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Chapter 01 Lecture

The document provides a history of molecular biology including Mendel's laws of inheritance, the chromosome theory of inheritance, and the discovery that DNA is the genetic material. It discusses how genes replicate, direct protein production, and accumulate mutations. It also outlines the three domains of life - bacteria, eukaryotes, and archaea.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
27 views22 pages

Chapter 01 Lecture

The document provides a history of molecular biology including Mendel's laws of inheritance, the chromosome theory of inheritance, and the discovery that DNA is the genetic material. It discusses how genes replicate, direct protein production, and accumulate mutations. It also outlines the three domains of life - bacteria, eukaryotes, and archaea.

Uploaded by

Aline peixoto
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Lecture PowerPoint to accompany

Molecular Biology
Fifth Edition

Robert F. Weaver

Chapter 1
A Brief History

Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
A Brief History
• What is molecular biology?
– The attempt to understand biological
phenomena in molecular terms
– The study of gene structure and function at
the molecular level
• Molecular biology is a melding of aspects
of genetics and biochemistry

1-2
1.1 Transmission Genetics
• Transmission genetics deals with the
transmission of traits from parental
organisms to their offspring
• The chemical composition of genes was
not known until 1944
– Gene - genetic units
– Phenotype - observable characteristics

1-3
Mendel’s Laws of Inheritance
• A gene can exist in different forms called
alleles
• One allele can be dominant over the other,
recessive, allele
• The first filial generation (F1) contains
offspring of the original parents
• If each parent carries two copies of a
gene, the parents are diploid for that gene
1-4
Mendel’s Laws of Inheritance
• Homoozygotes have two copies of the same allele
• Heterozygotes have one copy of each allele
• Parents in 1st mating are homozygotes, having 2
copies of one allele
• Sex cells, or gametes, are haploid, containing only
1 copy of each gene
• Heterozygotes produce gametes having either
allele
• Homozygotes produce gametes having only one
allele
1-5
Summary
• Genes can exist in several different forms or alleles
• One allele can be dominant over the other, so
heterozygotes having two different alleles of one
gene will generally exhibit the characteristic
dictated by the dominant allele
• The recessive allele is not lost; it can still exert its
influence when paired with another recessive allele
in a homozygote

1-6
The Chromosome Theory of Inheritance
• Chromosomes are discrete physical entities
that carry genes
• Thomas Hunt Morgan used the fruit fly,
Drosophila melanogaster, to study genetics
• Autosomes occur in pairs in a given
individual (not the X or the Y chromosome)
• Sex chromosomes are identified as X and Y
– Females have two X chromosomes
– Males have one X and one Y chromosome
1-7
Location of Genes on a Chromosome

• Every gene has its place, or locus, on a


chromosome
• Genotype is the combination of alleles
found in an organism
• Phenotype is the visible expression of the
genotype
– Wild-type phenotype is the most common or
generally accepted standard
– Mutant alleles are usually recessive

1-8
Genetic Recombination and Mapping

• In early experiments genes on separate


chromosomes behaved independently
• Genes on the same chromosome behaved
as if they were linked
• This genetic linkage is not absolute
• Offspring show new combinations of
alleles not seen in the parents when
recombination occurs
1-9
Recombination
• During meiosis, gamete formation,
crossing over can occur resulting in the
exchange of genes between the two
homologous chromosomes
• The result of the crossing-over event
produces a new combination of alleles
• This process is called recombination

1-10
Genetic Mapping
• Morgan proposed that the farther apart
two genes are on a chromosome, the
more likely they are to recombine
• If two loci recombine with a frequency of
1%, they are said to be separated by a
map distance of one centimorgan (named
for Morgan)
• This mapping observation applies both to
prokaryotes and to eukaryotes
1-11
Physical Evidence for Recombination

• Microscopic examination of the maize


chromosome provided direct physical
observation of recombination using easily
identifiable features of one chromosome
• Similar observations were made in
Drosophila
• Recombination was detected both
physically and genetically in both animals
and plants
1-12
Summary
• The chromosome theory of inheritance holds that
genes are arranged in linear fashion on
chromosomes
• Certain traits tend to be inherited together when the
genes for those traits are on the same chromosome
• Recombination between two homologous
chromosomes during meiosis can scramble the
parental alleles to yield nonparental combinations
• The farther apart two genes are on a chromosome
the more likely it is that recombination will occur
1-13
1.2 Molecular Genetics
• The Discovery of DNA: The general
structure of nucleic acids was discovered by the
end of the 19th century
– Long polymers or chains of nucleotides
– Nucleotides are linked by sugars through
phosphate groups
• Composition of Genes: DNA? RNA? Protein?
In 1944, Avery and his colleagues demonstrated
that genes are composed of DNA
1-14
The Relationship between Genes
and Proteins
• Experiments have shown that a defective
gene gives a defective or absent enzyme
• This lead to the proposal that one gene is
responsible for making one enzyme
• Proposal not quite correct for 3 reasons:
1. One enzyme may be composed of several
polypeptides, each gene codes for only one
polypeptide
2. Many genes code for non-enzyme proteins
3. End products of some genes are not
polypeptides (i.e. tRNA, rRNA) 1-15
Activities of Genes
Genes perform three major roles
• Replicated faithfully
• Direct the production of RNAs and
proteins
• Accumulate mutations thereby allowing for
evolution

1-16
Replication
• Franklin and Wilkins produced x-ray
diffraction data on DNA, Watson and Crick
proposed that DNA is double helix
– Two DNA strands wound around each other
– Strands are complementary – if you know the
sequence of one strand, you automatically
know the sequence of the other strand
• Semiconservative replication keeps one
strand of the parental double helix conserved
in each of the daughter double helices
1-17
Genes Direct the Production of
Polypeptides
• Gene expression is the process by which
a gene product is made
• Two steps are required
– 1. Transcription: DNA is transcribed into RNA
– 2. Translation: the mRNA is read or translated
to assemble a protein
– Codon: a sequence of 3 nucleic acid bases
that code for one amino acid within the mRNA

1-18
Genes Accumulate Mutations
Genes change in several ways
• Change one base to another
• Deletions of one base up to a large
segment
• Insertions of one base up to a large
segment
• The more drastic the change, the more
likely it is that the gene or genes involved
will be totally inactivated
1-19
Summary
• All cellular genes are made of DNA
arranged in a double helix
• This structure explains how genes replicate,
carry information and collect mutations
• The sequence of nucleotides in a gene is a
genetic code that carries the information for
making an RNA
• A change in the sequence of bases
constitutes and mutation, which can change
the sequence of amino acids in the genes
polypeptide product
1-20
1.3 The Three Domains of Life
Current research theories support the
division of living organisms into three
domains
1. Bacteria
2. Eukaryota
3. Archaea
• Like bacteria as they are organisms without
nuclei
• More similar to eukaryotes in the context of
their molecular biology 1-21
Archaea
Archaea live in the most inhospitable
regions of the earth
• Thermophiles tolerate extremely high
temperatures
• Halophiles tolerate very high salt
concentrations
• Methanogens produce methane as a
by-product of metabolism

1-22

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