Role of the genetic material A genetic material

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Role of the genetic material “A genetic material must carry out two jobs: duplicate

Role of the genetic material “A genetic material must carry out two jobs: duplicate itself and control the development of the rest of the cell in a specific way. ” -Francis Crick

DNA Deoxyribonucleic acid • The information necessary to sustain and perpetuate life is found

DNA Deoxyribonucleic acid • The information necessary to sustain and perpetuate life is found within a molecule. • This is the genetic material that is passed from one generation to the next.

History Before the mid-1800’s it was unthinkable for the leading Scientists and Philosophers that

History Before the mid-1800’s it was unthinkable for the leading Scientists and Philosophers that a chemical molecule could store enough information to build a human.

History Charles Darwin In 1859 he published ‘The Origin of Species‘ which expressed that

History Charles Darwin In 1859 he published ‘The Origin of Species‘ which expressed that living things appear to be designed but may be the result of natural selection. Darwin showed that living creatures evolve over several generations through a series of small changes.

 • In the 1860 s Darwin's ideas were finally supported when basic concepts

• In the 1860 s Darwin's ideas were finally supported when basic concepts of hereditary by Gregor Mendel. • ‘Factors’ determine the characteristics a living thing will express. • The genes are passed to later generations, with a child taking genes from both parents. • The great mystery was where and how would this information be stored? History 1823 -1884 Mendel

Friedrich Miescher Swiss physician 1844 -1895 Search for genetic material: His nuclei came from

Friedrich Miescher Swiss physician 1844 -1895 Search for genetic material: His nuclei came from pus! In 1870, a German scientist named Friedrich Miescher had isolated the chemicals found in the nucleus. These consist proteins and nucleic acids.

History While Miescher found these nucleic acids interesting and spent a great deal of

History While Miescher found these nucleic acids interesting and spent a great deal of time studying their chemical composition, he wasn’t alone in believing that proteins were more likely to be the chemicals involved in inheritance, because of their immense variability. Proteins were made up of 20 different building blocks (amino acids), as opposed to the mere 4 building blocks of nucleic acids.

Discovery of a “Transforming Principle” Frederick Griffith, in 1928 - Pneumonia (Diplococcus pneumoniae) infects

Discovery of a “Transforming Principle” Frederick Griffith, in 1928 - Pneumonia (Diplococcus pneumoniae) infects mice. - Mice develop pneumonia and die. Two types of bacteria: - S bacteria smooth coat – pneumonia - R bacteria rough coat - no pneumonia Coat type is associated with virulence. 1881 - 1941 English army medical officer

History Search for genetic material: 1928 Frederick Griffith: transforming principle

History Search for genetic material: 1928 Frederick Griffith: transforming principle

Frederick Griffith’s 1928 Experiment

Frederick Griffith’s 1928 Experiment

Griffith’s experiment identifying the “transforming principle” Bacterial colonies + Rough nonvirulent (strain R) Smooth

Griffith’s experiment identifying the “transforming principle” Bacterial colonies + Rough nonvirulent (strain R) Smooth virulent (strain S) Mouse healthy Mouse dies Heat-killed smooth virulent (strain S) Rough Heat-killed nonvirulent smooth (strain R) virulent (strain S) Injection Results Mouse healthy Mouse dies Live strain S bacteria in blood sample from dead mouse

Discovery of DNA The extracts of heat-killed S bacteria cells contained protein, RNA and

Discovery of DNA The extracts of heat-killed S bacteria cells contained protein, RNA and DNA Which of these substances were essential for transformation? How did they figure out which substance was essential for transformation?

KEY PLAYERS Oswald Avery (1877 -1955) Microbiologist Avery led the team that showed that

KEY PLAYERS Oswald Avery (1877 -1955) Microbiologist Avery led the team that showed that DNA is the unit of Inheritance. One Nobel laureate has called the discovery "the historical platform of modern DNA research", and his work inspired Watson and Crick to seek DNA's structure.

1600 s 1850 s 1900 s 1950 s 2000 s 1877 -1955 • Oswald

1600 s 1850 s 1900 s 1950 s 2000 s 1877 -1955 • Oswald Avery – American bacteriologist S R DNA • 1943 – proved that DNA carries genes S

Discovery of DNA • They decided to use the process of elimination • Extracts

Discovery of DNA • They decided to use the process of elimination • Extracts were treated with either • Proteases (to destroy protein) • RNase (to destroy RNA) • DNase (to destroy DNA) • Transformation was due exclusively to DNA

History Search for genetic material: It wasn’t until 1944 that Oswald Avery and his

History Search for genetic material: It wasn’t until 1944 that Oswald Avery and his colleagues, who were studying the bacteria which causes pnuemonia, discovered by process of elimination that bacteria contain nucleic acids, and that DNA is the chemical which carries genes. Despite the conclusive results of Avery’s experiments, theory of nucleic acids being the genetic material was still not a popular one, but experiments Performed with viruses also showed that nucleic acids were the genetic material and this confirmed Avery’s work.

