Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) is a molecule that contains the biological instructions that make each species unique. DNA, along with the instructions it contains, is passed from adult organisms to their offspring during reproduction. Learn what DNA is made of and how it works.
DNA molecule
Image by TheVisualMD
What Is DNA?
Human Genome - Infant and DNA
Image by TheVisualMD
Human Genome - Infant and DNA
Human Genome - Inheritance
Image by TheVisualMD
Deoxyribonucleic Acid
The three letters “DNA” have now become synonymous with crime solving, paternity testing, human identification, and genetic testing. DNA can be retrieved from hair, blood, or saliva. Each person’s DNA is unique, and it is possible to detect differences between individuals within a species on the basis of these unique features.
DNA analysis has many practical applications beyond forensics. In humans, DNA testing is applied to numerous uses: determining paternity, tracing genealogy, identifying pathogens, archeological research, tracing disease outbreaks, and studying human migration patterns. In the medical field, DNA is used in diagnostics, new vaccine development, and cancer therapy. It is now possible to determine predisposition to diseases by looking at genes.
Each human cell has 23 pairs of chromosomes: one set of chromosomes is inherited from the mother and the other set is inherited from the father. There is also a mitochondrial genome, inherited exclusively from the mother, which can be involved in inherited genetic disorders. On each chromosome, there are thousands of genes that are responsible for determining the genotype and phenotype of the individual. A gene is defined as a sequence of DNA that codes for a functional product. The human haploid genome contains 3 billion base pairs and has between 20,000 and 25,000 functional genes.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (28)
DNA Replication (Updated)
Video by Amoeba Sisters/YouTube
How DNA is Packaged (Advanced)
Video by DNA Learning Center/YouTube
DNA, Chromosomes, Genes, and Traits: An Intro to Heredity
Video by Amoeba Sisters/YouTube
DNA cloning and recombinant DNA | Biomolecules | MCAT | Khan Academy
Video by Khan Academy/YouTube
DNA vs RNA (Updated)
Video by Amoeba Sisters/YouTube
Momondo: The DNA Journey | Ancestry
Video by Ancestry/YouTube
What is Mitochondrial DNA?
Video by BritainsDNA/YouTube
GCSE Biology - DNA Part 1 - Genes and the Genome #48
Video by Cognito/YouTube
GCSE Biology - DNA Part 2 - Alleles / Dominant / Heterozygous / Phenotypes and more! #49
Video by Cognito/YouTube
DNA Structure and Replication: Crash Course Biology #10
Video by CrashCourse/YouTube
DNA, genes and genomes
Video by Garvan Institute of Medical Research/YouTube
DNA sequencing | Biomolecules | MCAT | Khan Academy
Video by khanacademymedicine/YouTube
Nucleic acids - DNA and RNA structure
Video by MEDSimplified/YouTube
Decode from DNA to mRNA to tRNA to amino acids
Video by MooMooMath and Science/YouTube
What is DNA and Gene Sequencing?
Video by NationwideChildrens/YouTube
DNA replication - 3D
Video by yourgenome/YouTube
How Much Junk Is in Your DNA Trunk?
Video by SciShow/YouTube
DNA Sequencing - 3D
Video by yourgenome/YouTube
A DNA Test Reveals A Surprise in One Family Tree
Video by World Science Festival/YouTube
History and Mitochondrial DNA
Video by Sebastian ioan/YouTube
DNA: Alterations
Video by Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings/YouTube
DNA: Replication
Video by Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings/YouTube
Dna Replication Part 2
Video by MEDSimplified/YouTube
Transcription Made Easy- From DNA to RNA (2019)
Video by MEDSimplified/YouTube
DNA Science - The Genetics of Cancer Documentary
Video by Red Science Channel/YouTube
DNA: The book of you - Joe Hanson
Video by TED-Ed/YouTube
The twisting tale of DNA - Judith Hauck
Video by TED-Ed/YouTube
How CRISPR lets you edit DNA - Andrea M. Henle
Video by TED-Ed/YouTube
8:12
DNA Replication (Updated)
Amoeba Sisters/YouTube
1:43
How DNA is Packaged (Advanced)
DNA Learning Center/YouTube
8:18
DNA, Chromosomes, Genes, and Traits: An Intro to Heredity
Amoeba Sisters/YouTube
11:08
DNA cloning and recombinant DNA | Biomolecules | MCAT | Khan Academy
Khan Academy/YouTube
6:31
DNA vs RNA (Updated)
Amoeba Sisters/YouTube
5:17
Momondo: The DNA Journey | Ancestry
Ancestry/YouTube
2:05
What is Mitochondrial DNA?
BritainsDNA/YouTube
5:26
GCSE Biology - DNA Part 1 - Genes and the Genome #48
Cognito/YouTube
4:16
GCSE Biology - DNA Part 2 - Alleles / Dominant / Heterozygous / Phenotypes and more! #49
Cognito/YouTube
12:59
DNA Structure and Replication: Crash Course Biology #10
CrashCourse/YouTube
2:17
DNA, genes and genomes
Garvan Institute of Medical Research/YouTube
4:41
DNA sequencing | Biomolecules | MCAT | Khan Academy
khanacademymedicine/YouTube
11:16
Nucleic acids - DNA and RNA structure
MEDSimplified/YouTube
2:33
Decode from DNA to mRNA to tRNA to amino acids
MooMooMath and Science/YouTube
1:37
What is DNA and Gene Sequencing?
NationwideChildrens/YouTube
3:28
DNA replication - 3D
yourgenome/YouTube
10:56
How Much Junk Is in Your DNA Trunk?
SciShow/YouTube
4:55
DNA Sequencing - 3D
yourgenome/YouTube
2:46
A DNA Test Reveals A Surprise in One Family Tree
World Science Festival/YouTube
9:08
History and Mitochondrial DNA
Sebastian ioan/YouTube
2:21
DNA: Alterations
Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings/YouTube
2:21
DNA: Replication
Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings/YouTube
8:09
Dna Replication Part 2
MEDSimplified/YouTube
7:49
Transcription Made Easy- From DNA to RNA (2019)
MEDSimplified/YouTube
53:02
DNA Science - The Genetics of Cancer Documentary
Red Science Channel/YouTube
4:29
DNA: The book of you - Joe Hanson
TED-Ed/YouTube
4:27
The twisting tale of DNA - Judith Hauck
TED-Ed/YouTube
5:29
How CRISPR lets you edit DNA - Andrea M. Henle
TED-Ed/YouTube
More on DNA
ds-DNA
Image by NHGRI
ds-DNA
Newborn baby feet and letters of A, T, C G.
Image by NHGRI
What Is Deoxyribonucleic Acid?
Deoxyribonucleic acid (abbreviated DNA) is the molecule that carries genetic information for the development and functioning of an organism. DNA is made of two linked strands that wind around each other to resemble a twisted ladder — a shape known as a double helix. Each strand has a backbone made of alternating sugar (deoxyribose) and phosphate groups. Attached to each sugar is one of four bases: adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G) or thymine (T). The two strands are connected by chemical bonds between the bases: adenine bonds with thymine, and cytosine bonds with guanine. The sequence of the bases along DNA’s backbone encodes biological information, such as the instructions for making a protein or RNA molecule.
Is there a more amazing molecule than DNA? It makes each of us who we are. The more scientists understand it, the more we all understand ourselves, one another, and the world around us. For example, did you know that we are all far more alike than we are different? In fact, the DNA from any two people is 99.9% identical, with that shared blueprint guiding our development and forming a common thread across the world. The differing 0.1% contains variations that influence our uniqueness, which when combined with our environmental and social contexts give us our abilities, our health, our behavior. How can one, single molecule contain so much mystery and wonder? We are only beginning to understand the answer to that question, which is what makes the study of DNA so exciting.
Source: National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Additional Materials (24)
Chromosome DNA and Gene Expression
Chromosome DNA
Image by TheVisualMD
Cell with DNA
DNA molecule unwinding from a chromosome inside the nucleus of a cell.
Image by NHGRI
Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA)
DNA is the chemical name for the molecule that carries genetic instructions in all living things.
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Dna Deoxyribonucleic Acid 3-D
Video by National Human Genome Research Institute/YouTube
DNA Microscopic cell gene helix
Image by Pixabay
DNA
DNA
Image by Nogas1974
Space-filling model animation of B-DNA
Space-filling model animation of B-DNA
Image by Bdna.gif: Spiffistan derivative work: Jahobr (talk)
DNA
Image by ColiN00B/Pixabay
Dna, Deoxyribonucleic Acid
Image by Eastlandtunes/Pixabay
The DNA Double Helix
Genomes are made of DNA, an extremely large molecule that looks like a long, twisted ladder. This is the iconic DNA double helix that you may have seen in textbooks or advertising.
DNA is read like a code. This code is made up of four types of chemical building blocks, adenine, thymine, cytosine, and guanine, abbreviated with the letters A, T, C, and G. The order of the letters in this code allows DNA to function in different ways. The code changes slightly from person to person to help make you who you are.
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Dna, Deoxyribonucleic Acid
Image by GDJ/Pixabay
DNA Molecule
DNA Molecule
Image by TheVisualMD
DNA Strand
Major Depressive Disorder can "run in families". There is about two to three times the risk for Major Depressive Disorder in the first degree relatives of people with the disorder compared to people in the general population.7 Studies of the rates of Major Depressive Disorder among twins more directly addresses the role of genes in this illness. A number of studies have been done, and these suggest that 40% to 50% of the differences in whether or not individuals have clinical depression is a function of genetic factors.8 The size of the genetic contribution to risk for Major Depressive Disorder is in the range of that found for many other medical conditions such as high blood pressure and high serum cholesterol.
Image by TheVisualMD
DNA profiling
A U.S. Customs and Border Protection chemist reads a DNA profile to determine the origin of a commodity.
Image by James Tourtellotte, photo editor of CBP Today
DNA Structure and Sequencing
DNA Macrostructure
Image by OpenStax College
DNA - What is pharmacogenomics?
The structure of DNA showing with detail showing the structure of the four bases, adenine, cytosine, guanine and thymine, and the location of the major and minor groove.
Image by Zephyris
Eukaryotic Cell with Visible Organelles
This image features a eukaryotic cell with the nucleus, golgi apparatus, mitochondria, and ribosomes visible. The coding for each protein is locked within the DNA in our cells. Once revealed, the code is used as a blueprint that determines the sequence and structure of amino acids to be bonded together into a protein. The first step of protein synthesis is generating mRNA (messenger RNA) in the cell's nucleus from DNA. A portion of DNA is \"unzipped,\" exposing its coding, and a new strand of mRNA is generated with the same code pattern as a portion of original DNA. The mRNA leaves the nucleus and moves to a ribosome, which is like a microscopic factory where proteins are assembled. Inside the ribosome, molecules called tRNA (transfer RNA) approach carrying an amino acid (cognate) which will be the first part of the protein molecule chain. tRNA molecules that complement the coding pattern of the mRNA are permitted to dock to the mRNA, each carrying a specific amino acid. tRNA molecules line up to dock and leave their amino acids behind in the mRNA-specified sequence, eventually forming a protein molecule chain. A chain of amino acids is formed after many tRNA taxis have docked to mRNA. The amino acids join together with peptide bonds, and then fold into a unique form. Proteins leave the ribosomes and enter the cell's fluid-filled endoplasmic reticulum. They are transferred to the Golgi, which \"pinches off\" a vesicle to move them to the edge of the cell. The vesicle fuses with outer plasma membrane and releases the proteins into extracellular space.
