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  • Do you recognize this molecule?

  • This is DNA, or deoxyribonucleic acid.

  • By the end of this video, you will

  • be able to identify the key structural features of DNA,

  • as well as describe the importance

  • of those features for function.

  • During this video, we will look at different representations

  • of the DNA molecule to better view certain details,

  • but all views represent this same structure.

  • Inside the cell, you will most commonly

  • find double- stranded DNA, in which two strands intertwine

  • to form a double helix.

  • The most common form of the DNA double helix,

  • which is what we will discuss here,

  • is also called B-form DNA.

  • Now, let's move to a more simplified representation

  • of DNA to discuss the details.

  • We can unwind the double helix like this

  • so that we can see the chemical structure inside.

  • Each strand is a polynucleotide, meaning

  • the strand is made up of many individual units called

  • nucleotides.

  • A nucleotide has three components: the five-carbon sugar,

  • a phosphate group, and one

  • of four possible nitrogenous bases--

  • adenine, guanine, thymine, and cytosine.

  • The nitrogenous base is always attached at the

  • 1' carbon of the sugar.

  • If we count from there, we can see

  • that there is a phosphate between the 5' carbon

  • of one sugar and the 3' carbon of the neighboring sugar.

  • The sugar is called deoxyribose because it

  • is missing a hydroxyl group at the 2' carbon which

  • is present in ribose.

  • Because of this, nucleotides in DNA, deoxyribonucleic acid,

  • are called deoxynucleotides.

  • Nucleotides attach to each other in the DNA strand

  • by phosphodiester bonds.

  • The phosphate group of one nucleotide

  • binds to the 3' oxygen of the neighboring nucleotide.

  • Thus, we can see that the sugars and phosphate groups make up

  • the DNA backbone.

  • The carbon numbering is key to describing

  • the directionality of the DNA strand, 5' to 3'.

  • Looking within the sugars, there is an intrinsic orientation

  • difference between the two strands.

  • On the top strand, you can see that the 5' carbon

  • of each sugar is on the left and the 3' carbon is

  • on the right.

  • The opposite is true for the bottom strand.

  • Reading left to right, that makes

  • the top strand orientation 5' to 3'

  • and the bottom strand orientation 3' to 5'.

  • These strands are also sometimes called Watson and Crick.

  • Keep in mind that this double-stranded DNA is still

  • a double helix and we have simplified the representation

  • by flattening and unwinding the helix here to better see

  • the atomic structure.

  • Although the nucleotides come together

  • through covalent bonds in the backbone,

  • the two DNA strands interact through non-covalent hydrogen

  • bonds between the bases.

  • Each base forms multiple hydrogen bonds

  • with its complementary base on the opposite strand.

  • Bound together by hydrogen bonds,

  • each unit is called a base pair.

  • The hydrogen bonding contributes to the specificity

  • of base pairing.

  • Thymine preferentially pairs with adenine

  • through two hydrogen bonds and cytosine preferentially pairs

  • with guanine through three hydrogen bonds.

  • Thymine and cytosine are called pyrimidines, characterized

  • by their single ring structure, and adenine and guanine

  • are called purines, which have double rings.

  • The geometry of the AT or TA and GC or CG base pairs

  • is the same, allowing for symmetry and base stacking

  • in the helix.

  • This mostly has to do with the distance between the backbones

  • and the angles to which the bases attach to the backbone.

  • Other base pairs, like GT, for example,

  • do not have the same geometry, cannot form strong hydrogen

  • bonds, and disturb the helix.

  • The double helix structure of DNA is highly regular.

  • Each turn of the helix measures approximately ten base pairs.

  • In addition to the hydrogen bonding between the bases,

  • the stacking of the bases also stabilizes the double helix

  • structure.

  • These pi-pi interactions form when

  • the aromatic rings of the bases stack

  • next to each other and share electron probabilities.

  • The regularity of the helical structure

  • forms two repeating and alternating

  • spaces, called the major and minor grooves.

  • These grooves act as base pair recognition

  • and binding sites for proteins.

  • The major groove contains base pair specific information

  • while the minor groove is largely base pair nonspecific.

  • This is because of the patterns of hydrogen bond acceptors

  • and donors that proteins can interact with in the grooves.

  • In this way, the DNA can be acted upon

  • in either a sequence specific or non-sequence specific manner,

  • allowing proteins to position themselves correctly

  • in the genome to carry out their designated tasks.

  • This is the DNA double helix, and you've now

  • learned the structural features that influence its function.

  • We hope you've enjoyed exploring this amazing molecule with us.

Do you recognize this molecule?

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