Chapter 5 The Structure and Function of Macromolecules
Lecture Outline
Overview: The Molecules of
Life
·
Within
cells, small organic molecules are joined together to form larger molecules.
·
These
large macromolecules may consist of thousands of covalently bonded atoms and
weigh more than 100,000 daltons.
·
The
four major classes of macromolecules are carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and
nucleic acids.
Concept 5.1 Most macromolecules are polymers,
built from monomers
·
Three
of the four classes of macromolecules—carbohydrates, proteins, and nucleic
acids—form chainlike molecules called polymers.
°
A
polymer is a long molecule consisting of many similar or identical building
blocks linked by covalent bonds.
°
The
repeated units are small molecules called monomers.
°
Some
of the molecules that serve as monomers have other functions of their own.
·
The
chemical mechanisms that cells use to make and break polymers are similar for
all classes of macromolecules.
·
Monomers
are connected by covalent bonds that form through the loss of a water molecule.
This reaction is called a condensation
reaction or dehydration reaction.
°
When
a bond forms between two monomers, each monomer contributes part of the water
molecule that is lost. One monomer provides a hydroxyl group (—OH), while the
other provides a hydrogen (—H).
°
Cells
invest energy to carry out dehydration reactions.
°
The
process is aided by enzymes.
·
The
covalent bonds connecting monomers in a polymer are disassembled by hydrolysis, a reaction that is
effectively the reverse of dehydration.
°
In
hydrolysis, bonds are broken by the addition of water molecules. A hydrogen
atom attaches to one monomer, and a hydroxyl group attaches to the adjacent
monomer.
°
Our
food is taken in as organic polymers that are too large for our cells to absorb.
Within the digestive tract, various enzymes direct hydrolysis of specific
polymers. The resulting monomers are absorbed by the cells lining the gut and
transported to the bloodstream for distribution to body cells.
°
The
body cells then use dehydration reaction to assemble the monomers into new
polymers that carry out functions specific to the particular cell type.
An immense variety of polymers can be built
from a small set of monomers.
·
Each
cell has thousands of different kinds of macromolecules.
°
These
molecules vary among cells of the same individual. They vary more among
unrelated individuals of a species, and even more between species.
·
This
diversity comes from various combinations of the 40–50 common monomers and some
others that occur rarely.
°
These
monomers can be connected in a great many combinations, just as the 26 letters
in the alphabet can be used to create a great diversity of words.
Concept
5.2 Carbohydrates serve as fuel and building material
·
Carbohydrates include sugars and their
polymers.
·
The
simplest carbohydrates are monosaccharides, or simple sugars.
·
Disaccharides,
or double sugars, consist of two monosaccharides joined by a condensation
reaction.
·
Polysaccharides
are polymers of many monosaccharides.
Sugars, the smallest carbohydrates, serve as
fuel and a source of carbon.
·
Monosaccharides generally have molecular
formulas that are some multiple of the unit CH2O.
°
For
example, glucose has the formula C6H12O6.
·
Monosaccharides
have a carbonyl group (>C=O) and multiple hydroxyl groups (—OH).
°
Depending
on the location of the carbonyl group, the sugar is an aldose or a ketose.
°
Most
names for sugars end in -ose.
°
Glucose,
an aldose, and fructose, a ketose, are structural isomers.
·
Monosaccharides
are also classified by the number of carbons in the carbon skeleton.
°
Glucose
and other six-carbon sugars are hexoses.
°
Five-carbon
backbones are pentoses; three-carbon sugars are trioses.
·
Monosaccharides
may also exist as enantiomers.
°
For
example, glucose and galactose, both six-carbon aldoses, differ in the spatial
arrangement of their parts around asymmetrical carbons.
·
Monosaccharides,
particularly glucose, are a major fuel for cellular work.
·
They
also function as the raw material for the synthesis of other monomers, such as
amino acids and fatty acids.
·
While
often drawn as a linear skeleton, monosaccharides in aqueous solutions form
rings.
