A-Endoplasmic Reticulum - Wrapping It Up: Rough and Smooth
A-Endoplasmic Reticulum - Wrapping It Up: Rough and Smooth
A-Endoplasmic Reticulum - Wrapping It Up: Rough and Smooth
b-Chromatin
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The major structures in DNA compaction: DNA, the nucleosome, the 10 nm "beads-on-a-string" fibre,
the 30 nm chromatin fibre and the metaphase chromosome.
Chromatinis a complex of DNA and proteinfound in eukaryoticcells.[1] Its primary function
is packaging very long DNA molecules into a more compact, denser shape, which prevents
the strands from becoming tangled and plays important roles in reinforcing the DNA
during cell division, preventing DNA damage, and regulating gene expression and DNA
replication. During mitosis and meiosis, chromatin facilitates proper segregation of
the chromosomes in anaphase; the characteristic shapes of chromosomes visible during this
stage are the result of DNA being coiled into highly condensed networks of chromatin.
The primary protein components of chromatin are histones, which bind to DNA and function
as "anchors" around which the strands are wound. In general, there are three levels of
chromatin organization:
1. DNA wraps around histone proteins, forming nucleosomes and the so-called "beads
on a string" structure (euchromatin).
2. Multiple histones wrap into a 30-nanometer fibre consisting of nucleosome arrays in
their most compact form (heterochromatin).[a]
3. Higher-level DNA supercoiling of the 30-nm fiber produces
the metaphase chromosome (during mitosis and meiosis).
This is an electron microscope image showing part of the rough endoplasmic
reticulum in a plant root cell from maize. The dark spots are ribosomes.
d-Lipids are a group of biological molecules that include
fats, oils and some steroids. They are built from fatty
acids bonded to a wide range of other compounds.
Structure DNA consists of two strands, RNA only has one strand, but
arranged in a double helix. like DNA, is made up of
These strands are made up of nucleotides. RNA strands
subunits called nucleotides. are shorter than DNA
Each nucleotide contains a strands. RNA sometimes
phosphate, a 5-carbon sugar forms a secondary double
molecule and a nitrogenous helix structure, but only
base. intermittently.
Length DNA is a much longer polymer than RNA molecules are variable in
RNA. A chromosome, for length, but much shorter
example, is a single, long DNA than long DNA polymers. A
molecule, which would be large RNA molecule might
several centimetres in length only be a few thousand
when unravelled. base pairs long.
Bases The bases in DNA are Adenine (‘A’), RNA shares Adenine (‘A’),
Thymine (‘T’), Guanine (‘G’) Guanine (‘G’) and Cytosine
and Cytosine (‘C’). (‘C’) with DNA, but
contains Uracil (‘U’) rather
than Thymine.
Base Pairs Adenine and Thymine pair (A-T) Adenine and Uracil pair (A-U)
Cytosine and Guanine pair (C-G) Cytosine and Guanine pair (C-
G)
Location DNA is found in the nucleus, with a RNA forms in the nucleolus, and
small amount of DNA also then moves to specialised
present in mitochondria. regions of the cytoplasm
depending on the type of
RNA formed.
Reactivity Due to its deoxyribose sugar, which contains RNA, containing a ribose sugar, is more
one less oxygen-containing hydroxyl group, reactive than DNA and is not stable in
DNA is a more stable molecule than RNA, alkaline conditions. RNA’s larger helical
which is useful for a molecule which has the grooves mean it is more easily subject to
task of keeping genetic information safe. attack by enzymes.
Ultraviolet DNA is vulnerable to damage by ultraviolet RNA is more resistant to damage from
(UV) light. UV light than DNA.
Sensitivity
Function
DNA encodes all genetic information, and is the blueprint from which all biological life
is created. And that’s only in the short-term. In the long-term, DNA is a storage device, a
biological flash drive that allows the blueprint of life to be passed between generations . 2
RNA functions as the reader that decodes this flash drive. This reading process is multi-
step and there are specialized RNAs for each of these steps. Below, we look in more
detail at the three most important types of RNA.
Sugar
Both DNA and RNA are built with a sugar backbone, but whereas the sugar in DNA is
called deoxyribose (left in image), the sugar in RNA is called simply ribose (right in
image). The ‘deoxy’ prefix denotes that, whilst RNA has two hydroxyl (-OH) groups
attached to its carbon backbone, DNA has only one, and has a lone hydrogen atom
attached instead. RNA’s extra hydroxyl group proves useful in the process of converting
genetic code into mRNAs that can be made into proteins, whilst the deoxyribose sugar
gives DNA more stability .4
Bases
The nitrogen bases in DNA are the basic units of genetic code, and their correct ordering
and pairing is essential to biological function. The four bases that make up this code are
adenine (A), thymine (T), guanine (G) and cytosine (C). Bases pair off together in a
double helix structure, these pairs being A and T, and C and G. RNA doesn’t contain
thymine bases, replacing them with uracil bases (U), which pair to adenine . 1
Structure
Whilst the ubiquity of Francis Crick and James Watson’s (or should that be Rosalind
Franklin’s?) DNA double helix means that the two-stranded structure of DNA structure is
common knowledge, RNA’s single stranded format is not as well known. RNA can form
into double-stranded structures, such as during translation, when mRNA and tRNA
molecules pair. DNA polymers are also much longer than RNA polymers; the 2.3m long
human genome consists of 46 chromosomes, each of which is a single, long DNA
molecule. RNA molecules, by comparison, are much shorter . 4
Location
Eukaryotic cells, including all animal and plant cells, house the great majority of their
DNA in the nucleus, where it exists in a tightly compressed form, called a chromosome . 5
This squeezed format means the DNA can be easily stored and transferred. In addition to
nuclear DNA, some DNA is present in energy-producing mitochondria, small organelles
found free-floating in the cytoplasm, the area of the cell outside the nucleus.
The three types of RNA are found in different locations. mRNA is made in the nucleus,
with each mRNA fragment copied from its relative piece of DNA, before leaving the
nucleus and entering the cytoplasm. The fragments are then shuttled around the cell as
needed, moved along by the cell’s internal transport system, the cytoskeleton. tRNA, like
mRNA, is a free-roaming molecule that moves around the cytoplasm. If it receives the
correct signal from the ribosome, it will then hunt down amino acid subunits in the
cytoplasm and bring them to the ribosome to be built into proteins . rRNA, as previously
5
mentioned, is found as part of ribosomes. Ribosomes are formed in an area of the nucleus
called the nucleolus, before being exported to the cytoplasm, where some ribosomes float
freely. Other cytoplasmic ribosomes are bound to the endoplasmic reticulum, a
membranous structure that helps process proteins and export them from the cell . 6