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BIOLOGY305: Chapters 1-10 Reading Notes $20.49   Add to cart

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BIOLOGY305: Chapters 1-10 Reading Notes

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CUMULATIVE pre-lecture reading and textbook notes for chapters 1-10 of the class BIOLOGY305: Genetics at the University of Michigan. Notes taken WN2024 under professors Andrej Wierzbicki and Delbert Green

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  • August 2, 2024
  • 92
  • 2023/2024
  • Class notes
  • Andrej wierzbicki, delbert green
  • Biology305: genetics
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Lecture
1:
The
Genetic
Approach
to
Biology
Pre-Lecture
Notes
Detective
Work:
Figuring
Out
What
Genes
Do

Genes
carry
essential
genetic
information

Geneticists
try
to
figure
out
what
particular
genes
do
and
how
they
affect
the
organism
as
a
whole

Human
genome:
~20,000
protein-coding
genes,
~63,000
total
genes

Gene
discovery:
search
for
genes
w/
specific
functions

Method
(called
forward
genetics
):
choose
a
phenotype/character/trait
of
interest,
search
for
genes
that
affect
that
trait

Usually
start
by
comparing
wild-type
individual
to
variant
using
genetic
crosses

Modern
tech
+
long
history
of
research

complete
genome
sequences
available
for
humans
and
other
species

another
method
is
to
choose
an
unknown
piece
of
DNA
and
work
backwards
to
see
how
it
affects
an
organism
(
reverse
genetics
)

Mutations
appear
spontaneously
in
the
wild

If
variant
individual
is
rare,
called
mutant
or
mutation

Mutants
can
also
be
created
in
lab
using
mutagenesis
,
where
organism
is
exposed
to
environment
that
will
speed
up
rate
of
DNA
mutation

Mutants
studied
in
order
to
determine
consequences
of
altering
a
gene,
to
follow
gene
inheritance
b/n
generations

When
disrupted
gene
in
a
mutant
is
identified,
usually
named
for
the
mutant
phenotype

Ex:
gene
disrupted
in
flies
that
lack
wings
is
called
wingless

Genetic
dissection:
gene
discovery
using
collections
of
mutants
that
affect
trait
of
interest
Tools
for
Genetic
Analysis

Gel
electrophoresis:
uses
electric
field
to
separate
DNA,
RNA,
or
protein
pieces
by
size,
shape,
charge

Band:
molecules
of
same
size
appear
as
a
band
in
the
gel

Assumes
that
there
are
many
copies
of
the
molecule

Single
molecule
can’t
be
depicted
in
the
gel

Ladder:
reference
sample
for
which
the
sizes
of
the
molecules
are
known

Polymerase
Chain
Reaction
(PCR):
method
that
allows
for
copying/amplifying
specific
DNA
sequences Chapter
1:
The
Molecular
Basis
of
Heredity,
Variation,
and
Evolution
1.1
Modern
Genetics
Is
in
Its
Second
Century

Germ
Plasm
Theory:
reproductive
organs
carry
full
sets
of
genetic
info
w/in
the
sperm/egg
cells,
which
are
brought
together
in
fertilization

Four
phases
of
modern
genetics:

Identification
of
cell/chromosome
basis
of
heredity

Identification
of
DNA
as
hereditary
material

Description
of
informational/regulatory
processes
of
heredity

Encoding
info
in
genes

Transcription/translation

Genomic
era

Current

Began
in
80s
w
completing
first
genome
sequences,
continues
to
now

Genes:
physical
units
of
heredity

Made
up
of
DNA
sequences
that
contain
info
to
produce
RNA
molecules

Chromosomes:
long,
single
molecules
of
double-stranded
DNA
bound
by
many
kinds
of
proteins

Chromosomes
in
sexually
producing
organisms
usually
are
in
homologous
pairs
(homologs)

Carries
many
genes

Bacteria
and
archaea
have
one
circular
chromosome

only
one
copy
of
each
gene
in
in
the
genome
(condition
called
haploid
)

Bound
by
small
amount
of
protein

Eukaryotes
have
a
true
nucleus
w
multiple
sets
of
chromosomes

Have
haploid
and
diploid
stages
in
life
cycle

Sperm
and
eggs
are
haploid,
combined
they
are
diploid

In
diploid
stage,
genome
has
2
copies
(a
homologous
pair)
of
each
gene

Some
genomes
(particularly
plants)
have
more
than
2
copies
of
each
chromosome

called
polyploidy

Plants
and
animals
also
have
genetic
material
in
their
mitochondria
,
specialized
organelles

Plants
also
have
genes
in
their
chloroplasts

Organelle
genes
produce
proteins
that
perform
important
tasks

Cytoplasmic
Inheritance:
refers
to
random
distribution
of
mitochondria/chloroplasts
among
daughter
cells

Organelles
are
transmitted
in
cytoplasm
during
cell
division

Mitosis:
complete
set
of
chromosomes
transmitted

Produces
genetically
identical
daughter
cells

Meiosis:
process
in
sexual
reproduction,
produces
sex
cells
(
gametes
)