1600 s 1850 s 1900 s 1950 s 2000 s • Alfred Hershey and

1600 s 1850 s 1900 s 1950 s 2000 s • Alfred Hershey and Martha Chase 1952 • used bacteriophage (a virus) to prove that DNA was the hereditary material • the bacteriophage was the ideal organism for settling the debate between protein and DNA.

What are viruses? Viruses are organized associations of macromolecules: nucleic acid contained within a

What are viruses? Viruses are organized associations of macromolecules: nucleic acid contained within a protective shell of protein units. A virus is NOT alive. A virus is NOT made out of a cell.

DNA discovery Hershey-Chase 1952

DNA discovery Hershey-Chase 1952

DNA discovery Hershey-Chase 1952

DNA discovery Hershey-Chase 1952

History Search for genetic material: 1952 - Hershey-Chase Experiment

History Search for genetic material: 1952 - Hershey-Chase Experiment

Hershey and

Hershey and

Hershey and

Hershey and

History Search for genetic material: Ø Classic experiments for evidence Griffith: transformation Hershey-Chase: DNA

History Search for genetic material: Ø Classic experiments for evidence Griffith: transformation Hershey-Chase: DNA necessary to produce more virus Ø Other supporting evidence DNA volume doubles before cells divide Chargaff: ratio of nucleotides A = T and G = C

1600 s 1850 s 1900 s 1950 s 2000 s 1929 -1992 • Erwin

1600 s 1850 s 1900 s 1950 s 2000 s 1929 -1992 • Erwin Chargaff – Austrian American biochemist • (1950) Discovered the basepairing regularities or "complementarity relationships" of nucleic acids that provided one of the key steps in developing a structural model for DNA.

KEY PLAYERS Erwin Chargaff (1905 -2002) Chargaff discovered the pairing Rules of DNA letters,

KEY PLAYERS Erwin Chargaff (1905 -2002) Chargaff discovered the pairing Rules of DNA letters, noticing that A Matches to T, and C to G. He later criticized molecularbiology, the discipline he helped invent, as "the practice of biochemistry without a license", and once described Francis Crick as looking like "a faded racing tout".

1600 s 1850 s 1900 s 1950 s 2000 s 1953 • James Watson

1600 s 1850 s 1900 s 1950 s 2000 s 1953 • James Watson – American ornithologist • Francis Crick – British Physicist

The Scientists James Watson was an American, born in 1928, was only 24 when

The Scientists James Watson was an American, born in 1928, was only 24 when the discovery was made. He went to Chicago University at the age of 15. Francis Crick was born in 1916. He went to London University and trained as a physicist. After the war he changed the direction of his research to molecular biology.

KEY PLAYERS James Watson (1928 - ) Watson went to university in Chicago at

KEY PLAYERS James Watson (1928 - ) Watson went to university in Chicago at age 15, and teamed up with Crick in Cambridge in late 1951. After solving the double helix, he went on to work on viruses and RNA, another genetic information carrier. He also helped launch the human genome project, and is president of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in New York.

KEY PLAYERS Francis Crick (1916 -2004) Crick trained and worked as a physicist, but

KEY PLAYERS Francis Crick (1916 -2004) Crick trained and worked as a physicist, but switched to biology after the Second World War. After co discovering the structure of DNA, he went on to crack the genetic code that translates DNA into protein. At the time of his death he was studying consciousness at California's Salk Institute.

The Discovery The DNA molecule was discovered in 1951 by Francis Crick, James Watson

The Discovery The DNA molecule was discovered in 1951 by Francis Crick, James Watson and Maurice Wilkins using X-ray Diffraction. In Spring 1953, Francis Crick and James Watson, two scientists working at the Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge, discovered the structure of the DNA a double helix, or interlocking pair of spirals, joined by pairs of molecules.

The Discovery The seed that generated this was Watson’s presence at a conference in

The Discovery The seed that generated this was Watson’s presence at a conference in Naples in 1951, where an x-ray diffraction picture from DNA was shown by Maurice Wilkins from King’s College in London. This made a strong impression on Watson – the first indication that genes might have a regular structure.

