FGIKReplication Student Handout
FGIKReplication Student Handout
FGIKReplication Student Handout
Deoxyribonucleic
Acid (DNA)
2. Imagine you are cutting a bagel (one of the most common household injuries) and you get a
cut. The cut heals. How do the new cells compare to the original (pre-cut) cells?
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3. How does your body ensure that the new cells are the same?
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Introduction
No molecular structure has gained more world-wide recognition than the DNA double helix. The
famous Nature paper written by James Watson and Francis Crick in 1953 entitled, Molecular Structure
of Nucleic Acids, ends with, “It has not escaped our notice that the specific pairing we have postulated
immediately suggests a possible copying mechanism for the genetic material.” Since then, many
scientists have focused on researching the mechanism of DNA replication.
Assemble the non-template strand of the DNA sequence according to the pattern shown below.
Pair the nucleotides of the template strand to the non-template strand of DNA you constructed,
to create a double-stranded DNA model.
5. Record the template strand bases in the blank spaces provided above.
6. Examine the strands of DNA. What do you observe about the arrow ends of the model?
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Nitrogenous Bases
*The hydroxyl group (OH) shown in the above illustration has been added to the photo of the nucleotide, since this
particular model of a nucleotide doesn’t show the hydroxyl group.
5’
5’
3’
Double-stranded DNA is composed of two anti-parallel strands! Each DNA strand has
directionality. The two sugar-phosphate backbones run in opposite 5’ 3’ directions from
each other. It is important to keep this directionality in mind as you model the process of DNA
replication.
11. Find, circle and label the 5’ carbon of nucleotide 1 and nucleotide 4 in the diagram above.
12. Find, circle and label the 3’ carbon of nucleotide 3 and nucleotide 6 in the diagram above.
13. What group is attached to the 3’ carbon? What group is attached to the 5’ carbon?
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3’ 5’
5’ 3’
Replication bubble
16. Nucleotides are added at an approximate rate of 50 nucleotides per second in eukaryotic cells.
The human genome contains 6.4 billion nucleotides (3.2 billion base pairs), which must be
copied. Calculate the length of time in days that it would take to copy the human genome. Show
all calculations including units.
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17. Why do you think multiple replication bubbles form during the process of DNA replication?
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Continuous Replication
The DNA polymerase enzyme catalyzes the synthesis of new
DNA by adding nucleotides to a preexisting chain. New DNA
can elongate only in the 5’ 3’ direction. The DNA strand
that is made continuously is referred to as the leading strand.
21. As a new nucleotide is added to the growing DNA strand, which part of the new nucleotide
forms a bond with the 3’ OH group? ________________________________
23. Will you be able to synthesize the other strand of DNA in a continuous manner when
using the model? Explain why or why not.
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Discontinuous
Replication
Place the second DNA
polymerase at some point on
the other strand of DNA. Notice
that the DNA polymerase
must move away from the fork
instead of toward the fork, as
it did in the leading strand.
In order to accommodate the
5’ 3’ synthesis of DNA, short
fragments are made on the
second strand, which is referred
to as the lagging strand.
Continue adding nucleotides in
the active site as you move the
DNA polymerase away from the
fork until you reach the end.
When your polymerase bumps into the first fragment, you will need to remove the DNA
polymerase and join the two fragments together with the appropriate nucleotide. The actual
process of joining the Okazaki fragments together is more complex and involves several other
proteins.
Complete the process of DNA replication with the remaining 11 nucleotides on both the leading and
the lagging strands. DNA replication is considered to be a semi-discontinuous process.
26. Create a sketch which models the semi-discontinuous process of DNA replication at a
replication bubble. Be sure to label the following aspects of your representation: leading and
lagging strands, helicase, Okazaki fragments, parental strands, 3’ ends and 5’ ends.
27. How do these two new strands compare to the original (parental) strand?
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Obtain and assemble 4 nucleotide base pairs of the colored DNA foam pieces. Find the matching gray
base pair pieces but DO NOT assemble them. These colored DNA strands represent the parental
strands from E. coli grown in a medium tagged with 15N nucleotides. The gray foam pieces represent
the nucleotides used to synthesize new DNA.
You will use the foam DNA models to detect which mechanisms of replication would most likely
explain Meselson and Stahl’s results.
You will create a physical representation of the three models of DNA replication: (1) conservative, (2)
semiconservative, and (3) dispersive. Begin with modeling the first round of replication of the DNA
after the bacteria were transferred to a medium with only 14N.
28. Sketch the new and old strands after one round of replication. It will be helpful if you have
two different colored pens or pencils to create your sketches.
Sketch a test tube showing the density gradient of 15N tagged DNA after one round of
conservative replication.
Now using the colored DNA parental strands you have created and the gray nucleotides, model
the semiconservative method of DNA replication.
29. Sketch the results of one round of DNA synthesis after the semiconservative method of
replication.
30. Sketch a test tube showing the density gradient of 15N tagged DNA after one round of
semiconservative replication. Refer to the Meselson and Stahl experiment to help you
create your sketch.
Finally, using the colored DNA parental strands you have just created and the gray nucleotides,
model the dispersive method of DNA replication.
31. Sketch the results of one round of DNA synthesis after the dispersive method of
replication.
32. Sketch a test tube showing the density gradient of 15N tagged DNA after one round of
dispersive replication.
33. Which of the methods can now be eliminated based on the results that Meselson and
Stahl got after one round of replication? Why?
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Use the foam pieces to visualize what the newly synthesized strands of DNA would look like after a
second round of replication in each of the methods. Sketch your results in the first column in the table
below. In the second column, sketch what the DNA density gradient would look like in the test tube.
Semiconservative Model
Dispersive Model
34. Which method of DNA replication may now be eliminated after the second round of DNA
replication based on the results of the Meselson and Stahl experiments? Why?
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35. Based on the results of Meselson and Stahl’s experiments, DNA is shown to replicate in a
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Post-Lab Questions
37. Of the representations of DNA models (foam pieces, paper diagram, mini toobers), identify the
strengths and weaknesses of each.
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38. Based on what you have learned from this activity, explain why semiconservative replication is
the preferred process of DNA replication as opposed to dispersive or conservative.
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Big Ideas
Each time one of your cells divide, it must duplicate its DNA genome so that the new cell will have an
exact replica of DNA contained in the original cell. This process of duplicating the double-stranded
DNA is called replication. Because the nucleotide sequence of one strand of DNA is complementary
to the sequence of the opposite strand – during DNA replication, the two strands of the original DNA
are separated, and two different DNA polymerase enzymes use each single strand as a template for
the synthesis of the second, complementary strand. This process is known as semiconservative DNA
replication – meaning that each new cell receives a double-stranded DNA composed of one old strand
of DNA and one newly-synthesized strand.