Alleles:
alternative
forms
of
a
gene
that
alter
the
phenotype

Genome:
complete
set
of
DNA
sequences ○
Genes,
regions
controlling
those
genes

LUCA:
last
universal
common
ancestor

All
three
domains
(
eukarya,
bacteria,
archaea
)
evolved
from
LUCA

Foundations
of
modern
bio:

All
life
on
earth
shares
common
ancestor
(LUCA)

DNA
is
hereditary
material
in
all
organisms

All
3
domains
share
general
mechanism
of
DNA
replication
and
gene
expression

All
organisms
use
transcription
and
translation

Transcription:
one
strand
of
DNA
synthesizes
one
strand
of
RNA

Translation
:
RNA
codes
for
protein
production
at
the
ribosomes

3
branches
of
modern
genetics:

Transmission
(Mendelian)
:
transmission
of
traits
in
successive
generations

Evolutionary
:
origins
of
and
genetic
relationships
b/n
organisms;
evolution
of
genes/genomes

Molecular
:
inheritance
and
variation
in
DNA,
RNA,
proteins,
and
genomes
1.2
Structure
of
DNA
Suggests
a
Mechanism
for
Replication

Chargaff’s
Rule:
percent
of
adenine
and
thymine
are
approx.
equal,
and
percent
of
cytosine
and
guanine
are
approx.
equal

Helped
form
hypothesis
that
DNA
nucleotides
are
arranged
in
complementary
base
pairs

Each
strand
in
the
helix
is
made
of
DNA
nucleotides
w/
3
principle
pieces:
5-carbon
deoxyribose
sugar,
a
phosphate,
and
one
of
4
nitrogen-containing
nucleotide
bases
(A,
C,
T,
or
G)

Nucleotides
are
linked
by
a
covalent
phosphodiester
bond
b/n
the
5’
phosphate
group
of
one
nucleotide
and
the
3’
hydroxyl
group
of
the
adjacent
nucleotide

This
bond

alternating
deoxyribose
sugars/phosphate
groups
on
the
strand

sugar-phosphate
backbone

Nucleotide
bases
are
hydrophobic

Hydrogen
bonds
form
between
the
base
pairs
to
join
two
DNA
strands
into
a
double
helix

Two
hydrogen
bonds
for
A–T,
three
for
C–G

Each
DNA
strand
has
a
5’
and
a
3’
end
to
establish
strand
polarity

Complementary
strands
of
DNA
are
antiparallel
,
so
the
3’
end
of
one
strand
is
matched
with
the
5’
end
of
the
other

Semiconservative
Replication:
usual
DNA
replication
mechanism,
the
two
complimentary
helix
strands
separate
and
each
strand
acts
as
a
template
for
a
new
complimentary
strand

Each
new
helix
has
a
parental
strand
and
a
new
daughter
strand

DNA
only
replicates
in
the
5’-to-
3’
direction 1.3
DNA
Transcription
and
Messenger
RNA
Translation
Express
Genes

Central
Dogma
of
Biology:
statement
describing
flow
of
hereditary
info
and
other
central
aspects
of
DNA
and
inheritance

Modern
bio
has
clear
understanding
of
the
central
dogma


Multiple
types
of
RNA

Ribosomal
RNA
(rRNA)
:
NOT
translated,
forms
part
of
the
ribosomes

Transfer
RNA
(tRNA)
:
NOT
translated,
carries
amino
acids
(building
blocks
of
proteins)
to
the
ribosomes

Messenger
RNA
(mRNA)
:
translated
to
make
proteins

Reverse
Transcription:
form
of
information
flow
where
an
enzyme
synthesizes
DNA
from
an
RNA
template
that
comes
from
RNA-containing
viruses
Transcription

Transcription
:
process
by
which
DNA
info
is
converted
into
an
RNA
sequence

Template
Strand:
strand
of
DNA
that
synthesizes
the
transcript

RNA
polymerase
pairs
template-strand
nucleotides
w/
their
pair
RNA
nucleotides

RNA
uses
uracil
(U)
instead
of
thymine,
which
still
pairs
with
adenine

To
begin
transcription,
RNA
polymerase
and
other
necessary
proteins
locate
a
gene,
access
template
strand
by
interacting
with
DNA
sequences
that
initiate
transcription

RNA
polymerase
also
ends
transcription
and
releases
transcript
at
the
end

Promoters:
most
common
DNA
sequence
controlling
transcription

Recognised
by
RNA
polymerase
which
directs
them
to
nearby
gene

Not
transcribed
by
RNA
polymerase

Eukaryotic
genes
divided
into
exons
which
have
all
the
coding
information
for
translation,
and
introns
which
intervene
between
exons
and
are
removed
before
translation
Translation

Translation
:
conversion
of
genetic
info
in
mRNA
into
amino
acid
sequences

Amino
acids
joined
together
by
covalent
peptide
bond
,
and
they
string
together
to
form
polypeptides

Folded
up
polypeptides

proteins
(one
or
more
polypeptides
combined)

Translation
occurs
in
the
ribosomes

Codon:
set
of
3
consecutive
nucleotides
in
mRNA
which
specify
the
amino
acid
at
each
position
in
the
polypeptide

To
begin,
mRNA
attaches
to
ribosome
in
a
way
that
puts
the
start
codon
in
the
right
location

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