DP IB Biology: HL

Revision Notes

Syllabus Edition

First teaching 2014

Last exams 2024

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7.1.1 DNA Structure

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Nucleosomes

  • Unlike most prokaryotic DNA which is referred to as ‘naked’, eukaryotic nuclear DNA is associated with proteins called histones (to form chromatin)
  • Histones package the DNA into structures called nucleosomes
    • The nucleosome consists of a strand of DNA coiled around a core of eight histone proteins (octamer) to form a bead-like structure
    • DNA takes two turns around the histone core and is held in place by an additional histone protein
    • The DNA molecule continues to be wound around a series of nucleosomes to form what looks like a ‘string of beads
  • Nucleosomes help to supercoil the DNA, resulting in a compact structure which saves space within the nucleus
    • Nucleosomes also help to protect DNA and facilitate movement of chromosomes during cell division
    • An analogy for supercoiling is twisting an elastic band repeatedly until it forms additional coils
  • Nucleosomes can be tagged with proteins to promote or suppress transcription
structure-of-a-nucleosome
Structure of a nucleosome
histones
DNA is wrapped around a series of nucleosomes.
Nucleosomes coil tightly around each other to form the chromosome structure.

Franklin's Investigations

NOS Making careful observations—Rosalind Franklin’s X-ray diffraction provided crucial evidence that DNA is a double helix. 

  • In the 1950s Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins used a technique called X-ray diffraction to study the structure of DNA
    • Franklin’s work was instrumental to Crick and Watson's model as the diffraction patterns indicated that DNA had a double-helical structure
  • X-ray diffraction involves directing a beam of X-rays onto the molecule being studied
    • X-rays have a shorter wavelength and higher energy than visible light
  • The short wavelength allows X-rays to pass through the molecule, interacting with any electrons within the atoms
    • The interaction causes X-rays to scatter (diffraction) at angles that indicate the arrangement of atoms
    • The scattering pattern can be recorded on a film (similar to having an X-ray of a bone), with dark marks appearing where the X-rays strike the film
    • Rotating the sample allows for the three-dimensional molecular structure to be studied
  • Franklin was able to refine her methods and produce a clear diffraction pattern of DNA
  • Using mathematical techniques and available knowledge about DNA, Franklin deduced that
    • DNA strands were helices - as represented by the X-shape
    • The pitch of the helix - as represented by the angle of the X-shape
    • The distance between nucleotides
    • Phosphates are located on the outside of the molecule
    • DNA was double stranded
summary-of-rosalind-franklins-x-ray-diffraction-investigation, downloadable IB Biology revision notes
Summary of Rosalind Franklin’s X-ray diffraction investigation, the diffraction pattern represents the position of atoms in the sample of DNA

DNA Structure Suggests Semi-conservative Replication

  • The discovery of the structure of DNA was due to experimental evidence and inputs from a range of independent researchers
    • Franklin’s X-ray diffraction patterns identified a compact double helix
    • Erwin Chargaff showed that DNA was composed of an equal number of purine and pyrimidine bases which suggested base pairing
    • Crick and Watson used this evidence to build various physical models of DNA
    • One model had the bases facing outwards but Franklin argued they should face inwards due to their hydrophobic nature
    • It was determined that if adenine paired with thymine and cytosine paired with guanine in an antiparallel orientation a highly compact structure would result
  • When Crick and Watson proposed their model for the structure of DNA, they realised that the double stranded structure suggested a mechanism for its replication during the cell cycle
    • This was a key question that any model would have to address
  • Crick and Watson stated that as one chain of the double helix was the complement of the other, either chain could act as a template during replication
    • They postulated that hydrogen bonds break, allowing separation of the chains
    • Each separate chain then acts as a template for the formation of a new complementary chain on itself
  • This theory was called semi-conservative DNA replication as half of the original DNA molecule is kept (conserved) in each of the two new DNA molecules
  • An opposing theory suggested DNA replicated ‘conservatively’
    • The entire original DNA double helix would stay together and serve as a template for a new DNA molecule
  • Crick and Watsons' theory of semi-conservative DNA replication was later proven by Meselson and Stahl
Semi-conservative replication of DNA
Semi-conservative replication of DNA

Exam Tip

You don't need to memorise the nature of purine and pyrimidine bases in DNA; C and T are pyrimidines; A and G are purines. A purine always bonds to a pyrimidine in the A-T and C-G rules of base-pairing. 

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Phil

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