·
Two
monosaccharides can join with a glycosidic
linkage to form a disaccharide
via dehydration.
°
Maltose,
malt sugar, is formed by joining two glucose molecules.
°
Sucrose,
table sugar, is formed by joining glucose and fructose. Sucrose is the major
transport form of sugars in plants.
°
Lactose,
milk sugar, is formed by joining glucose and galactose.
Polysaccharides, the polymers of sugars, have
storage and structural roles.
·
Polysaccharides are polymers of hundreds
to thousands of monosaccharides joined by glycosidic linkages.
·
Some
polysaccharides serve for storage and are hydrolyzed as sugars are needed.
·
Other
polysaccharides serve as building materials for the cell or the whole organism.
·
Starch is a storage
polysaccharide composed entirely of glucose monomers.
°
Most
of these monomers are joined by 1–4 linkages (number 1 carbon to number 4
carbon) between the glucose molecules.
°
The
simplest form of starch, amylose, is unbranched and forms a helix.
°
Branched
forms such as amylopectin are more complex.
·
Plants
store surplus glucose as starch granules within plastids, including
chloroplasts, and withdraw it as needed for energy or carbon.
°
Animals
that feed on plants, especially parts rich in starch, have digestive enzymes
that can hydrolyze starch to glucose.
·
Animals
store glucose in a polysaccharide called glycogen.
°
Glycogen
is highly branched like amylopectin.
°
Humans
and other vertebrates store a day’s supply of glycogen in the liver and
muscles.
·
Cellulose is a major component of
the tough wall of plant cells.
°
Plants
produce almost one hundred billion tons of cellulose per year. It is the most
abundant organic compound on Earth.
·
Like
starch, cellulose is a polymer of glucose. However, the glycosidic linkages in
these two polymers differ.
°
The
difference is based on the fact that there are actually two slightly different
ring structures for glucose.
°
These
two ring forms differ in whether the hydroxyl group attached to the number 1
carbon is fixed above (beta glucose) or below (alpha glucose) the plane of the
ring.
·
Starch
is a polysaccharide of alpha glucose monomers.
·
Cellulose
is a polysaccharide of beta glucose monomers, making every other glucose
monomer upside down with respect to its neighbors.
·
The
differing glycosidic links in starch and cellulose give the two molecules
distinct three-dimensional shapes.
°
While
polymers built with alpha glucose form helical structures, polymers built with
beta glucose form straight structures.
°
The
straight structures built with beta glucose allow H atoms on one strand to form
hydrogen bonds with OH groups on other strands.
°
In
plant cell walls, parallel cellulose molecules held together in this way are
grouped into units called microfibrils, which form strong building materials
for plants (and for humans, as lumber).
·
The
enzymes that digest starch by hydrolyzing its alpha linkages cannot hydrolyze
the beta linkages in cellulose.
°
Cellulose
in human food passes through the digestive tract and is eliminated in feces as
“insoluble fiber.”
°
As
it travels through the digestive tract, cellulose abrades the intestinal walls
and stimulates the secretion of mucus, aiding in the passage of food.
·
Some
microbes can digest cellulose to its glucose monomers through the use of
cellulase enzymes.
·
Many
eukaryotic herbivores, from cows to termites, have symbiotic relationships with
cellulolytic microbes, providing the microbe and the host animal access to a
rich source of energy.
°
Some
fungi can also digest cellulose.
·
Another
important structural polysaccharide is chitin,
used in the exoskeletons of arthropods (including insects, spiders, and
crustaceans).
°
Chitin
is similar to cellulose, except that it contains a nitrogen-containing
appendage on each glucose monomer.
°
Pure
chitin is leathery but can be hardened by the addition of calcium carbonate.
·
Chitin
also provides structural support for the cell walls of many fungi.
Concept 5.3 Lipids are a diverse group of hydrophobic molecules
·
Unlike
other macromolecules, lipids do not form polymers.
·
The
unifying feature of lipids is that
they all have little or no affinity for water.
