DNA Worksheet Trisha McCabe SCI/230 May 8th 20132 Chandreyi Basu‚ PhD Associate Program Material DNA Worksheet Answer the following in at least 100 words: 1. Describe the structure of DNA. DNA made up of units called nucleotides‚ nucleotides are made up of three molecules components‚ a nitrogen base‚ a sugar‚ and a phosphate (Simon‚ Reece‚ Dickey‚ 2010). The nucleotides are joined together by bonds between the sugar of one nucleotide and the phosphate of the next producing
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DNA helicase -separates strands of nuclei acid‚ breaks H bond between nitrogenous bases.‚ works at the replication fork -DNA PRIMASE- lays RNA primer ‚ acts as new strand‚ can only add nucleotides to a free3’ end ‚ lays nucleotide with a 5’ orientation -DNA POLYMERASE 3- adds nucleotides using base pair rules lcreating 2 new daughter strands‚ only adds to a free 3’end and lays down nucleotide with 5’ orientation. Pol3 continuously synthesizes new daughter cell(leading strand) same direction as
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The upper most strand is the (coding strand) DNA base sequence (triplet) of the gene codes for synthesis of a particular polypeptide chain. The second strand is the mRNA base sequence (template strand used for copying) codon of the transcribed mRNA. The process for going from the upper stand to the second strand is called Transcription and involves an enzyme called polymerase. The polymerase attaches to the promoter region (start codon) and reads the nucleotide base sequence until it gets to a termination
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determining paternity to name a few. DNA based techniques are a sub-discipline of forensic biology and are a crucial component in this field of work. DNA analysis began in the mid 1980’s and revolutionised the field of forensic science. With continual refinement of DNA analysis methods in crime laboratories over the years‚ small amounts of blood‚ saliva‚ skin cells and other biological material can now be used to develop leads and confirm or disprove an account of the crime. DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) is
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DNA molecules are very long. They wrap around proteins and wind tightly‚ forming structures called chromosomes. A human somatic (non-sex) cell has 23 pairs of chromosomes. Twenty-two pairs are autosomes‚ which do not differ between the sexes. The autosomes are numbered from 1 to 22‚ with 1 the largest. The other two chromosomes‚ the X and the Y‚ are sex chromosomes. The Y chromosome bears genes that determine maleness. In humans‚ a female has two X chromosomes and a male has one X and one Y. Charts
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The purpose of the DNA extraction lab was not only to inform students on how DNA is present in humans and all organisms‚ but to also educate them on how DNA can be extracted using common household materials. Also‚ the lab was very efficient as it introduced the students to extracting their own DNA found on their cheek cells as well as letting them take an observation on how DNA appears or how it is formed. Additionally‚ students were instructed through a very clear and simple procedure‚ which guided
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Homosexuality and DNA Honors Biology The human X and Y chromosomes have been completely sequenced. The X chromosome contains 153 million base pairs and harbors a total of 1168 genes. While the Y chromosome contains only 50 million base pairs and is estimated to contain about 251 genes. Educational institutions such as Baylor University‚ the Max Planck Institute‚ the Sanger Institute‚ Washington University in St. Louis‚ and others have spent countless hours and millions of research dollars
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DNA COMPUTING ……. The future of Computing By Priya Parmar Paromita Bhattacharyya email: priya.parmar2389@gmail.com email:tan389@gmail.com contact no: 9820154325 contact no:9967585813
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INDEX • DNA • DNA Structure • Interesting Facts • What is Need? • Where it all started? • How it works? • DNA Chip • Advantages • Challenges to Implementation • Goals for This Work • Applications • Limitations • Latest Developments • Comparison of DNA computers with conventional Computer • Features of DNA computer • DNA BASICS •
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main source of evidence. Notoriously unreliable‚ these techniques have since faded away to the stunning reliability of DNA forensics. In 1984‚ British geneticist Alec Jeffreys of the University of Leicester discovered an interesting new marker in the human genome. Most DNA information is the same in every human‚ but the junk code between genes is unique to every person. Junk DNA used for investigative purposes can be found in blood‚ saliva‚ perspiration‚ sexual fluid‚ skin tissue‚ bone marrow‚ dental
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