3:5 Bio
3:5 Bio
3:5 Bio
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The combination of a single base, a deoxyribose sugar, and a phosphate make up a nucleotide. DNA is actually a molecule of
repeating nucleotides. Examine the nucleotides closer. Two of the bases are purines - adenine and guanine. The pyrimidines
are thymine and cytosine. Note that the pyrimidines are single ringed and the purines are double ringed. Color the nucleotides
using the same colors as you colored them in the double helix.
The two sides of the DNA ladder are held together loosely by hydrogen bonds. Color the hydrogen bonds gray.
Messenger RNA
We know the nucleus controls the cell's activities through the chemical DNA, but how? It is the sequence of bases that
determine what protein is to be made. The only problem is that the DNA is too big to go through the nuclear pores. So a
chemical is used to read the DNA in the nucleus. That chemical is messenger RNA. The messenger RNA (mRNA) is small
enough to go through the nuclear pores. It takes the "message" of the DNA to the ribosomes and "tells them" what proteins
are to be made. Recall that proteins are the body's building blocks and are made of individual amino acids joined into a long
chain. Imagine that the code taken to the ribosomes is telling the ribosome what is needed - like a recipe.
Messenger RNA is similar to DNA, except that it is a single strand, and it has no thymine. Instead of thymine, mRNA contains
the base uracil. In addition to that difference, mRNA has the sugar ribose instead of deoxyribose. RNA stands for ribonucleic
acid.
Color the mRNA as you did the DNA.
Color the ribose a darker blue. Color the uracil brown.
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DNA Replication
Each time a new cell is made, the cell must receive an exact copy of the parent cell DNA. The new cells then receive the
instructions and information needed to function. The process of copying DNA is called replication. Replication occurs in a
unique way – instead of copying a complete new strand of DNA, the process “saves” or conserves one of the original strands.
For this reason, replication is called semi-conservative. When the DNA is ready to copy, the molecule “unzips” itself and new
nucleotides are added to each side.
The image showing replication is similar to the DNA and mRNA coloring. Note the nucleotides are shown as 2 parts
the sugar and phosphate (color blue) and one of the four bases identified by shape, color the same as you did on the
other model..
The Blueprint of Life
Every cell in your body has the same "blueprint" or the same DNA. Like the blueprints of a house tell the builders how to construct a
house, the DNA "blueprint" tells the cell how to build the organism. Yet, how can a heart be so different from a brain if all the cells
contain the same instructions? Although much work remains in genetics, it has become apparent that a cell has the ability to turn
off most genes and only work with the genes necessary to do a job.
To build the body, the code carried on messenger RNA travels to the ribosomes where three bases within the code (called a codon)
specify a single amino acid. A long mRNA chain could contain thousands of these amino acids. When linked together, the amino
acids form proteins, which make up many structures in the body.
In this section, color the bases and RNA chain the same as you did previously.
Color the amino acids red.
19. How do some cells become brain cells and others become skin cells, when the DNA in ALL the cells is exactly the
same. In other words, if the instructions are exactly the same, how does one cell become a brain cell and another a skin
cell?
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DNA REPLICATION
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