand is indicated by referring to one end as the 3ʹ end and the other as the 5ʹ end (see Figure 5–3). https://nerd.wwnorton.com/nerd/231302/r/goto/cfi/86!/4?lti=true Page 6 of 10 The Structure of DNA 10/14/23, 9:02 AM The two polynucleotide chains in the DNA double helix are held together by hydrogen-bonding between the bases on the different strands. All the bases are therefore on the inside of the helix, with the sugar–phosphate backbones on the outside (see Figure 5–2D). The bases do not pair at random, however; A always pairs with T, and G always pairs with C (Figure 5–4). In each case, a bulkier two-ring base (a purine; see Panel 2–7, pp. 82–83) is paired with a singlering base (a pyrimidine). Each purine–pyrimidine pair is called a base pair, and this complementary base-pairing enables the base pairs to be packed in the energetically most favorable arrangement along the interior of the double helix. In this arrangement, each base pair has the same width, thus holding the sugar– phosphate backbones an equal distance apart along the DNA molecule. Figure 5–4 The two strands of the DNA double helix are held together by hydrogen bonds between complementary base pairs. (A) Schematic illustration showing how the shapes and chemical structures of the bases allow hydrogen bonds to form efficiently only between A and T and between G and C. The atoms that form the hydrogen bonds between these nucleotides (see Panel 2–3, pp. 74–75) can be brought close together without perturbing the double helix. As shown, two hydrogen bonds form between A and T, whereas three form between G and C. The bases can pair in this way only if the two polynucleotide chains that contain them are antiparallel—that is, oriented in opposite directions. (B) A short section of the double helix viewed from its side. Four base pairs are illustrated; note that they lie perpendicular to the axis of the helix, unlike the schematic shown in (A). As shown in https://nerd.wwnorton.com/nerd/231302/r/goto/cfi/86!/4?lti=true Page 7 of 10 The Structure of DNA 10/14/23, 9:02 AM Figure 5–3, the nucleotides are linked together covalently by phosphodiester bonds that connect the 3′-hydroxyl (– OH) group of one sugar and the 5′ phosphate (–PO3) attached to the next (see Panel 2–7, pp. 82–83, to review how the carbon atoms in the sugar ring are numbered). This linkage gives each polynucleotide strand a chemical polarity; that is, its two ends are chemically distinct. The 3′ end carries an unlinked –OH group attached to the 3′ position on the sugar ring; the 5′ end carries a free phosphate group attached to the 5′ position on the sugar ring. For the members of each base pair to fit together within the double helix, the two strands of the helix must run antiparallel to each other—that is, be oriented with opposite polarities (see Figure 5–2C and D). The antiparallel sugar– phosphate strands then twist around each other to form a double helix containing 10 base pairs per helical turn (Figure 5–5). The twisting takes place because it renders the conformation of DNA’s helical structure energetically favorable. As a consequence of the base-pairing arrangement shown in Figure 5–4, each strand of a DNA double helix contains a sequence of nucleotides that is exactly complementary to the nucleotide sequence of its partner strand—an A always matches a T on the opposite strand, and a C always matches a G. This complementarity is of crucial importance when it comes to both copying and maintaining the DNA structure, as we discuss in Chapter 6. An animated version of the DNA double helix can be seen in Movie 5.1. The Structure of DNA Provides a Mechanism for Heredity The fact that genes encode information that must be copied and transmitted accurately when a cell divides raises two fundamental issues: how can the information for specifying an organism be carried in chemical form, and how can the information be accurately copied? The structure of DNA provides the answer to both questions. Information is encoded in the order, or sequence, of the nucleotides along each DNA strand. Each base—A, C, T, or G—can be considered a letter in a four-letter https://nerd.wwnorton.com/nerd/231302/r/goto/cfi/86!/4?lti=true Page 8 of 10 The Structure of DNA 10/14/23, 9:02 AM alphabet that is used to spell out biological messages (Figure 5–6). Organisms differ from one another because their respective DNA molecules have different nucleotide sequences and, consequently, carry different biological messages. But how is the nucleotide alphabet used to make up messages, and what do they spell out? Before the structure of DNA was determined, investigators had established that genes contain the instructions for producing proteins. Thus, it was clear that DNA messages must somehow be able to encode proteins. Consideration of the chemical character of proteins makes the problem easier to define. As discussed in Chapter 4, the function of a protein is determined by its three-dimensional structure, which in turn is determined by the sequence of the amino acids in its polypeptide chain. The linear sequence of nucleotides in a gene, therefore, must somehow spell out the linear sequence of amino acids in a protein. The exact correspondence between the 4-letter nucleotide alphabet of DNA and the 20-letter amino acid alphabet of proteins—the genetic code—is not at all obvious from the structure of the DNA molecule. It took more than a decade of clever experimentation after the discovery of the double helix to work this code out. In Chapter 7, we describe the genetic code in detail when we discuss gene expression—the process by which the nucleotide sequence of a gene is transcribed into the nucleotide sequence of an RNA molecule and then, in most cases, translated into the amino acid sequence of a protein (Figure 5–7). https://nerd.wwnorton.com/nerd/231302/r/goto/cfi/86!/4?lti=true Page 9 of 10 The Structure of DNA 10/14/23, 9:02 AM Figure 5–7 Most genes contain information to make proteins. As we discuss in Chapter 7, 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. The amount of information in an organism’s DNA is staggering: written out in the four-letter nucleotide alphabet, the nucleotide sequence of a very small protein-coding gene from humans occupies a quarter of a page of text, while the complete human DNA sequence would fill more than 1000 books the size of this one. Herein lies a problem that affects the architecture of all eukaryotic chromosomes: How can all this information be packed neatly into the cell nucleus? In the remainder of this chapter, we discuss the answer to this question. https://nerd.wwnorton.com/nerd/231302/r/goto/cfi/86!/4?lti=true Page 10 of 10

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