Image by TheVisualMD
Eukaryotic Cell with Visible Organelles
This image features a eukaryotic cell with the nucleus (blue), golgi apparatus, mitochondria, and ribosomes visible. The coding for each protein is locked within the DNA in our cells. Once revealed, the code is used as a blueprint that determines the sequence and structure of amino acids to be bonded together into a protein. The first step of protein synthesis is generating mRNA (messenger RNA) in the cell's nucleus from DNA. A portion of DNA is \"unzipped,\" exposing its coding, and a new strand of mRNA is generated with the same code pattern as a portion of original DNA. The mRNA leaves the nucleus and moves to a ribosome, which is like a microscopic factory where proteins are assembled. Inside the ribosome, molecules called tRNA (transfer RNA) approach carrying an amino acid (cognate) which will be the first part of the protein molecule chain. tRNA molecules that complement the coding pattern of the mRNA are permitted to dock to the mRNA, each carrying a specific amino acid. tRNA molecules line up to dock and leave their amino acids behind in the mRNA-specified sequence, eventually forming a protein molecule chain. A chain of amino acids is formed after many tRNA taxis have docked to mRNA. The amino acids join together with peptide bonds, and then fold into a unique form. Proteins leave the ribosomes and enter the cell's fluid-filled endoplasmic reticulum. They are transferred to the Golgi, which \"pinches off\" a vesicle to move them to the edge of the cell. The vesicle fuses with outer plasma membrane and releases the proteins into extracellular space.
Image by TheVisualMD
DNA Strand
DNA (Deoxyribonucleic acid) is known as \"the building block of life\" because it contains all of the hereditary information constituting genetic make-up. DNA is one of the three major macromolecules (DNA, RNA, and proteins) essential for all forms of life, and exact replicas of the same DNA molecule are in nearly every cell of the human body. DNA exists primarily in the nucleus and secondarily in the mitochondria of each human cell. In this model, the double helix is colored red and blue.
Image by TheVisualMD
Gel electrophoresis: 6 "DNA-tracks"
Gel electrophoresis: 6 "DNA-tracks". In the first row (left), DNA with known fragment sizes was used as a reference. Different bands indicate different fragment sizes (the smaller, the faster it travels, the lower it is in the image); different intensities indicate different concentrations (the brighter, the more DNA).
Image by Mnolf
DNA Sequencing
DNA sequencing is a laboratory technique used to determine the exact sequence of bases (A, C, G, and T) in a DNA molecule.
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) contains the biological instructions that make each species unique. DNA, along with the instructions it contains, is passed from adult organisms to their offspring during reproduction. DNA is made of chemical building blocks called nucleotides, which are made of three parts: a phosphate group, a sugar group and one of four types of nitrogen bases. To form a strand of DNA, nucleotides are linked into chains, with the phosphate and sugar groups alternating. The four types of nitrogen bases found in nucleotides are: adenine (A), thymine (T), guanine (G) and cytosine (C). The order, or sequence, of these bases determines what biological instructions are contained in a strand of DNA. Credit: Darryl Leja and Ernesto del Aguila, NHGRI.
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) from Bethesda, MD, USA/Wikimedia
What Is the DNA Double Helix?
Scientist use the term "double helix" to describe DNA's winding, two-stranded chemical structure. This shape - which looks much like a twisted ladder - gives DNA the power to pass along biological instructions with great precision.
To understand DNA's double helix from a chemical standpoint, picture the sides of the ladder as strands of alternating sugar and phosphate groups - strands that run in opposite directions. Each "rung" of the ladder is made up of two nitrogen bases, paired together by hydrogen bonds. Because of the highly specific nature of this type of chemical pairing, base A always pairs with base T, and likewise C with G. So, if you know the sequence of the bases on one strand of a DNA double helix, it is a simple matter to figure out the sequence of bases on the other strand.
DNA's unique structure enables the molecule to copy itself during cell division. When a cell prepares to divide, the DNA helix splits down the middle and becomes two single strands. These single strands serve as templates for building two new, double-stranded DNA molecules - each a replica of the original DNA molecule. In this process, an A base is added wherever there is a T, a C where there is a G, and so on until all of the bases once again have partners.
In addition, when proteins are being made, the double helix unwinds to allow a single strand of DNA to serve as a template. This template strand is then transcribed into mRNA, which is a molecule that conveys vital instructions to the cell's protein-making machinery.
Source: National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Additional Materials (11)
DNA translation example
This diagram shows an example of the double helix structure of DNA with its nucleotides labeled. Below that is the sequence of nucleotides from one strand, and below that the sequence of amino acids that the second sequence codes for.
Image by U.S. Department of Energy Human Genome Program/Wikimedia
DNA - What is pharmacogenomics?
The structure of DNA showing with detail showing the structure of the four bases, adenine, cytosine, guanine and thymine, and the location of the major and minor groove.
Image by Zephyris
Eukaryote DNA-en
Diagram of DNA in a eukaryotic cell
Image by Sponk, Tryphon, Magnus Manske, User:Dietzel65, LadyofHats (Mariana Ruiz), Radio89/Wikimedia
DNA structure labeled
DNA structure labeled
Image by 3dscience at English Wikipedia.
Space-filling model animation of B-DNA
Space-filling model animation of B-DNA
Image by Bdna.gif: Spiffistan derivative work: Jahobr (talk)
Dna conformations
A-DNA, B-DNA, and Z-DNA conformations of DNA.
12 base-pair steps composed by 13 base-pairs are show in a side view and top view.
The symmetrical features of the double-helix are highlighted with the top view panel.
Image by Mauroesguerroto/Wikimedia
0322 DNA Nucleotides Numbered
Version 8.25 from the Textbook
OpenStax Anatomy and Physiology
Published May 18, 2016
MODIFIED: numbering added for carbons and nitrogens
Image by OpenStax/Wikimedia
Difference DNA RNA-DE
Comparison of a single-stranded RNA and a double-stranded DNA with their corresponding nucleobases
Image by Sponk (talk)/Wikimedia
DNA simple2
Simple diagram of double-stranded DNA
Image by Forluvoft/Wikimedia
Diagram showing a double helix of a chromosome CRUK 065
Diagram showing a double helix of a chromosome.
Image by Cancer Research UK/Wikimedia
DNA double helix grooves
Infographic describing reading from the major and minor grooves of a DNA double helix
Image by Biochemlife/Wikimedia
DNA translation example
U.S. Department of Energy Human Genome Program/Wikimedia
DNA - What is pharmacogenomics?
Zephyris
Eukaryote DNA-en
Sponk, Tryphon, Magnus Manske, User:Dietzel65, LadyofHats (Mariana Ruiz), Radio89/Wikimedia
Diagram showing a double helix of a chromosome CRUK 065
Cancer Research UK/Wikimedia
DNA double helix grooves
Biochemlife/Wikimedia
Who Discovered DNA?
Maclyn McCarty with Francis Crick and James D Watson
Image by Marjorie McCarty/Wikimedia
Maclyn McCarty with Francis Crick and James D Watson
Maclyn McCarty (June 9, 1911, to January 2, 2005) with Francis Crick and James D. Watson
Image by Marjorie McCarty/Wikimedia
Who Discovered DNA?
The Swiss biochemist Frederich Miescher first observed DNA in the late 1800s. But nearly a century passed from that discovery until researchers unraveled the structure of the DNA molecule and realized its central importance to biology.
For many years, scientists debated which molecule carried life's biological instructions. Most thought that DNA was too simple a molecule to play such a critical role. Instead, they argued that proteins were more likely to carry out this vital function because of their greater complexity and wider variety of forms.
The importance of DNA became clear in 1953 thanks to the work of James Watson*, Francis Crick, Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin. By studying X-ray diffraction patterns and building models, the scientists figured out the double helix structure of DNA - a structure that enables it to carry biological information from one generation to the next.
* James Watson was the first NHGRI Director and appears here as part of our history collection. Despite his scientific achievements, Dr. Watson’s career was also punctuated by a number of offensive and scientifically erroneous comments about his beliefs on race, nationalities, homosexuality, gender, and other societal topics. Dr. Watson’s opinions on these topics are unsupported by science and are counter to the mission and values of NHGRI.
Source: National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Additional Materials (4)
Historical Basis of Modern Understanding
Friedrich Miescher (1844–1895) discovered nucleic acids.
Image by CNX Openstax
DNA Structure and Replication: Crash Course Biology #10
Video by CrashCourse/YouTube
Rosalind Franklin: DNA's unsung hero - Cláudio L. Guerra
Video by TED-Ed/YouTube
DNA Structure and Sequencing
The work of pioneering scientists (a) James Watson, Francis Crick, and Maclyn McCarty led to our present day understanding of DNA. Scientist Rosalind Franklin discovered (b) the X-ray diffraction pattern of DNA, which helped to elucidate its double helix structure. (credit a: modification of work by Marjorie McCarty, Public Library of Science)
Image by CNX Openstax
Historical Basis of Modern Understanding
CNX Openstax
12:59
DNA Structure and Replication: Crash Course Biology #10
CrashCourse/YouTube
4:10
Rosalind Franklin: DNA's unsung hero - Cláudio L. Guerra
TED-Ed/YouTube
DNA Structure and Sequencing
CNX Openstax
What Is DNA Made Of?
Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA)
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA)
DNA is made of chemical building blocks called nucleotides. These building blocks are made of three parts: a phosphate group, a sugar group and one of four types of nitrogen bases. To form a strand of DNA, nucleotides are linked into chains, with the phosphate and sugar groups alternating.
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
What Is DNA Made Of?
DNA is made of chemical building blocks called nucleotides. These building blocks are made of three parts: a phosphate group, a sugar group and one of four types of nitrogen bases. To form a strand of DNA, nucleotides are linked into chains, with the phosphate and sugar groups alternating.
The four types of nitrogen bases found in nucleotides are: adenine (A), thymine (T), guanine (G) and cytosine (C). The order, or sequence, of these bases determines what biological instructions are contained in a strand of DNA. For example, the sequence ATCGTT might instruct for blue eyes, while ATCGCT might instruct for brown.
The complete DNA instruction book, or genome, for a human contains about 3 billion bases and about 20,000 genes on 23 pairs of chromosomes.
