Nucleic Acid Structure and Function - Gene Scene Investigators
- Nucleic Acids: DNA & RNA; polymers of nucleotides.
- Building Blocks:
- Nucleotide: Nitrogenous Base + Pentose Sugar (Deoxyribose in DNA, Ribose in RNA) + Phosphate group(s).
- Nucleoside: Nitrogenous Base + Pentose Sugar.
- Nitrogenous Bases:
- Purines (double ring): Adenine (A), Guanine (G). 📌 Pure As Gold.
- Pyrimidines (single ring): Cytosine (C), Thymine (T, in DNA), Uracil (U, in RNA). 📌 CUT the Pye.
- DNA Structure: Double helix; two antiparallel strands. Complementary base pairing: A=T (2 H-bonds), G≡C (3 H-bonds).
- RNA Structure: Mostly single-stranded. Key types: mRNA, tRNA, rRNA.
- Functions: DNA stores genetic information; RNA is crucial for protein synthesis and gene regulation.

⭐ Chargaff's rules for dsDNA: Amount of Adenine (A) = Thymine (T), and Guanine (G) = Cytosine (C). Thus, total Purines (A+G) = total Pyrimidines (C+T).
Nucleic Acid Structure and Function - The Helix Blueprint
- DNA Double Helix: Two polynucleotide chains coiled.
- Antiparallel strands (5'→3' & 3'→5').
- B-form: common, right-handed.
- Base Pairing (Chargaff's Rules):
- Adenine (A) pairs with Thymine (T) via 2 H-bonds ($A=T$).
- Guanine (G) pairs with Cytosine (C) via 3 H-bonds ($G \equiv C$).
- Purines (A,G) pair with Pyrimidines (T,C).
- Forms of DNA:
- B-DNA: Common, right-handed, 10.5 bp/turn.
- A-DNA: Right-handed, wider, shorter (found in dehydrated conditions).
- Z-DNA: Left-handed, zig-zag backbone, G-C rich regions.
- Grooves: Major & Minor grooves; sites for protein binding.
- Packaging: DNA + histones → nucleosomes → chromatin.

⭐ Z-DNA is a left-handed helix, often formed by alternating purine-pyrimidine sequences (e.g., GCGCGC), and may play a role in gene regulation.
Nucleic Acid Structure and Function - The Versatile Transcript
- RNA vs. DNA:
- Ribose sugar (2'-OH).
- Uracil (U) for Thymine (T).
- Usually single-stranded; forms secondary structures (hairpins).

- Types of RNA & Key Functions:
- mRNA (Messenger RNA): Template for protein synthesis.
- Eukaryotic: Monocistronic; 5' cap (7-methylguanosine), 3' poly-A tail (stability, translation).
- Prokaryotic: Polycistronic; Shine-Dalgarno sequence (ribosome binding).
- tRNA (Transfer RNA): Carries specific amino acids to ribosome.
- Cloverleaf structure; anticodon loop (reads mRNA codon); 3'-CCA tail (amino acid attachment).
- rRNA (Ribosomal RNA): Ribosome's structural & catalytic (ribozyme) core. Most abundant RNA.
⭐ Peptidyl transferase activity of 23S rRNA (prokaryotes) / 28S rRNA (eukaryotes) forms peptide bonds.
- snRNA (Small Nuclear RNA): Pre-mRNA splicing in eukaryotes (component of spliceosome).
- miRNA/siRNA (Micro/Small Interfering RNA): Regulate gene expression via RNA interference (mRNA degradation or translation inhibition).
- mRNA (Messenger RNA): Template for protein synthesis.
Nucleic Acid Structure and Function - Info Flow Highway
- Nucleic Acids: Polymers of nucleotides (pentose sugar + nitrogenous base + phosphate).
- DNA (Deoxyribonucleic Acid): Genetic blueprint. Double helix (Watson-Crick). Deoxyribose sugar. Bases: Adenine (A), Guanine (G), Cytosine (C), Thymine (T). A pairs with T (2 H-bonds); G pairs with C (3 H-bonds).
- RNA (Ribonucleic Acid): Involved in protein synthesis, gene regulation. Mostly single-stranded. Ribose sugar. Bases: A, G, C, Uracil (U) instead of T. Types: mRNA (messenger), tRNA (transfer), rRNA (ribosomal).
- Central Dogma: Describes the flow of genetic information.
- Key Processes:
- Replication: DNA duplication. Semiconservative. Key enzymes: DNA polymerase, helicase, ligase.
- Transcription: Synthesis of RNA from a DNA template. Key enzyme: RNA polymerase.
- Translation: Synthesis of protein from mRNA template on ribosomes. Involves tRNA (anticodon) recognizing mRNA codons. ⭐ > The genetic code is triplet, non-overlapping, and degenerate. Start codon: AUG (Methionine). Stop codons: UAA, UAG, UGA (📌 Mnemonic: U Are Away, U Go Away, U Are Gone).

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- DNA: double helix, deoxyribose, A,T,G,C; RNA: single-stranded, ribose, Uracil.
- Purines (A, G): two rings; Pyrimidines (C, T/U): one ring.
- A-T pairing (2 H-bonds); G-C pairing (3 H-bonds, stronger).
- Central Dogma: DNA → RNA → Protein (Replication, Transcription, Translation).
- mRNA carries codons; tRNA (anticodon) brings amino acids; rRNA forms ribosomes.
- Genetic code: triplet, degenerate, non-overlapping, nearly universal.
- Okazaki fragments form on lagging strand during DNA replication.
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