KEY PLAYERS Linus Pauling (1901 -1994) The titan of twentieth-century chemistry, Pauling led the

KEY PLAYERS Linus Pauling (1901 -1994) The titan of twentieth-century chemistry, Pauling led the way in working out the structure of big biological molecules, and Watson and Crick saw him as their main competitor. In early 1953, working without the benefit of X-ray pictures, he published a paper suggesting that DNA was a triple helix. Short video link.

James Watson shared an office with Crick, and the topic of DNA structure naturally

James Watson shared an office with Crick, and the topic of DNA structure naturally arose – particularly how to determine it. They were inclined to follow the methods of Pauling who had designed a helical structure by building a model consistent with the x-ray patterns from fibrous proteins. Like proteins, DNA was built from similar units – the bases adenine(A), thymine(T), guanine(G) and cytosine(C), and so it seemed likely that DNA also had a helical structure. The published x-ray patterns of DNA were not very clear, so contact was made with King’s. Watson attended a DNA colloquium there in November 1951, at which Rosalind Franklin described her results.

1600 s 1850 s 1900 s 1950 s 2000 s 1920 – 1958 Rosalind

1600 s 1850 s 1900 s 1950 s 2000 s 1920 – 1958 Rosalind Franklin- English Chemist • the most beautiful X-ray photographs of any substance ever taken • (1952) crucial contributions to the solution of the structure of DNA

KEY PLAYERS Rosalind Franklin (1920 -1958) Franklin, trained as a chemist, was expert in

KEY PLAYERS Rosalind Franklin (1920 -1958) Franklin, trained as a chemist, was expert in deducing the structure of molecules by firing X-rays through them. Her images of DNA – disclosed without her knowledge - put Watson and Crick on the track towards the right structure. She went on to do pioneering work on the structures of viruses.

The Evidence Search for genetic material: James Watson and Francis Crick used this photo

The Evidence Search for genetic material: James Watson and Francis Crick used this photo with other evidence to describe the structure of DNA. X-ray diffraction photo of DNA Image produced by Rosalind Franklin

In July 1952, Erwin Chargaff visited Watson and Crick and told of his 1947

In July 1952, Erwin Chargaff visited Watson and Crick and told of his 1947 findings that the ratios of A/T and G/C were statistically equal for a wide variety of DNA’s. Crick became convinced that base pairing was the key to the structure. Prompted by receiving a flawed manuscript on DNA structure from Pauling, Watson again visited King’s and Wilkins showed him a DNA x-ray pattern taken by Franklin showing clear helical characteristics.

OOPS!!! Watson brought back a less-thanaccurate account to Cambridge, but Crick produced a three-strand

OOPS!!! Watson brought back a less-thanaccurate account to Cambridge, but Crick produced a three-strand model structure only a week later. Invited to view this, Franklin pointed out that it was inconsistent with her results – it had the phosphate groups on the inside whereas her results showed they were on the outside, and the water content was too low.

Watson & Crick What they deduced from: Franklin’s X-ray data • Double helix •

Watson & Crick What they deduced from: Franklin’s X-ray data • Double helix • Uniform width of 2 nm • Bases stacked 0. 34 nm apart Chargaff’s “rules” • Adenine pairs with thymine • Cytosine pairs with guanine

Watson & Crick What they came up with on their own: • Bases face

Watson & Crick What they came up with on their own: • Bases face inward, phosphates and sugars outward • Hydrogen bonding • Hinted at semi-conservative model for replication

History Watson began pursuing the idea of hydrogen bonding by using cardboard cutouts of

History Watson began pursuing the idea of hydrogen bonding by using cardboard cutouts of the four bases. He found that (A+T) and (G+C) could be bonded together to form pairs with very similar shapes. On this basis, a model was built consistent with the Franklin’s symmetry and Chargaff’s results, and Watson & Crick published in April 1953 in Nature accompanied by ones from the Wilkins and Franklin groups. Watson and Crick’s paper ends with the oftquoted line “It has not escaped our notice that the specific pairing we have postulated immediately suggests a possible copying mechanism for the genetic material”.

Watson and Crick with their DNA model

Watson and Crick with their DNA model

The Nobel Prize Crick, Watson and Wilkins won the Nobel Prize for medicine in

The Nobel Prize Crick, Watson and Wilkins won the Nobel Prize for medicine in 1962. Maurice Wilkins was at King's College, London and was an expert in X-ray photography. His colleague, Rosalind Franklin, did brilliant work developing the technique to photograph a single strand of DNA. She received little recognition for this at the time and died tragically of cancer in 1958, so could not be recognized in the Nobel Award.

Further reading https: //www. nature. com/scitable/topicpage/discoveryof-dna-structure-and-function-watson-397/

Further reading https: //www. nature. com/scitable/topicpage/discoveryof-dna-structure-and-function-watson-397/