Source: National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Additional Materials (3)
What are Nucleic Acids? Nucleic Acid Structure & Function
Video by 2 Minute Classroom/YouTube
DNA, Chromosomes, Genes, and Traits: An Intro to Heredity
Video by Amoeba Sisters/YouTube
New 8-Letter DNA Rewrites the Genetic Code | SciShow News
Video by SciShow/YouTube
2:32
What are Nucleic Acids? Nucleic Acid Structure & Function
2 Minute Classroom/YouTube
8:18
DNA, Chromosomes, Genes, and Traits: An Intro to Heredity
Amoeba Sisters/YouTube
5:10
New 8-Letter DNA Rewrites the Genetic Code | SciShow News
SciShow/YouTube
What Is a Nucleotide?
Nucleotide Structure of DNA
Image by TheVisualMD
Nucleotide Structure of DNA
Computer generated 3D visualization of nucleotides of DNA. Nucleotides are comprised of three main parts - a five-carbon-ring sugar, a nitrogenous base, and a phosphate group; and are linked together by hydrogen bonds. DNA is made up of a coiled double polymer (double helix) of nucleotides. The four nucleotides involved are adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G), and thiamine (T).
Image by TheVisualMD
What Is a Nucleotide?
A nucleotide is the basic building block of nucleic acids (RNA and DNA). A nucleotide consists of a sugar molecule (either ribose in RNA or deoxyribose in DNA) attached to a phosphate group and a nitrogen-containing base. The bases used in DNA are adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G) and thymine (T). In RNA, the base uracil (U) takes the place of thymine. DNA and RNA molecules are polymers made up of long chains of nucleotides.
Nucleotide. It is the chains of these nucleotides that encode the information content in RNA and DNA.
Lawrence Brody, Ph.D., Director, Division of Genomics and Society
Source: National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Additional Materials (19)
Nucleotide
A nucleotide is the basic building block of nucleic acids (RNA and DNA). A nucleotide consists of a sugar molecule (either ribose in RNA or deoxyribose in DNA) attached to a phosphate group and a nitrogen-containing base. The bases used in DNA are adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G) and thymine (T). In RNA, the base uracil (U) takes the place of thymine. DNA and RNA molecules are polymers made up of long chains of nucleotides.
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute
Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs)
Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are a type of polymorphism involving variation of a single base pair.
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Nucleotides
(a) The building blocks of all nucleotides are one or more phosphate groups, a pentose sugar, and a nitrogen-containing base. (b) The nitrogen-containing bases of nucleotides. (c) The two pentose sugars of DNA and RNA.
Image by CNX Openstax
0322 DNA Nucleotides Numbered
Version 8.25 from the Textbook
OpenStax Anatomy and Physiology
Published May 18, 2016
MODIFIED: numbering added for carbons and nitrogens
Image by OpenStax/Wikimedia
DNA translation example
This diagram shows an example of the double helix structure of DNA with its nucleotides labeled. Below that is the sequence of nucleotides from one strand, and below that the sequence of amino acids that the second sequence codes for.
Image by U.S. Department of Energy Human Genome Program/Wikimedia
Single nucleotide polymorphism substitution mutation diagram - cytosine to thymine
Diagram of a substitution mutation where cytosine is replaced by thymine.
Image by NHS National Genetics and Genomics Education Centre/Wikimedia
Nucleotide Structure of DNA
Computer generated 3D visualization of DNA and its components - This image depicts the structural components that make up DNA, the genetic material of human life. The left side presents a series of panels that illustrate the four nucleotides; adenine , cytosine, guanine, and thiamine, that make up the constitent parts of the DNA molecule. The right side presents the double-helical structure of the DNA. Each nucleotide is made up of three main parts; a five-carbon-ring sugar, a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base.
Image by TheVisualMD
Nucleotide
A nucleotide is the basic building block of nucleic acids. RNA and DNA are polymers made of long chains of nucleotides.
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
DNA, genes and genomes
Video by Garvan Institute of Medical Research/YouTube
Introduction to nucleic acids and nucleotides | High school biology | Khan Academy
Video by Khan Academy/YouTube
Nucleic acids - DNA and RNA structure
Video by MEDSimplified/YouTube
Paths to Guanine and Adenine Nucleotides – Biochemistry | Lecturio
Mitochondrial DNA | mtDNA | All Mitochondrial genes detail
Biotech Review/YouTube
4:22
DNA Structure
Teacher's Pet/YouTube
8:45
DNA- Structure and function of Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA)
MEDSimplified/YouTube
5:10
New 8-Letter DNA Rewrites the Genetic Code | SciShow News
SciShow/YouTube
What Is a Base Pair?
Base Pair
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Base Pair
A base pair is two chemical bases bonded to one another forming a "rung of the DNA ladder."
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
What Is a Base Pair?
A base pair consists of two complementary DNA nucleotide bases that pair together to form a “rung of the DNA ladder.” DNA is made of two linked strands that wind around each other to resemble a twisted ladder — a shape known as a double helix. Each strand has a backbone made of alternating sugar (deoxyribose) and phosphate groups. Attached to each sugar is one of four bases: adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G) [GWA-NeeN] or thymine (T). The two strands are held together by hydrogen bonds between pairs of bases: adenine pairs with thymine, and cytosine pairs with guanine.
One copy of the human genome consists of approximately 3 billion base pairs of DNA, which are distributed across 23 chromosomes. Human chromosomes range in size from about 50 million to 300 million base pairs. Because the bases exist as pairs, and the identity of one of the bases in the pair determines the other member of the pair, scientists do not have to report both bases of the pair — which is why DNA sequence is typically represented as single strings of letters. DNA sequencing involves determining the exact order of the base pairs across a DNA segment of interest or across an entire genome. A signature goal of the Human Genome Project was to generate the first high-quality sequence of the human. The effort was successful in generating a such a sequence for over 90% of the human genome, but it took nearly two more decades to sequence the remaining bits of the human genome — which were heavily enriched for highly repetitive and difficult-to-sequence stretches of DNA.
Sarah A. Bates, M.S., M.A., Chief, Office of Communications
Source: National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Additional Materials (7)
Base Pairs
Showing the arrangement of nucleotides within the structure of nucleic acids: At lower left, a monophosphate nucleotide; its nitrogenous base represents one side of a base-pair. At upper right, four nucleotides form two base-pairs: thymine and adenine (connected by double hydrogen bonds) and guanine and cytosine (connected by triple hydrogen bonds). The individual nucleotide monomers are chain-joined at their sugar and phosphate molecules, forming two 'backbones' (a double helix) of a nucleic acid, shown at upper left.
Image by OpenStax
Base pairs
A base pair consists of two complementary DNA nucleotide bases that pair together to form a “rung of the DNA ladder.” DNA is made of two linked strands that wind around each other to resemble a twisted ladder — a shape known as a double helix. Each strand has a backbone made of alternating sugar (deoxyribose) and phosphate groups. Attached to each sugar is one of four bases: adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G) [GWA-NeeN] or thymine (T). The two strands are held together by hydrogen bonds between pairs of bases: adenine pairs with thymine, and cytosine pairs with guanine.
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Base Pair 3-D
Video by National Human Genome Research Institute/YouTube
DNA Structure and Replication: Crash Course Biology #10
Video by CrashCourse/YouTube
The Mystery of the Biggest Genomes
Video by SciShow/YouTube
3 Sad Surprises: The Human Genome Project
Video by SciShow/YouTube
98% of Your DNA is Junk
Video by Seeker/YouTube
Base Pairs
OpenStax
Base pairs
National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
0:49
Base Pair 3-D
National Human Genome Research Institute/YouTube
12:59
DNA Structure and Replication: Crash Course Biology #10
CrashCourse/YouTube
5:59
The Mystery of the Biggest Genomes
SciShow/YouTube
3:34
3 Sad Surprises: The Human Genome Project
SciShow/YouTube
3:22
98% of Your DNA is Junk
Seeker/YouTube
What Is ACGT?
ACGT
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
ACGT
ACGT is an acronym for the four types of bases found in a DNA molecule: adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G), and thymine (T).
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
What Is ACGT?
ACGT is an acronym for the four types of bases found in a DNA molecule: adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G), and thymine (T). A DNA molecule consists of two strands wound around each other, with each strand held together by bonds between the bases. Adenine pairs with thymine, and cytosine pairs with guanine. The sequence of bases in a portion of a DNA molecule, called a gene, carries the instructions needed to assemble a protein.
Genetic code is the term we use for the way that the four bases of DNA--the A, C, G, and Ts--are strung together in a way that the cellular machinery, the ribosome, can read them and turn them into a protein. In the genetic code, each three nucleotides in a row count as a triplet and code for a single amino acid. So each sequence of three codes for an amino acid. And proteins are made up of sometimes hundreds amino acids, so the code that would make one protein could have hundreds, sometimes even thousands, of triplets contained in it.
Source: National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Additional Materials (4)
ACGT 3-D
Video by National Human Genome Research Institute/YouTube
DNA vs RNA (Updated)
Video by Amoeba Sisters/YouTube
DNA Structure
Video by Teacher's Pet/YouTube
The Structure of DNA
Video by MITx Bio/YouTube
0:47
ACGT 3-D
National Human Genome Research Institute/YouTube
6:31
DNA vs RNA (Updated)
Amoeba Sisters/YouTube
4:22
DNA Structure
Teacher's Pet/YouTube
5:59
The Structure of DNA
MITx Bio/YouTube
Adenine (A)
Adenine
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Adenine
Adenine (A) is one of four chemical bases in DNA, with the other three being cytosine (C), guanine (G), and thymine (T).
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
What Is Adenine?
Adenine (A) is one of the four nucleotide bases in DNA, with the other three being cytosine (C), guanine (G) and thymine (T). Within a double-stranded DNA molecule, adenine bases on one strand pair with thymine bases on the opposite strand. The sequence of the four nucleotide bases encodes DNA’s information.
Adenine. Adenine, pairing with T in DNA, is usually represented as bonding with two hydrogen bonds, holding the DNA together.
Lawrence Brody, Ph.D., Director, Division of Genomics and Society
Source: National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Additional Materials (8)
Adenosine Triphosphate
This image shows a full 360-degree rotation of a single, gas-phase magnesium-ATP chelate with a charge of -2. The molecule was optimized at the UB3LYP/6-311++G(d,p) theoretical level and the atomic connectivity modified by the human optimizer to reflect the probable electronic structure.
Image by Someone1939
ATP: Adenosine Triphosphate
ATP is the primary energy currency of the cell. It has an adenosine backbone with three phosphate groups attached.
Image by CNX Openstax
Adenine
Adenine (A) is one of the four nucleotide bases in DNA, with the other three being cytosine (C), guanine (G) and thymine (T). Within a double-stranded DNA molecule, adenine bases on one strand pair with thymine bases on the opposite strand. The sequence of the four nucleotide bases encodes DNA’s information.
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
DNA, Chromosomes, Genes, and Traits: An Intro to Heredity
Video by Amoeba Sisters/YouTube
Human Physiology : What Is Adenine?
