Regents Biology Nucleic Acids Examples DNA DeoxyriboNucleic Acid RNA RiboNucleic Acid ATP ...

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Regents Biology

Nucleic Acids Examples

DNA DeoxyriboNucleic Acid

RNA RiboNucleic Acid

ATP Adenosine TriPhosphate

DNADouble Helix

Regents Biology

Nucleic Acids Function:

genetic material stores information

genesblueprint for building proteins

DNA RNA proteins

(protein Synthesis)

transfers informationblueprint for new cellsblueprint for next generationReproduction

chromosomes

Regents Biology

nucleotide

nucleicacid

genes(bands)

chromosome

nucleus inthe cell

SmallestTo

Largest

Regents Biology

Nucleic acids Building block = nucleotides (monomer)

5 different nucleotides different nitrogen bases A, T, C, G, U

nucleotide – nucleotide – nucleotide – nucleotide

Phosphate

PO4

Sugar-ose

N base

Nitrogen basesI’m the

A,T,C,G or Upart!

one strand

DNA – deoxyriboseRNA and ATP - ribose

Regents Biology

Nucleotide chains Nucleic acids

nucleotides chained into a polymer DNA

double-sideddouble helixA, C, G, T

RNAsingle-sidedA, C, G, U

phosphate

sugar N base

phosphate

sugar N base

phosphate

sugar N base

phosphate

sugar N base

strong bonds

sugar-phosphate backbone

Regents Biology

DNA Double strand twists into a double helix

weak bonds – hydrogen bonds form between nitrogen bases join the 2 strands A pairs with T

A :: T C pairs with G

C :: G the two strands can separate when our cells need to make copies of it – need enzymes and ATP

weak bondsshown as

dotted lines

complementary bases “fit” together

Regents Biology

Copying DNA Replication

copy DNA 2 strands of DNA helix are

complementary they are matching have one, can build other have one, can rebuild the whole

Regents Biology

Watson and Crick … and others…1953 | 1962