·
This
is because they consist mostly of hydrocarbons, which form nonpolar covalent
bonds.
·
Lipids
are highly diverse in form and function.
Fats store large amounts of energy.
·
Although
fats are not strictly polymers, they are large molecules assembled from smaller
molecules by dehydration reactions.
·
A
fat is constructed from two kinds of
smaller molecules: glycerol and fatty acids.
°
Glycerol is a three-carbon alcohol
with a hydroxyl group attached to each carbon.
°
A
fatty acid consists of a carboxyl
group attached to a long carbon skeleton, often 16 to 18 carbons long.
°
The
many nonpolar C—H bonds in the long hydrocarbon skeleton make fats hydrophobic.
°
Fats
separate from water because the water molecules hydrogen bond to one another
and exclude the fats.
·
In
a fat, three fatty acids are joined to glycerol by an ester linkage, creating a
triacylglycerol, or triglyceride.
·
The
three fatty acids in a fat can be the same or different.
·
Fatty
acids may vary in length (number of carbons) and in the number and locations of
double bonds.
°
If
the fatty acid has no carbon-carbon double bonds, then the molecule is a saturated fatty acid, saturated with
hydrogens at every possible position.
°
If
the fatty acid has one or more carbon-carbon double bonds formed by the removal
of hydrogen atoms from the carbon skeleton, then the molecule is an unsaturated fatty acid.
·
A
saturated fatty acid is a straight chain, but an unsaturated fatty acid has a
kink wherever there is a double bond.
·
Fats
made from saturated fatty acids are saturated fats.
°
Most
animal fats are saturated.
°
Saturated
fats are solid at room temperature.
·
Fats
made from unsaturated fatty acids are unsaturated fats.
°
Plant
and fish fats are liquid at room temperature and are known as oils.
°
The
kinks caused by the double bonds prevent the molecules from packing tightly
enough to solidify at room temperature.
°
The
phrase “hydrogenated vegetable oils” on food labels means that unsaturated fats
have been synthetically converted to saturated fats by the addition of
hydrogen.
§
Peanut
butter and margarine are hydrogenated to prevent lipids from separating out as
oil.
°
A
diet rich in saturated fats may contribute to cardiovascular disease (atherosclerosis)
through plaque deposits.
°
The
process of hydrogenating vegetable oils produces saturated fats and also
unsaturated fats with trans double
bonds. These trans fat molecules
contribute more than saturated fats to atherosclerosis.
·
The
major function of fats is energy storage.
°
A
gram of fat stores more than twice as much energy as a gram of a polysaccharide
such as starch.
°
Because
plants are immobile, they can function with bulky energy storage in the form of
starch. Plants use oils when dispersal and compact storage is important, as in
seeds.
°
Animals
must carry their energy stores with them and benefit from having a more compact
fuel reservoir of fat.
°
Humans
and other mammals store fats as long-term energy reserves in adipose cells that
swell and shrink as fat is deposited or withdrawn from storage.
·
Adipose
tissue also functions to cushion vital organs, such as the kidneys.
·
A
layer of fat can also function as insulation.
°
This
subcutaneous layer is especially thick in whales, seals, and most other marine mammals.
Phospholipids are major components of cell
membranes.
·
Phospholipids have two fatty acids
attached to glycerol and a phosphate group at the third position.
°
The
phosphate group carries a negative charge.
°
Additional
smaller groups may be attached to the phosphate group to form a variety of
phospholipids.
·
The
interaction of phospholipids with water is complex.
°
The
fatty acid tails are hydrophobic, but the phosphate group and its attachments
form a hydrophilic head.
·
When
phospholipids are added to water, they self-assemble into assemblages with the
hydrophobic tails pointing toward the interior.
°
This
type of structure is called a micelle.
·
Phospholipids
are arranged as a bilayer at the surface of a cell.
°
Again,
the hydrophilic heads are on the outside of the bilayer, in contact with the
aqueous solution, and the hydrophobic tails point toward the interior of the
bilayer.