Video by ehow/YouTube
Jim Watson's Discovery of DNA Base Pairing
Video by The Explorer's Guide to Biology/YouTube
STRUCTURE OF DNA
Video by Neural Academy/YouTube
Paths to Guanine and Adenine Nucleotides – Biochemistry | Lecturio
Video by Lecturio Medical/YouTube
Adenosine Triphosphate
Someone1939
ATP: Adenosine Triphosphate
CNX Openstax
Adenine
National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
8:18
DNA, Chromosomes, Genes, and Traits: An Intro to Heredity
Amoeba Sisters/YouTube
1:32
Human Physiology : What Is Adenine?
ehow/YouTube
1:24
Jim Watson's Discovery of DNA Base Pairing
The Explorer's Guide to Biology/YouTube
5:59
STRUCTURE OF DNA
Neural Academy/YouTube
4:26
Paths to Guanine and Adenine Nucleotides – Biochemistry | Lecturio
Lecturio Medical/YouTube
Thymine (T)
Thymine
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Thymine
Thymine (T) is one of four chemical bases in DNA, the other three being adenine (A), cytosine (C), and guanine (G).
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
What Is Thymine?
Thymine (T) is one of the four nucleotide bases in DNA, with the other three being adenine (A), cytosine (C) and guanine (G). Within a double-stranded DNA molecule, thymine bases on one strand pair with adenine bases on the opposite strand. The sequence of the four nucleotide bases encodes DNA’s information.
Thymine. Thymine, like several other nucleotides, also is used in metabolism, and has more functions than just being in DNA.
Lawrence Brody, Ph.D., Director, Division of Genomics and Society
Source: National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Additional Materials (6)
Thymine
00:00
00:42
Thymine (T) is one of the four nucleotide bases in DNA, with the other three being adenine (A), cytosine (C) and guanine (G). Within a double-stranded DNA molecule, thymine bases on one strand pair with adenine bases on the opposite strand. The sequence of the four nucleotide bases encodes DNA’s information.
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute
Thymine
00:00
00:42
Thymine (T) is one of the four nucleotide bases in DNA, with the other three being adenine (A), cytosine (C) and guanine (G). Within a double-stranded DNA molecule, thymine bases on one strand pair with adenine bases on the opposite strand. The sequence of the four nucleotide bases encodes DNA’s information.
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute
Clint Explains DNA Base Pairing Rules
Video by Clint Explains/YouTube
STRUCTURE OF DNA
Video by Neural Academy/YouTube
DNA Structure and Replication: Crash Course Biology #10
Video by CrashCourse/YouTube
DNA repair 1 | Biomolecules | MCAT | Khan Academy
Video by khanacademymedicine/YouTube
Thymine
National Human Genome Research Institute
Thymine
National Human Genome Research Institute
3:04
Clint Explains DNA Base Pairing Rules
Clint Explains/YouTube
5:59
STRUCTURE OF DNA
Neural Academy/YouTube
12:59
DNA Structure and Replication: Crash Course Biology #10
CrashCourse/YouTube
11:16
DNA repair 1 | Biomolecules | MCAT | Khan Academy
khanacademymedicine/YouTube
Guanine (G)
Guanine
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Guanine
Guanine (G) is one of four chemical bases in DNA, with the other three being adenine (A), cytosine (C), and thymine (T).
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
What Is Guanine?
Guanine (G) is one of the four nucleotide bases in DNA, with the other three being adenine (A), cytosine (C) and thymine (T). Within a double-stranded DNA molecule, guanine bases on one strand pair with cytosine bases on the opposite strand. The sequence of the four nucleotide bases encodes DNA’s information.
Guanine is one of the building blocks of DNA. It's the G in the A, C, G, or T. Guanine in the double helix pairs with cytosine, so you will see CG pairs; one on one strand and one on the other. And the CG pairs happen to bind more tightly than the AT pairs, so long stretches of CG make stronger helixes than stretches of AT.
Source: National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Additional Materials (7)
Guanine
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute
Guanine
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute
Base Pair 3-D
Video by National Human Genome Research Institute/YouTube
DNA: Complementary Base Pairing
Video by Study.com/YouTube
Clint Explains DNA Base Pairing Rules
Video by Clint Explains/YouTube
Paths to Guanine and Adenine Nucleotides – Biochemistry | Lecturio
Video by Lecturio Medical/YouTube
DNA- Structure and function of Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA)
Video by MEDSimplified/YouTube
Guanine
National Human Genome Research Institute
Guanine
National Human Genome Research Institute
0:49
Base Pair 3-D
National Human Genome Research Institute/YouTube
4:04
DNA: Complementary Base Pairing
Study.com/YouTube
3:04
Clint Explains DNA Base Pairing Rules
Clint Explains/YouTube
4:26
Paths to Guanine and Adenine Nucleotides – Biochemistry | Lecturio
Lecturio Medical/YouTube
8:45
DNA- Structure and function of Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA)
MEDSimplified/YouTube
Cytosine (C)
Cytosine
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Cytosine
Cytosine (C) is one of four chemical bases in DNA, the other three being adenine (A), guanine (G), and thymine (T).
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
What Is Cytosine?
Cytosine (C) is one of the four nucleotide bases in DNA, with the other three being adenine (A), guanine (G) and thymine (T). Within a double-stranded DNA molecule, cytosine bases on one strand pair with guanine bases on the opposite strand. The sequence of the four nucleotide bases encodes DNA’s information.
Cytosine. The fact that DNA encodes all of its information in four bases, each with its own letter, allows us to write the DNA code by just representing the letters.
Source: National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Additional Materials (8)
What is DNA and Gene Sequencing?
Video by NationwideChildrens/YouTube
Biomolecules (Updated)
Video by Amoeba Sisters/YouTube
What are Nucleic Acids? Nucleic Acid Structure & Function
Video by 2 Minute Classroom/YouTube
DNA Structure
Video by Teacher's Pet/YouTube
Single nucleotide polymorphism substitution mutation diagram - cytosine to thymine
Diagram of a substitution mutation where cytosine is replaced by thymine.
Image by NHS National Genetics and Genomics Education Centre/Wikimedia
Nucleic Acids
In a double stranded DNA molecule, the two strands run antiparallel to one another so that one strand runs 5′ to 3′ and the other 3′ to 5′. The phosphate backbone is located on the outside, and the bases are in the middle. Adenine forms hydrogen bonds (or base pairs) with thymine, and guanine base pairs with cytosine.
Image by CNX Openstax
Nucleotide Structure of DNA
Computer generated 3D visualization of nucleotides of DNA. Nucleotides are comprised of three main parts - a five-carbon-ring sugar, a nitrogenous base, and a phosphate group; and are linked together by hydrogen bonds. DNA is made up of a coiled double polymer (double helix) of nucleotides. The four nucleotides involved are adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G), and thiamine (T).
Image by TheVisualMD
Nucleotide Structure of DNA
Computer generated 3D visualization of DNA and its components - This image depicts the structural components that make up DNA, the genetic material of human life. The left side presents a series of panels that illustrate the four nucleotides; adenine , cytosine, guanine, and thiamine, that make up the constitent parts of the DNA molecule. The right side presents the double-helical structure of the DNA. Each nucleotide is made up of three main parts; a five-carbon-ring sugar, a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base.
Image by TheVisualMD
1:37
What is DNA and Gene Sequencing?
NationwideChildrens/YouTube
8:13
Biomolecules (Updated)
Amoeba Sisters/YouTube
2:32
What are Nucleic Acids? Nucleic Acid Structure & Function
2 Minute Classroom/YouTube
4:22
DNA Structure
Teacher's Pet/YouTube
Single nucleotide polymorphism substitution mutation diagram - cytosine to thymine
NHS National Genetics and Genomics Education Centre/Wikimedia
Nucleic Acids
CNX Openstax
Nucleotide Structure of DNA
TheVisualMD
Nucleotide Structure of DNA
TheVisualMD
Where Is DNA Found?
DNA-terminology
Image by WaSu-Bio/Wikimedia
DNA-terminology
Based on image from: https://pixabay.com/en/genetics-chromosomes-rna-dna-156404/
Image by WaSu-Bio/Wikimedia
Where Is DNA Found?
In organisms called eukaryotes, DNA is found inside a special area of the cell called the nucleus. Because the cell is very small, and because organisms have many DNA molecules per cell, each DNA molecule must be tightly packaged. This packaged form of the DNA is called a chromosome.
During DNA replication, DNA unwinds so it can be copied. At other times in the cell cycle, DNA also unwinds so that its instructions can be used to make proteins and for other biological processes. But during cell division, DNA is in its compact chromosome form to enable transfer to new cells.
Researchers refer to DNA found in the cell's nucleus as nuclear DNA. An organism's complete set of nuclear DNA is called its genome.
Besides the DNA located in the nucleus, humans and other complex organisms also have a small amount of DNA in cell structures known as mitochondria. Mitochondria generate the energy the cell needs to function properly.
In sexual reproduction, organisms inherit half of their nuclear DNA from the male parent and half from the female parent. However, organisms inherit all of their mitochondrial DNA from the female parent. This occurs because only egg cells, and not sperm cells, keep their mitochondria during fertilization.
Source: National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Additional Materials (4)
How DNA is Packaged (Advanced)
Video by DNA Learning Center/YouTube
DNA replication - 3D
Video by yourgenome/YouTube
DNA: The book of you - Joe Hanson
Video by TED-Ed/YouTube
Genetics Basics | Chromosomes, Genes, DNA | Don't Memorise
Video by Don't Memorise/YouTube
1:43
How DNA is Packaged (Advanced)
DNA Learning Center/YouTube
3:28
DNA replication - 3D
yourgenome/YouTube
4:29
DNA: The book of you - Joe Hanson
TED-Ed/YouTube
5:24
Genetics Basics | Chromosomes, Genes, DNA | Don't Memorise
Don't Memorise/YouTube
DNA Organization in Nucleus
Chromosome inside nucleus (with labels)
Image by National Institute of General Medical Sciences
Chromosome inside nucleus (with labels)
The long, stringy DNA that makes up genes is spooled within chromosomes inside the nucleus of a cell. (Note that a gene would actually be a much longer stretch of DNA than what is shown here.)
Featured in The New Genetics.
Image by National Institute of General Medical Sciences
How the Nucleus and Its DNA Is Organized
Like most other cellular organelles, the nucleus is surrounded by a membrane called the nuclear envelope. This membranous covering consists of two adjacent lipid bilayers with a thin fluid space in between them. Spanning these two bilayers are nuclear pores. A nuclear pore is a tiny passageway for the passage of proteins, RNA, and solutes between the nucleus and the cytoplasm. Proteins called pore complexes lining the nuclear pores regulate the passage of materials into and out of the nucleus.
