Chapter 11 Lecture Notes: The Structure of DNA
Chapter 11 Lecture Notes: The Structure of DNA
(From: AN INTRODUCTION TO GENETIC ANALYSIS 6/E BY Griffiths, Miller, Suzuki, Leontin, Gelbart
1996 by W. H. Freeman and Company. Used with permission.)
B. Avery, MacLeod, and McCarty experiment (1944)
Showed that transforming material in Griffith’s experiment was DNA
(From: AN INTRODUCTION TO GENETIC ANALYSIS 6/E BY Griffiths, Miller, Suzuki, Leontin, Gelbart
1996 by W. H. Freeman and Company. Used with permission.)
4 different nucleotides
adenine =A
guanine =G
} Purines
thymine =T
cytosine =C
} Pyrimidines
B. Chargraff’s rules (in each DNA molecule: T+C =A+G and T=A and C=G)
C. Franklin and Wilkins x-ray diffraction data suggested that the molecule was long and
skinny, had two parallel components, and was helical
D. Watson and Crick put it all together to solve the structure of DNA in 1953
(From: AN INTRODUCTION TO GENETIC ANALYSIS 6/E BY Griffiths, Miller, Suzuki, Leontin, Gelbart
1996 by W. H. Freeman and Company. Used with permission.)
B. The Meselson-Stahl experiment
Meselson and Stahl used nitrogen isotopes that had different densities to follow
DNA replication in E. coli.
Grew E. coli in 15N for several generations so that all the DNA was labeled à
Shifted cells to 14N media and allowed them to replicate their DNA 1 time à
Sample of DNA was taken à Cells were allowed to replicate their DNA again
(total of 2 times) à Sample of DNA was taken à Used CsCl gradient
centrifugation of DNA samples to determine the isotope composition and pattern
of labeling in the DNA à found pattern matched semiconservative
(From: AN INTRODUCTION TO GENETIC ANALYSIS 6/E BY Griffiths, Miller, Suzuki, Leontin, Gelbart
1996 by W. H. Freeman and Company. Used with permission.)
(From: AN INTRODUCTION TO GENETIC ANALYSIS 6/E BY Griffiths, Miller, Suzuki, Leontin, Gelbart
1996 by W. H. Freeman and Company. Used with permission.)