§
The
phospholipid bilayer forms a barrier between the cell and the external
environment.
°
Phospholipids
are the major component of all cell membranes.
Steroids include cholesterol and certain
hormones.
·
Steroids are lipids with a carbon
skeleton consisting of four fused rings.
·
Different
steroids are created by varying functional groups attached to the rings.
·
Cholesterol, an important steroid, is
a component in animal cell membranes.
·
Cholesterol
is also the precursor from which all other steroids are synthesized.
°
Many
of these other steroids are hormones, including the vertebrate sex hormones.
·
While
cholesterol is an essential molecule in animals, high levels of cholesterol in
the blood may contribute to cardiovascular disease.
·
Both
saturated fats and trans fats exert
their negative impact on health by affecting cholesterol levels.
Concept 5.4 Proteins have many structures, resulting in a wide range
of functions
·
Proteins
account for more than 50% of the dry mass of most cells. They are instrumental
in almost everything that an organism does.
°
Protein
functions include structural support, storage, transport, cellular signaling,
movement, and defense against foreign substances.
°
Most
important, protein enzymes function as catalysts
in cells, regulating metabolism by selectively accelerating chemical reactions
without being consumed.
·
Humans
have tens of thousands of different proteins, each with a specific structure
and function.
·
Proteins
are the most structurally complex molecules known.
°
Each
type of protein has a complex three-dimensional shape or conformation.
·
All
protein polymers are constructed from the same set of 20 amino acid monomers.
·
Polymers
of proteins are called polypeptides.
·
A
protein consists of one or more
polypeptides folded and coiled into a specific conformation.
Amino acids are the monomers from which
proteins are constructed.
·
Amino acids are organic molecules
with both carboxyl and amino groups.
·
At
the center of an amino acid is an asymmetric carbon atom called the alpha carbon.
·
Four
components are attached to the alpha carbon: a hydrogen atom, a carboxyl group,
an amino group, and a variable R group (or side chain).
°
Different
R groups characterize the 20 different amino acids.
·
R
groups may be as simple as a hydrogen atom (as in the amino acid glycine), or
it may be a carbon skeleton with various functional groups attached (as in
glutamine).
·
The
physical and chemical properties of the R group determine the unique
characteristics of a particular amino acid.
°
One
group of amino acids has hydrophobic R groups.
°
Another
group of amino acids has polar R groups that are hydrophilic.
°
A
third group of amino acids includes those with functional groups that are
charged (ionized) at cellular pH.
§
Some
acidic R groups are negative in charge due to the presence of a carboxyl group.
§
Basic
R groups have amino groups that are positive in charge.
§
Note
that all amino acids have carboxyl
and amino groups. The terms acidic
and basic in this context refer only
to these groups in the R groups.
·
Amino
acids are joined together when a dehydration reaction removes a hydroxyl group
from the carboxyl end of one amino acid and a hydrogen from the amino group of
another.
°
The
resulting covalent bond is called a peptide
bond.
·
Repeating
the process over and over creates a polypeptide chain.
°
At
one end is an amino acid with a free amino group (the N-terminus) and at the
other is an amino acid with a free carboxyl group (the C-terminus).
·
Polypeptides
range in size from a few monomers to thousands.
·
Each
polypeptide has a unique linear sequence of amino acids.
The amino acid sequence of a polypeptide can
be determined.
·
Frederick
Sanger and his colleagues at
°
Sanger
used protein-digesting enzymes and other catalysts to hydrolyze the insulin at
specific places.
°
The
fragments were then separated by a technique called chromatography.
°
Hydrolysis
by another agent broke the polypeptide at different sites, yielding a second
group of fragments.
°
Sanger
used chemical methods to determine the sequence of amino acids in the small
fragments.
°
He
then searched for overlapping regions among the pieces obtained by hydrolyzing
with the different agents.
°
After
years of effort, Sanger was able to reconstruct the complete primary structure
of insulin.