Inside the nuclear envelope is a gel-like nucleoplasm with solutes that include the building blocks of nucleic acids. There also can be a dark-staining mass often visible under a simple light microscope, called a nucleolus (plural = nucleoli). The nucleolus is a region of the nucleus that is responsible for manufacturing the RNA necessary for construction of ribosomes. Once synthesized, newly made ribosomal subunits exit the cell’s nucleus through the nuclear pores.
The genetic instructions that are used to build and maintain an organism are arranged in an orderly manner in strands of DNA. Within the nucleus are threads of chromatin composed of DNA and associated proteins (Figure 3.22). Along the chromatin threads, the DNA is wrapped around a set of histone proteins. A nucleosome is a single, wrapped DNA-histone complex. Multiple nucleosomes along the entire molecule of DNA appear like a beaded necklace, in which the string is the DNA and the beads are the associated histones. When a cell is in the process of division, the chromatin condenses into chromosomes, so that the DNA can be safely transported to the “daughter cells.” The chromosome is composed of DNA and proteins; it is the condensed form of chromatin. It is estimated that humans have almost 22,000 genes distributed on 46 chromosomes.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (14)
Cell nucleus
Nucleus. See a full animation of this medical topic.
Image by Blausen.com staff (2014). \"Medical gallery of Blausen Medical 2014\". WikiJournal of Medicine 1 (2). DOI:10.15347/wjm/2014.010. ISSN 2002-4436
Nucleus
A nucleus is a membrane-bound organelle that contains the cell's chromosomes.
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Organelles
An organelle is a subcellular structure that has one or more specific jobs to perform in the cell, much like an organ does in the body. Among the more important cell organelles are the nuclei, which store genetic information; mitochondria, which produce chemical energy; and ribosomes, which assemble proteins.
Image by NIH, National Human Genome Research Institute (Darryl Leja)
Organelles
Eukaryote (animal) cell with organelles labeled
Image by NIH, National Human Genome Research Institute (Darryl Leja)
Cell Nucleolus
Name: Microbiology ID: e42bd376-624b-4c0f-972f-e0c57998e765@4.4 Language: English Summary: Subjects: Science and Technology Keywords: Print Style: License: Creative Commons Attribution License (by 4.0) Authors: OpenStax Microbiology Copyright Holders: OpenStax Microbiology Publishers: OpenStax Microbiology Latest Version: 4.4 First Publication Date: Oct 17, 2016 Latest Revision: Nov 11, 2016 Last Edited By: OpenStax Microbiology
Image by CNX OpenStax
Graphic decomposition of a chromosome (found in the cell nucleus), to the bases pair of the DNA
Graphic decomposition of a chromosome (found in the cell nucleus), to the bases pair of the DNA.
Image by File:Chromosome-es.svg: KES47 (talk)
Cell nucleus - Phagocytosis and endocytosis
Phagocytosis and endocytosis: the cell membrane pinches together, forming an intracellular membrane-bound compartment, called a phagosome or endosome, that contains extracellular material. The phagosome travels from the cell membrane to the lysosome, and then is engulfed by the lysosome, releasing its contents.
Image by Nicolle Rager Fuller, National Science Foundation
Cell nucleus
A comprensive diagram of a human cell nucleous.
Image by Mariana Ruiz LadyofHats
Eukaryotic Cells
The nucleus stores chromatin (DNA plus proteins) in a gel-like substance called the nucleoplasm. The nucleolus is a condensed region of chromatin where ribosome synthesis occurs. The boundary of the nucleus is called the nuclear envelope. It consists of two phospholipid bilayers: an outer membrane and an inner membrane. The nuclear membrane is continuous with the endoplasmic reticulum. Nuclear pores allow substances to enter and exit the nucleus.
Image by CNX Openstax
Eukaryotic Cells
Image by CNX Openstax
What Is a Nucleus?
(a) The nucleus of an atom contains its protons and neutrons. (b) The nucleus of a cell is the organelle that contains DNA. (c) A nucleus in the CNS is a localized center of function with the cell bodies of several neurons, shown here circled in red. (credit c: “Was a bee”/Wikimedia Commons)
Image by CNX Openstax
Nucleus
The nucleus serves as the cell’s command center, sending directions to the cell to grow, mature, divide, or die. It also houses DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid), the cell’s hereditary material. The nucleus is surrounded by a membrane called the nuclear envelope, which protects the DNA and separates the nucleus from the rest of the cell.
Image by U.S. National Library of Medicine
The Nucleus
The nucleus is the control center of the cell. The nucleus of living cells contains the genetic material that determines the entire structure and function of that cell.
Image by CNX Openstax
Biology: Cell Structure I Nucleus Medical Media
Video by Nucleus Medical Media/YouTube
Cell nucleus
Blausen.com staff (2014). \"Medical gallery of Blausen Medical 2014\". WikiJournal of Medicine 1 (2). DOI:10.15347/wjm/2014.010. ISSN 2002-4436
Nucleus
National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Organelles
NIH, National Human Genome Research Institute (Darryl Leja)
Organelles
NIH, National Human Genome Research Institute (Darryl Leja)
Cell Nucleolus
CNX OpenStax
Graphic decomposition of a chromosome (found in the cell nucleus), to the bases pair of the DNA
File:Chromosome-es.svg: KES47 (talk)
Cell nucleus - Phagocytosis and endocytosis
Nicolle Rager Fuller, National Science Foundation
Cell nucleus
Mariana Ruiz LadyofHats
Eukaryotic Cells
CNX Openstax
Eukaryotic Cells
CNX Openstax
What Is a Nucleus?
CNX Openstax
Nucleus
U.S. National Library of Medicine
The Nucleus
CNX Openstax
7:22
Biology: Cell Structure I Nucleus Medical Media
Nucleus Medical Media/YouTube
What Does DNA Do?
DNA to protein or ncRNA
Image by Thomas Shafee/Wikimedia
DNA to protein or ncRNA
Protein coding genes are transcribed to an mRNA intermediate, then translated to a functional protein. RNA-coding genes are transcribed to a functional non-coding RNA. (PDB: 3BSE, 1OBB, 3TRA)
Annotated version of not uploaded yet
Image by Thomas Shafee/Wikimedia
What Does DNA Do?
DNA contains the instructions needed for an organism to develop, survive and reproduce. To carry out these functions, DNA sequences must be converted into messages that can be used to produce proteins, which are the complex molecules that do most of the work in our bodies.
Each DNA sequence that contains instructions to make a protein is known as a gene. The size of a gene may vary greatly, ranging from about 1,000 bases to 1 million bases in humans. Genes only make up about 1 percent of the DNA sequence. DNA sequences outside this 1 percent are involved in regulating when, how and how much of a protein is made.
Source: National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Additional Materials (4)
What is DNA and Gene Sequencing?
Video by NationwideChildrens/YouTube
DNA, Chromosomes, Genes, and Traits: An Intro to Heredity
Video by Amoeba Sisters/YouTube
DNA, genes and genomes
Video by Garvan Institute of Medical Research/YouTube
DNA Structure and Replication: Crash Course Biology #10
Video by CrashCourse/YouTube
1:37
What is DNA and Gene Sequencing?
NationwideChildrens/YouTube
8:18
DNA, Chromosomes, Genes, and Traits: An Intro to Heredity
Amoeba Sisters/YouTube
2:17
DNA, genes and genomes
Garvan Institute of Medical Research/YouTube
12:59
DNA Structure and Replication: Crash Course Biology #10
CrashCourse/YouTube
DNA Replication
DNA replication origin recognition complex (ORC)
Image by Huilin Li, Brookhaven National Laboratory, and Bruce Stillman, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
DNA replication origin recognition complex (ORC)
A study published in March 2012 used cryo-electron microscopy to determine the structure of the DNA replication origin recognition complex (ORC), a semi-circular, protein complex (yellow) that recognizes and binds DNA to start the replication process. The ORC appears to wrap around and bend approximately 70 base pairs of double stranded DNA (red and blue). Also shown is the protein Cdc6 (green), which is also involved in the initiation of DNA replication. Related to video 3307 that shows the structure from different angles.
From a Brookhaven National Laboratory news release, "Study Reveals How Protein Machinery Binds and Wraps DNA to Start Replication."
Image by Huilin Li, Brookhaven National Laboratory, and Bruce Stillman, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
DNA Replication
In order for an organism to grow, develop, and maintain its health, cells must reproduce themselves by dividing to produce two new daughter cells, each with the full complement of DNA as found in the original cell. Billions of new cells are produced in an adult human every day. Only very few cell types in the body do not divide, including nerve cells, skeletal muscle fibers, and cardiac muscle cells. The division time of different cell types varies. Epithelial cells of the skin and gastrointestinal lining, for instance, divide very frequently to replace those that are constantly being rubbed off of the surface by friction.
A DNA molecule is made of two strands that “complement” each other in the sense that the molecules that compose the strands fit together and bind to each other, creating a double-stranded molecule that looks much like a long, twisted ladder. Each side rail of the DNA ladder is composed of alternating sugar and phosphate groups (image). The two sides of the ladder are not identical, but are complementary. These two backbones are bonded to each other across pairs of protruding bases, each bonded pair forming one “rung,” or cross member. The four DNA bases are adenine (A), thymine (T), cytosine (C), and guanine (G). Because of their shape and charge, the two bases that compose a pair always bond together. Adenine always binds with thymine, and cytosine always binds with guanine. The particular sequence of bases along the DNA molecule determines the genetic code. Therefore, if the two complementary strands of DNA were pulled apart, you could infer the order of the bases in one strand from the bases in the other, complementary strand. For example, if one strand has a region with the sequence AGTGCCT, then the sequence of the complementary strand would be TCACGGA.
Molecular Structure of DNA
The DNA double helix is composed of two complementary strands. The strands are bonded together via their nitrogenous base pairs using hydrogen bonds.
DNA replication is the copying of DNA that occurs before cell division can take place. After a great deal of debate and experimentation, the general method of DNA replication was deduced in 1958 by two scientists in California, Matthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl. This method is illustrated in image and described below.
DNA Replication
DNA replication faithfully duplicates the entire genome of the cell. During DNA replication, a number of different enzymes work together to pull apart the two strands so each strand can be used as a template to synthesize new complementary strands. The two new daughter DNA molecules each contain one pre-existing strand and one newly synthesized strand. Thus, DNA replication is said to be “semiconservative.”
Stage 1: Initiation. The two complementary strands are separated, much like unzipping a zipper. Special enzymes, including helicase, untwist and separate the two strands of DNA.
Stage 2: Elongation. Each strand becomes a template along which a new complementary strand is built. DNA polymerase brings in the correct bases to complement the template strand, synthesizing a new strand base by base. A DNA polymerase is an enzyme that adds free nucleotides to the end of a chain of DNA, making a new double strand. This growing strand continues to be built until it has fully complemented the template strand.
Stage 3: Termination. Once the two original strands are bound to their own, finished, complementary strands, DNA replication is stopped and the two new identical DNA molecules are complete.
