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Structure of DNA
Table of contents
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The components of DNA and a few principles
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DNA: some facts
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What's in a name
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Further information
The components
The deoxyribonucleic acid, DNA, is a long chain of nucleotides
which consist of (figure 1):
-
Deoxyribose
(a pentose = sugar with 5
carbons)
-
Phosphoric Acid
-
Organic (nitrogenous) bases (Purines
- Adenine
and Guanine, or Pyrimidines
-Cytosine and Thymine)
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Figure 1: A nucleotide.
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Note:
in a nucleotide, the atoms of the organic base are numbered 1, 2, ... and
the atoms of the sugar, wether it is a deoxyribose like in DNA or a ribose like
in RNA, are numbered 1', 2', 5'. Atoms in the sugar component of a nucleotide
provide the link between the base and the phosphate group. The 1' carbon is
attached to the 9 nitrogen of a purine, or the 1 nitrogen of a pyrimidine. The
OH (hydroxyl) group on the 5' carbon is replaced by a bond to the phosphate
group (ester bond).
DNA consists of two associated polynucleotide strands that wind together in a
helical fashion. It is often described as a double helix.
Each polynucleotide is a
linear polymer
in which the monomers
(deoxynucleotides),
are linked together by means of
phosphodiester bridges
, or bonds.
These bonds link the 3' carbon in the ribose of one deoxynucleotide to
the 5' carbon in the ribose of the adjacent deoxynucleotide.
This is illustrated
in
Figure 2
.
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Figure 2: A segment of a single nucleic acid chain : this is a clickable
MAP . On the right, is shown the double helix of DNA which is the normal state
of the molecule.
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Figure 3: The two sugar backbones are oulined in dark grey
deoxyadenylate (A) is in blue,
deoxythymidylate (T) is in green,
deoxyguanylate (G) is in red,
deoxycytidylate (C) is in orange,
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Notice that
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Figure 4: Base pairing. The hydrogen bonds between the NH (blue) and O (red)
are in green.
Naming nucleosides and nucleotides:
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Definitions
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Bases
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Adenine (A)
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Guanine (G)
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Cytosine (C)
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Thymine (T)
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The combination of a deoxyribose and a base constitutes a
deoxynucleoside
.
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Deoxyadenosine
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Deoxyguanosine
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Deoxycytidine
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Deoxythymidine
|
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The combination of a phosphate, a deoxyribose and a base constitutes
a deoxynucleotide.
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Deoxyadenylate
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Deoxyguanylate
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Deoxycytidylate
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Deoxythymidylate
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DNA is a double helix.
-
The
Watson and Crick model
of a double helix
structure provides an answer to the regularity of the composition in bases
and its physiological properties (replication in the cell). It is confirmed
by diffraction data.
Models using beads
are
useful to handle the concept.
-
The base composition is variable, but in all cases the amount of adenine
is equal to the amount of thymine (A=T). In the same manner, C=G. Consequently
A+C= T+G
.
-
E. coli
has a single circular DNA molecule of 4,600,000 base pairs.
The total length is 1.4 mm.
-
In man, the DNA molecule in a diploid cell, if fully extended, would
have a
total length of 1.7 metres.
If you unwrap all the DNA you
have in all your cells, you could reach the moon ...6000 times!
-
In addition to functioning as building blocks of nucleic acids, nucleotides
are important because they are used to store and transfer chemical energy
(e.g. ATP).
What's in a name
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D
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Deoxyribo
: the pentose does
not have any oxygen in position 2. Compare
a deoxyribose
with a
ribose
.
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N
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Nucleic: these molecules were first found in the nucleus of the
cell
,
before being found in mitochondria, chloroplasts (of plant cells), and in the
cytoplasm of prokaryotes.
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A
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Acid: only two of the three acid groups of the phosphoric
acid
are used to form the DNA chain. The third one gives the phosphoribo-backbone an
acidic property.
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And to go further
Some illustrations
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