°
Most
of the steps in sequencing a polypeptide have since been automated.
Protein conformation determines protein
function.
·
A
functional protein consists of one or more polypeptides that have been twisted,
folded, and coiled into a unique shape.
·
It
is the order of amino acids that determines what the three-dimensional
conformation of the protein will be.
·
A
protein’s specific conformation determines its function.
·
When
a cell synthesizes a polypeptide, the chain generally folds spontaneously to
assume the functional conformation for that protein.
·
The
folding is reinforced by a variety of bonds between parts of the chain, which in
turn depend on the sequence of amino acids.
°
Many
proteins are globular, while others are fibrous in shape.
·
In
almost every case, the function of a protein depends on its ability to
recognize and bind to some other molecule.
°
For
example, an antibody binds to a particular foreign substance.
°
An
enzyme recognizes and binds to a specific substrate, facilitating a chemical
reaction.
°
Natural
signal molecules called endorphins bind to specific receptor proteins on the
surface of brain cells in humans, producing euphoria and relieving pain.
§
Morphine,
heroin, and other opiate drugs mimic endorphins because they are similar in
shape and can bind to the brain’s endorphin receptors.
·
The
function of a protein is an emergent property resulting from its specific
molecular order.
·
Three
levels of structure—primary, secondary, and tertiary structures—organize the
folding within a single polypeptide.
·
Quaternary
structure arises when two or more polypeptides join to form a protein.
·
The
primary structure of a protein is
its unique sequence of amino acids.
°
Lysozyme,
an enzyme that attacks bacteria, consists of 129 amino acids.
°
The
precise primary structure of a protein is determined by inherited genetic
information.
·
Even
a slight change in primary structure can affect a protein’s conformation and
ability to function.
°
The
substitution of one amino acid (valine) for the normal one (glutamic acid) at a
particular position in the primary structure of hemoglobin, the protein that
carries oxygen in red blood cells, can cause sickle-cell disease, an inherited blood disorder.
°
The
abnormal hemoglobins crystallize, deforming the red blood cells into a sickle
shape and clogging capillaries.
·
Most
proteins have segments of their polypeptide chains repeatedly coiled or folded.
·
These
coils and folds are referred to as secondary
structure and result from hydrogen bonds between the repeating constituents
of the polypeptide backbone.
°
The
weakly positive hydrogen atom attached to the nitrogen atom has an affinity for
the oxygen atom of a nearby peptide bond.
°
Each
hydrogen bond is weak, but the sum of many hydrogen bonds stabilizes the
structure of part of the protein.
·
Typical
secondary structures are coils (an alpha helix) or folds (beta pleated sheets).
·
The
structural properties of silk are due to beta pleated sheets.
°
The
presence of so many hydrogen bonds makes each silk fiber stronger than a steel
strand of the same weight.
·
Tertiary structure is determined by
interactions among various R groups.
°
These
interactions include hydrogen bonds between polar and/or charged areas, ionic
bonds between charged R groups, and hydrophobic
interactions and van der Waals interactions among hydrophobic R groups.
°
While
these three interactions are relatively weak, strong covalent bonds called disulfide bridges that form between the
sulfhydryl groups (SH) of two cysteine monomers act to rivet parts of the
protein together.
·
Quaternary structure results from the
aggregation of two or more polypeptide subunits.
°
Collagen
is a fibrous protein of three polypeptides that are supercoiled like a rope.
§
This
provides structural strength for collagen’s role in connective tissue.
°
Hemoglobin
is a globular protein with quaternary structure.
§
It
consists of four polypeptide subunits: two alpha and two beta chains.
§
Both
types of subunits consist primarily of alpha-helical secondary structure.
°
Each
subunit has a nonpeptide heme component with an iron atom that binds oxygen.
·
What
are the key factors determining protein conformation?
·
A
polypeptide chain of a given amino acid sequence can spontaneously arrange
itself into a 3D shape determined and maintained by the interactions
responsible for secondary and tertiary structure.