Each new DNA molecule contains one strand from the original molecule and one newly synthesized strand. The term for this mode of replication is “semiconservative,” because half of the original DNA molecule is conserved in each new DNA molecule. This process continues until the cell’s entire genome, the entire complement of an organism’s DNA, is replicated. As you might imagine, it is very important that DNA replication take place precisely so that new cells in the body contain the exact same genetic material as their parent cells. Mistakes made during DNA replication, such as the accidental addition of an inappropriate nucleotide, have the potential to render a gene dysfunctional or useless. Fortunately, there are mechanisms in place to minimize such mistakes. A DNA proofreading process enlists the help of special enzymes that scan the newly synthesized molecule for mistakes and corrects them. Once the process of DNA replication is complete, the cell is ready to divide. You will explore the process of cell division later in the chapter.
Review
The nucleus is the command center of the cell, containing the genetic instructions for all of the materials a cell will make (and thus all of its functions it can perform). The nucleus is encased within a membrane of two interconnected lipid bilayers, side-by-side. This nuclear envelope is studded with protein-lined pores that allow materials to be trafficked into and out of the nucleus. The nucleus contains one or more nucleoli, which serve as sites for ribosome synthesis. The nucleus houses the genetic material of the cell: DNA. DNA is normally found as a loosely contained structure called chromatin within the nucleus, where it is wound up and associated with a variety of histone proteins. When a cell is about to divide, the chromatin coils tightly and condenses to form chromosomes.
There is a pool of cells constantly dividing within your body. The result is billions of new cells being created each day. Before any cell is ready to divide, it must replicate its DNA so that each new daughter cell will receive an exact copy of the organism’s genome. A variety of enzymes are enlisted during DNA replication. These enzymes unwind the DNA molecule, separate the two strands, and assist with the building of complementary strands along each parent strand. The original DNA strands serve as templates from which the nucleotide sequence of the new strands are determined and synthesized. When replication is completed, two identical DNA molecules exist. Each one contains one original strand and one newly synthesized complementary strand.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (13)
DNA Replication
DNA replication is the process by which a molecule of DNA is duplicated.
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
DNA replication - 3D
Video by yourgenome/YouTube
DNA Replication
DNA replication faithfully duplicates the entire genome of the cell. During DNA replication, a number of different enzymes work together to pull apart the two strands so each strand can be used as a template to synthesize new complementary strands. The two new daughter DNA molecules each contain one pre-existing strand and one newly synthesized strand. Thus, DNA replication is said to be “semiconservative.”
Image by CNX Openstax
DNA Replication in Prokaryotes
A replication fork is formed when helicase separates the DNA strands at the origin of replication. The DNA tends to become more highly coiled ahead of the replication fork. Topoisomerase breaks and reforms DNA’s phosphate backbone ahead of the replication fork, thereby relieving the pressure that results from this supercoiling. Single-strand binding proteins bind to the single-stranded DNA to prevent the helix from re-forming. Primase synthesizes an RNA primer. DNA polymerase III uses this primer to synthesize the daughter DNA strand. On the leading strand, DNA is synthesized continuously, whereas on the lagging strand, DNA is synthesized in short stretches called Okazaki fragments. DNA polymerase I replaces the RNA primer with DNA. DNA ligase seals the gaps between the Okazaki fragments, joining the fragments into a single DNA molecule. (credit: modification of work by Mariana Ruiz Villareal)
Image by CNX Openstax (credit: modification of work by Mariana Ruiz Villareal)
DNA replication illustration
During DNA replication, each strand of the original molecule acts as a template for the synthesis of a new, complementary DNA strand.
See image 2544 for a labeled version of this illustration.
Featured in The New Genetics.
Image by National Institute of General Medical Sciences
Basics of DNA Replication
The three suggested models of DNA replication. Grey indicates the original DNA strands, and blue indicates newly synthesized DNA.
Image by CNX Openstax
Basics of DNA Replication
Meselson and Stahl experimented with E. coli grown first in heavy nitrogen (15N) then in 14N. DNA grown in 15N (red band) is heavier than DNA grown in 14N (orange band), and sediments to a lower level in cesium chloride solution in an ultracentrifuge. When DNA grown in 15N is switched to media containing 14N, after one round of cell division the DNA sediments halfway between the 15N and 14N levels, indicating that it now contains fifty percent 14N. In subsequent cell divisions, an increasing amount of DNA contains 14N only. This data supports the semi-conservative replication model. (credit: modification of work by Mariana Ruiz Villareal)
Image by CNX Openstax
DNA Replication in Eukaryotes
The ends of linear chromosomes are maintained by the action of the telomerase enzyme.
Image by CNX Openstax
Telomere end replication problem
The end replication problem causes telomeres to shorten over successive cell divisions.
Image by WassermanLab/Wikimedia
DNA replication (13080697695)
This image was created by the NHS National Genetics and Genomics Education Centre. For further information and resources please visit our website www.geneticseducation.nhs.uk
Image by Genomics Education Programme/Wikimedia
DNA Replication from 3 to 5 prime (13061371753)
This image was created by the NHS National Genetics and Genomics Education Centre. For further information and resources please visit our website www.geneticseducation.nhs.uk
Image by Genomics Education Programme/Wikimedia
Eukaryotic DNA replication
DNA diagram during replication
Image by LadyofHats/Wikimedia
Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is a laboratory technique used to amplify DNA sequences.
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
DNA Replication
National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
3:28
DNA replication - 3D
yourgenome/YouTube
DNA Replication
CNX Openstax
DNA Replication in Prokaryotes
CNX Openstax (credit: modification of work by Mariana Ruiz Villareal)
DNA replication illustration
National Institute of General Medical Sciences
Basics of DNA Replication
CNX Openstax
Basics of DNA Replication
CNX Openstax
DNA Replication in Eukaryotes
CNX Openstax
Telomere end replication problem
WassermanLab/Wikimedia
DNA replication (13080697695)
Genomics Education Programme/Wikimedia
DNA Replication from 3 to 5 prime (13061371753)
Genomics Education Programme/Wikimedia
Eukaryotic DNA replication
LadyofHats/Wikimedia
Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)
National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
How Are DNA Sequences Used?
Transcription Factors
Image by Kelvin13/Wikimedia
Transcription Factors
Diagram of gene transcription factors.
Note—This image serves as its own editable text version—the editable text layer is invisible, underneath the outline text. Open it in Inkscape and follow the instructions outside the image boundary.
Image by Kelvin13/Wikimedia
How Are DNA Sequences Used to Make Proteins?
DNA's instructions are used to make proteins in a two-step process. First, enzymes read the information in a DNA molecule and transcribe it into an intermediary molecule called messenger ribonucleic acid, or mRNA.
Next, the information contained in the mRNA molecule is translated into the "language" of amino acids, which are the building blocks of proteins. This language tells the cell's protein-making machinery the precise order in which to link the amino acids to produce a specific protein. This is a major task because there are 20 types of amino acids, which can be placed in many different orders to form a wide variety of proteins.
Source: National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Additional Materials (4)
From DNA to protein - 3D
Video by yourgenome/YouTube
DNA vs RNA (Updated)
Video by Amoeba Sisters/YouTube
Protein Synthesis (Updated)
Video by Amoeba Sisters/YouTube
Protein Synthesis | Cells | Biology | FuseSchool
Video by FuseSchool - Global Education/YouTube
2:42
From DNA to protein - 3D
yourgenome/YouTube
6:31
DNA vs RNA (Updated)
Amoeba Sisters/YouTube
8:47
Protein Synthesis (Updated)
Amoeba Sisters/YouTube
5:08
Protein Synthesis | Cells | Biology | FuseSchool
FuseSchool - Global Education/YouTube
DNA Structure and Sequencing
Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA)
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA)
DNA is the chemical name for the molecule that carries genetic instructions in all living things.
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
DNA Structure and Sequencing
The building blocks of DNA are nucleotides. The important components of the nucleotide are a nitrogenous base, deoxyribose (5-carbon sugar), and a phosphate group (Figure). The nucleotide is named depending on the nitrogenous base. The nitrogenous base can be a purine such as adenine (A) and guanine (G), or a pyrimidine such as cytosine (C) and thymine (T).
Each nucleotide is made up of a sugar, a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base. The sugar is deoxyribose in DNA and ribose in RNA.
The nucleotides combine with each other by covalent bonds known as phosphodiester bonds or linkages. The purines have a double ring structure with a six-membered ring fused to a five-membered ring. Pyrimidines are smaller in size; they have a single six-membered ring structure. The carbon atoms of the five-carbon sugar are numbered 1', 2', 3', 4', and 5' (1' is read as "one prime"). The phosphate residue is attached to the hydroxyl group of the 5' carbon of one sugar of one nucleotide and the hydroxyl group of the 3' carbon of the sugar of the next nucleotide, thereby forming a 5'-3' phosphodiester bond.
In the 1950s, Francis Crick and James Watson worked together to determine the structure of DNA at the University of Cambridge, England. Other scientists like Linus Pauling and Maurice Wilkins were also actively exploring this field. Pauling had discovered the secondary structure of proteins using X-ray crystallography. In Wilkins' lab, researcher Rosalind Franklin was using X-ray diffraction methods to understand the structure of DNA. Watson and Crick were able to piece together the puzzle of the DNA molecule on the basis of Franklin's data because Crick had also studied X-ray diffraction (Figure). In 1962, James Watson, Francis Crick, and Maurice Wilkins were awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine. Unfortunately, by then Franklin had died, and Nobel prizes are not awarded posthumously.
The work of pioneering scientists (a) James Watson, Francis Crick, and Maclyn McCarty led to our present day understanding of DNA. Scientist Rosalind Franklin discovered (b) the X-ray diffraction pattern of DNA, which helped to elucidate its double helix structure. (credit a: modification of work by Marjorie McCarty, Public Library of Science)
Watson and Crick proposed that DNA is made up of two strands that are twisted around each other to form a right-handed helix. Base pairing takes place between a purine and pyrimidine; namely, A pairs with T and G pairs with C. Adenine and thymine are complementary base pairs, and cytosine and guanine are also complementary base pairs. The base pairs are stabilized by hydrogen bonds; adenine and thymine form two hydrogen bonds and cytosine and guanine form three hydrogen bonds. The two strands are anti-parallel in nature; that is, the 3' end of one strand faces the 5' end of the other strand. The sugar and phosphate of the nucleotides form the backbone of the structure, whereas the nitrogenous bases are stacked inside. Each base pair is separated from the other base pair by a distance of 0.34 nm, and each turn of the helix measures 3.4 nm. Therefore, ten base pairs are present per turn of the helix. The diameter of the DNA double helix is 2 nm, and it is uniform throughout. Only the pairing between a purine and pyrimidine can explain the uniform diameter. The twisting of the two strands around each other results in the formation of uniformly spaced major and minor grooves.
