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Inquiry: How is DNA used to store and transmit cell information?

Inquiry: How is DNA used to store and transmit cell information?. Essential Question #1: Compare the structures of DNA and RNA. Essential Question #2: Compare the functions of DNA and RNA. Relationship Between Chromosomes and Cell. DNA. Double helix (twisted ladder)

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Inquiry: How is DNA used to store and transmit cell information?

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  1. Inquiry: How is DNA used to store and transmit cell information?

  2. Essential Question #1:Compare the structures of DNA and RNA.

  3. Essential Question #2: Compare the functions of DNA and RNA.

  4. Relationship Between Chromosomes and Cell

  5. DNA • Double helix (twisted ladder) • Bases joined by hydrogen bonds (A-T and C-G) • A=Adenine • T=Thymine • C=Cytosine • G=Guanine (Bases spell a code for life) • Composed of Nucleotides

  6. Nucleotide = deoxyribose sugar, phosphate, & base

  7. What does DNA do? • Contains recipe for making proteins • Gives us our inherited characteristics • Replication - DNA copies itself exactly for cell division

  8. DNA Models 1. Color the DNA nucleotides • Use the color codes below • Cytosine – green • Guanine – blue • Adenine – red • Thymine – purple • Sugar – white • Phosphate – yellow 2. Cut out the DNA nucleotides • Just like assembling a puzzle, put the nucleotides together randomly to create DNA. Words will be upside down on one side. 3. Tape it together but DO NOT TAPE ACROSS THE BASES (ACTG) in the middle

  9. DNA Replication • DNA is unique among all known molecules because it is the only one that is capable of duplicating itself. • The process of duplication is called replication. • During replication, the two complementary strands which form the DNA molecule unzip and then are used as templates from which new strands are made as free nucleotides combine with their complementary bases. • The result is one side of each new DNA strand is "old" and the other side is "new". Why does this happen?

  10. Enzymes that make DNA Replication possible • Helicase – helps unzip the DNA molecule by breaking the hydrogen bonds between base pairs • DNA Polymerase – reconnects the free nucleotides with the original DNA strand

  11. How DNA Replication Works Animation

  12. DNA Replication Models • Using your DNA model that you and your partner(s) constructed, cut the last 3 DNA bases where the hydrogen bonds exist. • Slightly pull your newly separated sections of DNA apart. Determine which bases will be able to reattach to the last 3 nucleotide bases. Fill in the diagram below.

  13. Color and cut out the new complementary free nucleotides. • Attach the new complementary free nucleotides to your DNA models to show how replication will occur. Use the figure below as a hint.

  14. Summary of DNA Replication • DNA is unzipped or unwinds. • The unwinding of the helix is facilitated by an enzyme called helicase • Complementary bases from free nucleotides are paired up with their match. • DNA polymerase is another enzyme that reconnects the bases of the two new DNA strands • DNA replication occurs to create a copy of DNA before cell reproduction.

  15. Describe what is happening in the picture?What is this process called?

  16. http://present.smith.udel.edu/biotech/rDNA.html

  17. SB2. Students will analyze how biological traits are passed on to successive generations.a. Distinguish between DNA and RNA.

  18. The sugar in the RNA molecule is ribose. DNA's sugar is deoxyribose. RNA is usually a single stranded molecule while DNA is nearly always double stranded. DNA's rigid double helix structure allows for only one function (information storage) whereas RNA's greater molecular diversity results in a wider range of functions RNA uses the nucleotide uracil instead of thymine DNA is larger than RNA RNA is much less stable than DNA. As a single stranded molecule it has no way of repairing itself Comparing/Contrasting DNA/RNA

  19. Use a Venn chart to compare DNA and RNA

  20. What is Transcription? • Making a copy of the information in DNA as a new version called RNA • When transcription is finished, the portion of the DNA that coded for a protein, i.e. a gene, is now represented by a messenger RNA molecule • This mRNA can be used as a template for translation later.

  21. How Transcription Works • DNA unzips and RNA polymerase (enzyme) binds to one strand of DNA • A chain of RNA nucleotides is created as each new RNA nucleotide complementary to the DNA nucleotide it is hydrogen bonded to. • The completed mRNA molecule is released from RNA polymerase .

  22. Transcription Models • With your DNA model in front of you, demonstrate the process of transcription. • Fold the DNA model where the base pairs touch • Match up the complementary pieces of the RNA nucleotides from • A-U • C-G • T-A

  23. Transcription Models • Color the RNA nucleotides • Use the color codes below • Cytosine – green • Guanine – blue • Adenine – red • Uracil – light purple or pink • Sugar – white • Phosphate – yellow

  24. Transcription Models • Cut out the RNA nucleotides • Tape these nucleotides together as a new molecule. DO NOT ATTACH TO THE ORIGINAL DNA MODEL. • What process can occur next?

  25. Modeling Review

  26. What is Translation? • DNA translation is the process that converts an mRNA sequence into a string of amino acids that form a protein. • This fundamental process is responsible for creating the proteins that make up most cells. • It also marks the final step in the journey from DNA sequence to a functional protein.

  27. TranslationRNA Proteins • Look at your new RNA molecule that was created using information that was stored and transmitted from DNA. • Fill in the letters that represent the bases in YOUR DNA model. • Next, fill in the letters of the bases that are in YOUR RNA model. • Starting at the top of YOUR DNA model circle every three letters as a DNA base sequence. • Write these 3 DNA letters in the first column of your table

  28. Example

  29. Starting at the top of YOUR RNA model circle every three letters as a codon. Write these 3 RNA letters in the first column of your table

  30. Example

  31. Identify the Amino Acid with Table 11-2

  32. Anticodons • Identify the tRNA anticodon from the mRNA codon • Fill in the anti codon in the table and in the blanks on your tRNA cut out and label the amino acid that it will be bring to mRNA • Attach this tRNA cutout to YOUR RNA strand

  33. Example

  34. Modeling Review

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