°
The
folding occurs as the protein is being synthesized within the cell.
·
However,
protein conformation also depends on the physical and chemical conditions of
the protein’s environment.
°
Alterations
in pH, salt concentration, temperature, or other factors can unravel or denature a protein.
°
These
forces disrupt the hydrogen bonds, ionic bonds, and disulfide bridges that
maintain the protein’s shape.
·
Most
proteins become denatured if the are transferred to an organic solvent. The
polypeptide chain refolds so that its hydrophobic regions face outward, toward
the solvent.
·
Denaturation
can also be caused by heat, which disrupts the weak interactions that stabilize
conformation.
°
This
explains why extremely high fevers can be fatal. Proteins in the blood become
denatured by the high body temperatures.
·
Some
proteins can return to their functional shape after denaturation, but others
cannot, especially in the crowded environment of the cell.
·
Biochemists
now know the amino acid sequences of more than 875,000 proteins and the 3D
shapes of about 7,000.
°
Nevertheless,
it is still difficult to predict the conformation of a protein from its primary
structure alone.
·
Most
proteins appear to undergo several intermediate stages before reaching their
“mature” configuration.
·
The
folding of many proteins is assisted by chaperonins
or chaperone proteins.
°
Chaperonins
do not specify the final structure of a polypeptide but rather work to
segregate and protect the polypeptide while it folds spontaneously.
·
At
present, scientists use X-ray
crystallography to determine protein conformation.
·
This
technique requires the formation of a crystal of the protein being studied.
·
The
pattern of diffraction of an X-ray by the atoms of the crystal can be used to
determine the location of the atoms and to build a computer model of its
structure.
·
Nuclear
magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy has recently been applied to this problem.
°
This
method does not require protein crystallization.
Concept 5.5 Nucleic acids store and transmit hereditary information
·
The
amino acid sequence of a polypeptide is programmed by a unit of inheritance
known as a gene.
·
A
gene consists of DNA, a polymer known as a nucleic
acid.
There are two types of nucleic acids: RNA and
DNA.
·
There
are two types of nucleic acids: ribonucleic acid (RNA) and deoxyribonucleic
acid (DNA).
°
These
are the molecules that allow living organisms to reproduce their complex
components from generation to generation.
·
DNA
provides directions for its own replication.
·
DNA
also directs RNA synthesis and, through RNA, controls protein synthesis.
·
Organisms
inherit DNA from their parents.
°
Each
DNA molecule is very long, consisting of hundreds to thousands of genes.
°
Before
a cell reproduces itself by dividing, its DNA is copied. The copies are then
passed to the next generation of cells.
·
While
DNA encodes the information that programs all the cell’s activities, it is not
directly involved in the day-to-day operations of the cell.
°
Proteins
are responsible for implementing the instructions contained in DNA.
·
Each
gene along a DNA molecule directs the synthesis of a specific type of messenger RNA molecule (mRNA).
·
The
mRNA molecule interacts with the cell’s protein-synthesizing machinery to
direct the ordering of amino acids in a polypeptide.
·
The
flow of genetic information is from DNA -> RNA -> protein.
·
Protein
synthesis occurs on cellular structures called ribosomes.
·
In
eukaryotes, DNA is located in the nucleus, but most ribosomes are in the
cytoplasm. mRNA functions as an intermediary, moving information and directions
from the nucleus to the cytoplasm.
·
Prokaryotes
lack nuclei but still use RNA as an intermediary to carry a message from DNA to
the ribosomes.
A nucleic acid strand is a polymer of
nucleotides.
·
Nucleic
acids are polymers made of nucleotide
monomers.
·
Each
nucleotide consists of three parts: a nitrogenous base, a pentose sugar, and a
phosphate group.
·
The
nitrogen bases are rings of carbon and nitrogen that come in two types: purines and pyrimidines.
°
Pyrimidines
have a single six-membered ring.
§
There
are three different pyrimidines: cytosine (C), thymine (T), and uracil (U).
