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Summary Introduction of biology

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Biology is the study of living things. It encompasses the cellular basis of living things, the energy metabolism that underlies the activities of life, and the genetic basis for inheritance in organisms. In this document there is a very good summary and introduction to biology

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Running head: Introduction to Biology 1




INTRODUCTION TO
BIOLOGY
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,Introduction to Biology 2




Task 1 – Excursion to the international Museum for Family History



1) Structure of the DNA:



 Most crucial evidence was obtained by x-ray crystallography method

 Francis Crick and James Watson first described the structure of a double
helix

 The DNA is helical with 2 polynucleotide chains

 DNA is a polymer of nucleotides from which each nucleotide consists of a
molecule of the sugar deoxyribose, a phosphate group, and a nitrogen
containing base

 Nitrogenous bases: Adenine; Guanine; Cytosine; Thymine;

 A pyrimidine (T;C) is always paired with a purine (A;G) on opposite
strands (complementary base pairing)

 The amount of (A)=(T) is equal and the amount of (G)≡(C) is equal

 The strands run in opposite directions (antiparallel) (right-handed)

 The nucleotide bases are on the interior of two strands, with a sugar-
phosphate backbone on the outside

 Outer edges of the nitrogenous bases are exposed

 The two chains are held together by hydrogen bonding between
(Chargaff’s rule)

 A=T (two hydrogen bonds), G≡C (three hydrogen bonds) are equal of
length

 (‘) designates the position of a carbon atom in the sugar

,Introduction to Biology 3


 the phosphate groups are connected to 3’ carbon of one deoxyribose
molecule and the 5’ carbon of the next

 At one end is a 5’phosphate group, at the other end is a 3’ hydroxyl group

 The difference between ribonucleotide and deoxyribonucleotide is the
sugar



2) Detailed knowledge of DNA replication



 DNA is replicated through the interaction of the template strand with a
huge protein complex called the replication complex, which contains at
least 4 proteins, including DNA polymerase (from 5’ to 3’)

 Two steps in DNA Replication which involve a number of different
enzymes / proteins

 The first event at the origin of replication is the localized unwinding and
separation of the DNA strands to make them available for new base
pairing

 A necessary energy is required from ATP hydrolysis to unwind the
strands

 Special proteins (single-strand binding proteins) bind to the unwound
strands to keep them from re-associating into a double helix

 The leading strand grows continuously forward, but the lagging strand
grows into short discontinuous stretches of OKAZAKI fragments

 As new nucleotides form complementary base pairs with template DNA,
they are covalently linked together by phosphodiester bonds, forming a
polymer whose base sequence is complementary to the bases in the
template strand

 DNA polymerases add nucleotides to the growing chain, this elongates a
polynucleotide strand by covalently linking new nucleotides to a
previously existing strand

 All chromosomes have a region called the origin of replication to which
the replication complex binds. The attachment occurs when proteins in the

, Introduction to Biology 4


complex recognize a specific DNA sequence within the origin of
replication

 The starter strand is called primer (usually short single RNA strand,
sometimes DNA)

 The primer is synthesized one nucleotide at a time by an enzyme called
primase

 The DNA polymerase adds nucleotides to the 3’ end of the primer and
continues until the replication of that section of DNA has been completed

 Then the RNA primer is degraded, DNA is added in its place, and the
resulting DNA fragments are connected by the action of other enzymes


3) Basic understanding of transcription and translation



 Transcription is the first step of gene expression, in which a particular
segment of DNA is copied into RNA by the enzyme RNA polymerase

 Translation is the decoding of mRNA by a ribosome to produce a specific
amino acid chain or polypeptide

 Messenger RNA (mRNA): carries information from DNA to the ribosome

 Transfer RNA (tRNA): transfers a specific amino acid to a growing
polypeptide chain

 Ribosomal RNA (rRNA): catalytic component of the ribosomes

 Anticodon: three nucleotides corresponding to three bases of the codon on
the mRNA

 2% of our DNA is coding, 98% or non-coding



Task 2 – The Cell, The Basic Unit of Life



1) Differences between prokaryotic & Eukaryotic cells
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