DNA has (a) a double helix structure and (b) phosphodiester bonds. The (c) major and minor grooves are binding sites for DNA binding proteins during processes such as transcription (the copying of RNA from DNA) and replication.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (3)
Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA)
DNA is made of chemical building blocks called nucleotides. These building blocks are made of three parts: a phosphate group, a sugar group and one of four types of nitrogen bases. To form a strand of DNA, nucleotides are linked into chains, with the phosphate and sugar groups alternating.
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
DNA Structure and Replication: Crash Course Biology #10
Video by CrashCourse/YouTube
Jim Watson's Discovery of DNA Base Pairing
Video by The Explorer's Guide to Biology/YouTube
Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA)
National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
12:59
DNA Structure and Replication: Crash Course Biology #10
CrashCourse/YouTube
1:24
Jim Watson's Discovery of DNA Base Pairing
The Explorer's Guide to Biology/YouTube
Transcription
Translation Occuring Inside Ribosome (Green) in Process of Protein Synthesis
Image by TheVisualMD
Translation Occuring Inside Ribosome (Green) in Process of Protein Synthesis
The process of protein synthesis begins within the nucleus of a cell, where DNA resides. The first step is to reveal the blueprint. In the process called transcription, general transcription factors and RNA polymerase bind to the promoter region of a DNA nucleotide. The DNA helix is first unwound or \"unzipped\" to divulge the instructions for assembling a particular type of protein molecule. The instructions are then copied, or transcribed, to mRNA (messenger RNA), a snake-like strand that will carry the blueprint off for production (blue). When transcription is complete, the mRNA exits the cell nucleus with its duplicate of the blueprint and shuttles off to the protein-making factory, the ribosome (green). Pictured here, the mRNA remains at the ribosome factory and is itself used as the template for protein production. The strand is long and feeds in one side of the ribosome and out the other, advancing like a strip of film through a projector. Production commences as the amino acid \"parts\" arrive at the factory. Amino acid molecules from within the cell are transported to the ribosome by tRNA (transfer RNA, yellow) and dock to the mRNA's assembly line one by one. Each amino acid is adjoined to another by a peptide bond, creating a chain (red). The selection and sequence of amino acids in the chain, as determined by the blueprint, are central to defining which type of protein is being produced.
Image by TheVisualMD
From DNA to RNA: Transcription
DNA is housed within the nucleus, and protein synthesis takes place in the cytoplasm, thus there must be some sort of intermediate messenger that leaves the nucleus and manages protein synthesis. This intermediate messenger is messenger RNA (mRNA), a single-stranded nucleic acid that carries a copy of the genetic code for a single gene out of the nucleus and into the cytoplasm where it is used to produce proteins.
There are several different types of RNA, each having different functions in the cell. The structure of RNA is similar to DNA with a few small exceptions. For one thing, unlike DNA, most types of RNA, including mRNA, are single-stranded and contain no complementary strand. Second, the ribose sugar in RNA contains an additional oxygen atom compared with DNA. Finally, instead of the base thymine, RNA contains the base uracil. This means that adenine will always pair up with uracil during the protein synthesis process.
Gene expression begins with the process called transcription, which is the synthesis of a strand of mRNA that is complementary to the gene of interest. This process is called transcription because the mRNA is like a transcript, or copy, of the gene’s DNA code. Transcription begins in a fashion somewhat like DNA replication, in that a region of DNA unwinds and the two strands separate, however, only that small portion of the DNA will be split apart. The triplets within the gene on this section of the DNA molecule are used as the template to transcribe the complementary strand of RNA (Figure 3.26). A codon is a three-base sequence of mRNA, so-called because they directly encode amino acids. Like DNA replication, there are three stages to transcription: initiation, elongation, and termination.
Figure 3.26 Transcription: from DNA to mRNA In the first of the two stages of making protein from DNA, a gene on the DNA molecule is transcribed into a complementary mRNA molecule.
Stage 1: Initiation. A region at the beginning of the gene called a promoter—a particular sequence of nucleotides—triggers the start of transcription.
Stage 2: Elongation. Transcription starts when RNA polymerase unwinds the DNA segment. One strand, referred to as the coding strand, becomes the template with the genes to be coded. The polymerase then aligns the correct nucleic acid (A, C, G, or U) with its complementary base on the coding strand of DNA. RNA polymerase is an enzyme that adds new nucleotides to a growing strand of RNA. This process builds a strand of mRNA.
Stage 3: Termination. At the end of the gene, a sequence of nucleotides called the terminator sequence causes the new RNA to fold up on itself. This fold causes the RNA to separate from the gene and from RNA polymerase, ending transcription.
Before the mRNA molecule leaves the nucleus and proceeds to protein synthesis, it is modified in a number of ways. For this reason, it is often called a pre-mRNA at this stage. For example, your DNA, and thus complementary mRNA, contains long regions called non-coding regions that do not code for amino acids. Their function is still a mystery, but the process called splicing removes these non-coding regions from the pre-mRNA transcript (Figure 3.27). A spliceosome—a structure composed of various proteins and other molecules—attaches to the mRNA and “splices” or cuts out the non-coding regions. The removed segment of the transcript is called an intron. The remaining exons are pasted together. An exon is a segment of RNA that remains after splicing. Interestingly, some introns that are removed from mRNA are not always non-coding. When different coding regions of mRNA are spliced out, different variations of the protein will eventually result, with differences in structure and function. This process results in a much larger variety of possible proteins and protein functions. When the mRNA transcript is ready, it travels out of the nucleus and into the cytoplasm.
Figure 3.27 Splicing DNA In the nucleus, a structure called a spliceosome cuts out introns (noncoding regions) within a pre-mRNA transcript and reconnects the exons.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (3)
Ribonucleic Acid (RNA)
Ribonucleic acid (RNA) is a molecule similar to DNA. Unlike DNA, RNA is single-stranded.
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Transcription Factors \"Unzipping\" DNA Helix to Commence Protein Synthesis
The process of protein synthesis begins within the nucleus of a cell, where DNA resides (purple). The first step is to reveal the blueprint. In the process called transcription, general transcription factors and RNA polymerase (orange) bind to the promoter region of a DNA nucleotide. The DNA helix is first unwound or \"unzipped\" to divulge the instructions for assembling a particular type of protein molecule. The instructions are then copied, or transcribed, to mRNA (messenger RNA), a snake-like strand that will carry the blueprint off for production (blue). When transcription is complete, the mRNA exits the cell nucleus with its duplicate of the blueprint and shuttles off to the protein-making factory, the ribosome.
Image by TheVisualMD
DNA replication and RNA transcription and translation | Khan Academy
Video by Khan Academy/YouTube
Ribonucleic Acid (RNA)
National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Transcription Factors \"Unzipping\" DNA Helix to Commence Protein Synthesis
TheVisualMD
15:23
DNA replication and RNA transcription and translation | Khan Academy
Khan Academy/YouTube
Translation
Embryonic Development, DNA and Chromosomal Mix
Image by TheVisualMD
Embryonic Development, DNA and Chromosomal Mix
Image by TheVisualMD
From RNA to Protein: Translation
From RNA to Protein: Translation
Like translating a book from one language into another, the codons on a strand of mRNA must be translated into the amino acid alphabet of proteins. Translation is the process of synthesizing a chain of amino acids called a polypeptide. Translation requires two major aids: first, a “translator,” the molecule that will conduct the translation, and second, a substrate on which the mRNA strand is translated into a new protein, like the translator’s “desk.” Both of these requirements are fulfilled by other types of RNA. The substrate on which translation takes place is the ribosome.
Remember that many of a cell’s ribosomes are found associated with the rough ER, and carry out the synthesis of proteins destined for the Golgi apparatus. Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) is a type of RNA that, together with proteins, composes the structure of the ribosome. Ribosomes exist in the cytoplasm as two distinct components, a small and a large subunit. When an mRNA molecule is ready to be translated, the two subunits come together and attach to the mRNA. The ribosome provides a substrate for translation, bringing together and aligning the mRNA molecule with the molecular “translators” that must decipher its code.
The other major requirement for protein synthesis is the translator molecules that physically “read” the mRNA codons. Transfer RNA (tRNA) is a type of RNA that ferries the appropriate corresponding amino acids to the ribosome, and attaches each new amino acid to the last, building the polypeptide chain one-by-one. Thus tRNA transfers specific amino acids from the cytoplasm to a growing polypeptide. The tRNA molecules must be able to recognize the codons on mRNA and match them with the correct amino acid. The tRNA is modified for this function. On one end of its structure is a binding site for a specific amino acid. On the other end is a base sequence that matches the codon specifying its particular amino acid. This sequence of three bases on the tRNA molecule is called an anticodon. For example, a tRNA responsible for shuttling the amino acid glycine contains a binding site for glycine on one end. On the other end it contains an anticodon that complements the glycine codon (GGA is a codon for glycine, and so the tRNAs anticodon would read CCU). Equipped with its particular cargo and matching anticodon, a tRNA molecule can read its recognized mRNA codon and bring the corresponding amino acid to the growing chain (Figure 3.28).
Translation from RNA to Protein
Figure 3.28 Translation from RNA to Protein During translation, the mRNA transcript is “read” by a functional complex consisting of the ribosome and tRNA molecules. tRNAs bring the appropriate amino acids in sequence to the growing polypeptide chain by matching their anti-codons with codons on the mRNA strand.
Much like the processes of DNA replication and transcription, translation consists of three main stages: initiation, elongation, and termination. Initiation takes place with the binding of a ribosome to an mRNA transcript. The elongation stage involves the recognition of a tRNA anticodon with the next mRNA codon in the sequence. Once the anticodon and codon sequences are bound (remember, they are complementary base pairs), the tRNA presents its amino acid cargo and the growing polypeptide strand is attached to this next amino acid. This attachment takes place with the assistance of various enzymes and requires energy. The tRNA molecule then releases the mRNA strand, the mRNA strand shifts one codon over in the ribosome, and the next appropriate tRNA arrives with its matching anticodon. This process continues until the final codon on the mRNA is reached which provides a “stop” message that signals termination of translation and triggers the release of the complete, newly synthesized protein. Thus, a gene within the DNA molecule is transcribed into mRNA, which is then translated into a protein product (Figure 3.29).
From DNA to Protein: Transcription through Translation
Figure 3.29 From DNA to Protein: Transcription through Translation Transcription within the cell nucleus produces an mRNA molecule, which is modified and then sent into the cytoplasm for translation. The transcript is decoded into a protein with the help of a ribosome and tRNA molecules.
Commonly, an mRNA transcription will be translated simultaneously by several adjacent ribosomes. This increases the efficiency of protein synthesis. A single ribosome might translate an mRNA molecule in approximately one minute; so multiple ribosomes aboard a single transcript could produce multiple times the number of the same protein in the same minute. A polyribosome is a string of ribosomes translating a single mRNA strand.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (3)
From DNA to Life
From DNA to Life
Image by William Crochot / Medium69
Protein translation 2
Video by khanacademymedicine/YouTube
From DNA to protein - 3D
Video by yourgenome/YouTube
From DNA to Life
William Crochot / Medium69
10:53
Protein translation 2
khanacademymedicine/YouTube
2:42
From DNA to protein - 3D
yourgenome/YouTube
What Is Non-Coding DNA?