°
Purines
have a six-membered ring joined to a five-membered ring.
§
The
two purines are adenine (A) and guanine (G).
·
The
pentose joined to the nitrogen base is ribose
in nucleotides of RNA and deoxyribose
in DNA.
°
The
only difference between the sugars is the lack of an oxygen atom on carbon two
in deoxyribose.
°
Because
the atoms in both the nitrogenous base and the sugar are numbered, the sugar
atoms have a prime after the number to distinguish them.
°
Thus,
the second carbon in the sugar ring is the 2’ (2 prime) carbon and the carbon
that sticks up from the ring is the 5’ carbon.
°
The
combination of a pentose and a nitrogenous base is a nucleoside.
·
The
addition of a phosphate group creates a nucleoside monophosphate or nucleotide.
·
Polynucleotides are synthesized when
adjacent nucleotides are joined by covalent bonds called phosphodiester
linkages that form between the —OH group on the 3’ of one nucleotide and the
phosphate on the 5’ carbon of the next.
°
This
creates a repeating backbone of sugar-phosphate units, with appendages
consisting of the nitrogenous bases.
·
The
two free ends of the polymer are distinct.
°
One
end has a phosphate attached to a 5’ carbon; this is the 5’ end.
°
The
other end has a hydroxyl group on a 3’ carbon; this is the 3’ end.
·
The
sequence of bases along a DNA or mRNA polymer is unique for each gene.
°
Because
genes are normally hundreds to thousands of nucleotides long, the number of
possible base combinations is virtually limitless.
·
The
linear order of bases in a gene specifies the order of amino acids—the primary
structure—of a protein, which in turn determines three-dimensional conformation
and function.
Inheritance is based on replication of the DNA
double helix.
·
An
RNA molecule is a single polynucleotide chain.
·
DNA
molecules have two polynucleotide strands that spiral around an imaginary axis
to form a double helix.
°
The
double helix was first proposed as the structure of DNA in 1953 by James Watson
and Francis Crick.
·
The
sugar-phosphate backbones of the two polynucleotides are on the outside of the
helix.
°
The
two backbones run in opposite 5’ -> 3’ directions from each other, an
arrangement referred to as antiparallel.
·
Pairs
of nitrogenous bases, one from each strand, connect the polynucleotide chains
with hydrogen bonds.
·
Most
DNA molecules have thousands to millions of base pairs.
·
Because
of their shapes, only some bases are compatible with each other.
°
Adenine
(A) always pairs with thymine (T) and guanine (G) with cytosine (C).
·
With
these base-pairing rules, if we know the sequence of bases on one strand, we
know the sequence on the opposite strand.
°
The
two strands are complementary.
·
Prior
to cell division, each of the strands serves as a template to order nucleotides
into a new complementary strand.
°
This
results in two identical copies of the original double-stranded DNA molecule,
which are then distributed to the daughter cells.
·
This
mechanism ensures that a full set of genetic information is transmitted
whenever a cell reproduces.
We can
use DNA and proteins as tape measures of evolution.
·
Genes
(DNA) and their products (proteins) document the hereditary background of an
organism.
·
Because
DNA molecules are passed from parents to offspring, siblings have greater
similarity in their DNA and protein than do unrelated individuals of the same
species.
·
This
argument can be extended to develop a “molecular genealogy” to relationships between species.
·
Two
species that appear to be closely related based on fossil and molecular
evidence should also be more similar in DNA and protein sequences than are more
distantly related species.
°
In
fact, that is so.
§
For
example, if we compare the sequence of 146 amino acids in a hemoglobin
polypeptide, we find that humans and gorillas differ in just 1 amino acid.
à
Humans
and gibbons differ in 2 amino acids.
à
Humans
and rhesus monkeys differ in 8 amino acids.
§
More
distantly related species have more differences.
à
Humans
and mice differ in 27 amino acids.
à
Humans
and frogs differ in 67 amino acids.
§
Molecular
biology can be used to assess evolutionary kinship.