DNA

From WikiLectures
This revision has been recently reviewed from this computer!
Number of reviews: 0x, number of edits 2, number of authors 1   
   Thank you for your review (0★)   
star1-0 star2-0 star3-0 star4-0 star5-0
Jump to: navigation, search
This article is forgotten
This article is forgotten  

It was marked by its author as Under construction, but last edit is older than 30 days.

If you want to edit this page, please try to contact its author first (you fill find him in the history). Watch the discussion as well.

If the author will not continue in work, remove the template {{Under construction}} and edit the page.

Last update: Sunday, 11 Dec 2011 at 2.31 pm.


DNA Overview.png

DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) is the molecule containing the primary genetic information in the form of a linear sequence of nucleotides in groups of three (codon). A nucleotide is composed of a phosphorylated sugar and base. DNA bases are adenine, cytosine, guanine and thymine. The bases form complementary bases pairing, with two hydrogen bonds between cytosine and guanine, and three hydrogen bonds between thymine and adenine. DNA consists of a large number of repeats 100-6500 bp (base pairs).

Contents

edit edit Structure

Phosphorylation of nucleosides gives DNA a negative charge. DNA is negatively charged, it forms bonds with positively charged histones. Histones are responsible for compacting DNA. The structure formed is 8 histone proteins together in one unit with the DNA double helix wound twice around it.

A-B-Z-DNA Side View.png

Helix of DNA occur in three forms; α-helix, β-helix and z-helix. α-helix and β-helix are right handed. z-helix is left handed.




edit edit Major and Minor grooves

The DNA double helix forms minor and major grooves. Minor grooves have two highly hydrophilic components, whereas major grooves enable bases to be accessible.

edit edit Modifications

DNA modifications can be methylation, acetylation, ubiquilation, and phosphorylation. Acetylation activates chromatin, allowing protein synthesis to occur. Methylation deactivates DNA.

edit edit DNA forms

sDNA (satellite DNA) contains tandem repeats of nucleotide sequences of different lenghs. sDNA can be separated from the main DNA in gradient centrifugation, after which it appears as one or several bands separated from that of the main body of the DNA. Microsatellites are small (2-10) tandem repeats of DNA nucleotides. Minisatellites are tandem repeats of about 20-100 base pairs.

cDNA is a reverse transcriptase product. DNA can be natured and renatured continuously because it has a highly ordered structure.


edit edit Links

edit edit Related articles

edit edit External links

edit edit Sources

edit edit References

edit edit Bibliography

edit edit Further reading

Personal tools
Namespaces
Variants
Actions
Navigation
Portals
Exam topics
Toolbox
PDF version