Pre-mRNA
Image by Nastypatty/Wikimedia
Pre-mRNA
Pre-mRNA is the first form of RNA created through transcription in protein synthesis. The pre-mRNA lacks structures that the messenger RNA (mRNA) requires. First all introns have to be removed from the transcribed RNA through a process known as splicing. Before the RNA is ready for export, a Poly(A)tail is added to the 3’ end of the RNA and a 5’ cap is added to the 5’ end.
Image by Nastypatty/Wikimedia
What Is Non-Coding DNA?
Non-coding DNA corresponds to the portions of an organism’s genome that do not code for amino acids, the building blocks of proteins. Some non-coding DNA sequences are known to serve functional roles, such as in the regulation of gene expression, while other areas of non-coding DNA have no known function.
Non-coding DNA. So I could talk about this one forever because it actually happened to be the part of the genome that I did most of my PhD work in. And there used to be an older and derogatory term called junk DNA, which, thankfully, doesn't get used these days much longer. So really, the thing to keep in mind here that human genome is a vast, vast expanse of nucleotides, 3.3 billion almost. And only a very, very small fraction of that, about 2% actually codes for what we know to be proteins. And so the question is, what really happens with the rest? Is it just there doing nothing? Or does it have a function? And for many years, particularly in the earlier stages of genomics as a field, people were not really sure that the non-coding parts of the genome have a purpose for being there. And now, or I would say over the last decade or so maybe, we are only just starting to realize that there are an immense number of ways in which what we think of as non-coding actually might just have a more subtle way of passing its information along. So it may not code in the classical protein-coding sense. But there is a ton of information crucial in many, many ways that is hidden in this part of the genome.
Source: National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Additional Materials (13)
Dna conformations
A-DNA, B-DNA, and Z-DNA conformations of DNA.
12 base-pair steps composed by 13 base-pairs are show in a side view and top view.
The symmetrical features of the double-helix are highlighted with the top view panel.
Image by Mauroesguerroto/Wikimedia
A-, B- and Z-DNA
From left to right, the structures of A-, B- and Z-DNA. The structure a DNA molecule depends on its environment. In aqueous enviromnents, including the majority of DNA in a cell, B-DNA is the most common structure. The A-DNA structure is dominates in dehydrated samples and is similar to the double-stranded RNA and DNA/RNA hybrids. Z-DNA is a rarer structure found in DNA bound to certain proteins.
Image by Original uploader was Richard Wheeler (Zephyris) at en.wikipedia
Structure and functions of the TDP-43 protein
(A) Structure of TAR DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43) protein. The TDP-43 protein contains 414 amino acids and is comprised of an N-terminal region with a nuclear localisation signal (NLS). In addition, the protein consists of two RNA recognition motifs (RRM1 and RRM2), a nuclear export signal (NES) and a C-terminal domain with a glutamine/asparagine-rich (Q/N) and glycine-rich regions. Mitochondrial localisation motifs (M1; M3; M5) are also evident. Pathogenic mutations are predominantly located within the C-terminal region which can exhibit prion-like properties. The numbers represent amino acid lengths. (B) The TDP-43 protein is critical for mediating RNA metabolism. In the nucleus, TDP-43 is important for transcription and splicing of messenger RNA (mRNA), as well as maintaining RNA stability (pA) and transport to nucleus. In addition, TDP-43 regulates biogenesis of microRNA (miRNA) and processing of long non-coding RNA (lncRNA). Although predominantly located within the nucleus, TDP-43 shuttles between the nucleus and the cytoplasm. In the cytoplasm, TDP-43 participates in mRNA stability, translation, formation of stress and ribonucleoprotein (RNP) transport granules.
Image by Eva Maria Johanna de Boer et al./Wikimedia
DNA to protein or ncRNA
Protein coding genes are transcribed to an mRNA intermediate, then translated to a functional protein. RNA-coding genes are transcribed to a functional non-coding RNA. (PDB: 3BSE, 1OBB, 3TRA)
Annotated version of not uploaded yet
Image by Thomas Shafee/Wikimedia
3 Sad Surprises: The Human Genome Project
Video by SciShow/YouTube
Introns: The gaps in our genes
Video by nature video/YouTube
Transcription and Translation
Video by Bozeman Science/YouTube
98% of Your DNA is Junk
Video by Seeker/YouTube
How Much Junk Is in Your DNA Trunk?
Video by SciShow/YouTube
WACE Biology: Coding and Non-Coding DNA
Video by Atomi/YouTube
ncRNAs - all types of non-coding RNA (lncRNA, tRNA, rRNA, snRNA, snoRNA, siRNA, miRNA, piRNA)
Video by Henrik's Lab/YouTube
Coding DNA | Non Coding DNA | Coding Vs Non Coding DNA | Coding Vs Non Coding Strand |
Video by BMH learning/YouTube
‘Dark DNA’ Is the Latest Mystery in the World of Genetics… But What Is It?
Video by Seeker/YouTube
Dna conformations
Mauroesguerroto/Wikimedia
A-, B- and Z-DNA
Original uploader was Richard Wheeler (Zephyris) at en.wikipedia
Structure and functions of the TDP-43 protein
Eva Maria Johanna de Boer et al./Wikimedia
DNA to protein or ncRNA
Thomas Shafee/Wikimedia
3:34
3 Sad Surprises: The Human Genome Project
SciShow/YouTube
3:25
Introns: The gaps in our genes
nature video/YouTube
11:57
Transcription and Translation
Bozeman Science/YouTube
3:22
98% of Your DNA is Junk
Seeker/YouTube
10:56
How Much Junk Is in Your DNA Trunk?
SciShow/YouTube
7:52
WACE Biology: Coding and Non-Coding DNA
Atomi/YouTube
5:43
ncRNAs - all types of non-coding RNA (lncRNA, tRNA, rRNA, snRNA, snoRNA, siRNA, miRNA, piRNA)
Henrik's Lab/YouTube
1:38
Coding DNA | Non Coding DNA | Coding Vs Non Coding DNA | Coding Vs Non Coding Strand |
BMH learning/YouTube
4:11
‘Dark DNA’ Is the Latest Mystery in the World of Genetics… But What Is It?
Seeker/YouTube
What Is DNA Fingerprinting?
DNA Fingerprinting
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
DNA Fingerprinting
DNA fingerprinting is a laboratory technique used to establish a link between biological evidence and a suspect in a criminal investigation.
Image by National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
What Is DNA Fingerprinting?
DNA fingerprinting is a laboratory technique used to determine the probable identity of a person based on the nucleotide sequences of certain regions of human DNA that are unique to individuals. DNA fingerprinting is used in a variety of situations, such as criminal investigations, other forensic purposes and paternity testing. In these situations, one aims to “match” two DNA fingerprints with one another, such as a DNA sample from a known person and one from an unknown person.
DNA fingerprinting. I think a lot of people are first introduced to DNA fingerprinting while watching crime shows. An officer collects some samples from the crime scene. They put it in a tube. And then an hour later, they hold up a brightly colored gel, squint at it, and say, aha, we have a match for the killer's DNA. Then the show is over. Of course, that isn't exactly how things work in real life. But DNA fingerprinting is an important part of forensic science. Although it can't really tell you exactly who committed a crime, it can be used to help narrow down a list of suspects based on how well their DNA matches the samples that were found at the crime scene. Investigators can also use the DNA results to search specific databases to find other potential suspects.
Source: National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Additional Materials (8)
DNA Fingerprinting | Genetics | Biology | FuseSchool
Video by FuseSchool - Global Education/YouTube
Gel Electrophoresis
Video by Amoeba Sisters/YouTube
DNA Fingerprinting
Video by Bozeman Science/YouTube
Stages of Gene Fingerprinting
1: A cell sample is taken- usually a cheek swab or blood test
2: DNA is extracted from sample
3: Cleavage of DNA by restriction enzyme- the DNA is broken into small fragments
4: Small fragments are amplified by the Polymerase Chain Reaction- results in many
more fragments
5: DNA fragments are separated by electrophoresis
6: The fragments are transferred to an agar plate
7: On the Agar Plate specific DNA fragments are bound to a radioactive DNA probe
8: The Agar Plate is washed free of excess probe
9: An x-ray film is used to detect a radioactive pattern
10: The DNA is compared to other DNA samples
Image by Sneptunebear16
Electrophoresis, Gel, Pulsed-Field
This image depicted samples of foodborne bacterial DNA, that had been prepared to undergo, pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) DNA fingerprinting.
Image by CDC/ Daniel Drapeau; Photo credit: James Gathany
DNA paternity testing
DNA paternity testing diagram. Results of genetic fingerprinting. Samples obtained from M - mother, Ch - child, Father - possible fathers. DNA bands of different sizes in child sample should be a combination of mother's and father's samples
Image by Helixitta
DNA Profiling - RFLP Analysis
Seen here is a diagram of agarose gel for DNA Profiling: RFLP (restriction fragment length polymorphism) Analysis. To the left is a picture of a DNA fingerprinting experiment, and the diagram on the right is the line drawing of the picture to show the distributions of DNA fragments. By comparing the ditributions, people can determine which suspect is guilty. The reason that DNA fragments move to different distances is they have different lengths and sizes: shorter/smaller fragments would move faster and further. Under an electric field, nucleic acid molecules move negatively charged molecules through agarose gel, and identical fragments would move the same distance.
1. Known DNA
2. DNA of suspect 1
3. DNA of suspect 2
4. DNA from the crime scene
A. DNA fragments: larger fragments
B. Wells: where people load DNA samples
C. DNA fragments: smaller fragments that are further separated
D. Agarose gel: electric field
Image by Phoenix_src/Wikimedia
Gel Electrophoresis in DNA Fingerprinting
This is a diagram that illustrates the process of Gel electrophoresis. Gel electrophoresis is used for DNA fingerprinting, and is very useful in crime investigation since every individual has different DNA patterns. DNA can be extracted from any sample of body fluid(i.e. blood, semen, or saliva). DNA is mixed with restriction enzyme and amplified with PCR. The mixture of DNA fragment plus restriction enzyme is added into the wells of the agarose gel, which leads to a physical change instead of a chemical one. An electric current is applied to the gel from a power source. Negatively charged DNA moves toward the positive side. Larger fragments move slower and are located near the top whereas smaller fragments move faster and are near the bottom. Bands are stained but different shades indicate the amount of DNA each band contains.
http://www.yourgenome.org/facts/what-is-gel-electrophoresis
Image by Jennifer0328/Wikimedia
4:09
DNA Fingerprinting | Genetics | Biology | FuseSchool
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Deoxyribonucleic Acid
Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) is a molecule that contains the biological instructions that make each species unique. DNA, along with the instructions it contains, is passed from adult organisms to their offspring during reproduction. Learn what DNA is made of and how it works.