00:00:04
today we're going to be talking about
00:00:06
the only two types of nucleic acids that
00:00:08
exist
00:00:10
dna
00:00:11
and rna
00:00:14
dna stands for
00:00:16
deoxyribonucleic acid
00:00:18
and rna stands for ribonucleic acid
00:00:23
as nucleic acids both dna and rna are
00:00:27
long organic macro molecules which means
00:00:31
they are very large molecules that
00:00:34
contain the element carbon
00:00:38
both dna and rna are composed of nucleic
00:00:42
acid monomers called nucleotides
00:00:46
nucleotide monomers always contain
00:00:49
a phosphate group
00:00:51
a five carbon sugar sometimes referred
00:00:54
to as a pentose
00:00:56
and a nitrogenous base
00:00:59
but
00:01:00
dna nucleotides have the five carbon
00:01:03
sugar
00:01:04
deoxyribose while rna has a different
00:01:07
five carbon sugar called ribose
00:01:11
the pentose sugar in dna has one less
00:01:14
oxygen than ribose in rna which leads to
00:01:17
its name deoxyribose
00:01:21
let's focus on the nitrogenous bases in
00:01:24
dna for a moment
00:01:26
each dna nucleotide contains only one of
00:01:30
four possible nitrogenous bases
00:01:33
adenine
00:01:34
guanine
00:01:35
thymine and cytosine
00:01:39
these four bases are usually abbreviated
00:01:41
a
00:01:42
g
00:01:43
t
00:01:44
and c
00:01:46
when nucleotide bases connect through
00:01:48
hydrogen bonds it's important to know
00:01:51
that the bases always pair up with the
00:01:54
same partners
00:01:56
adenine only pairs with thymine
00:01:59
and guanine only pairs with cytosine
00:02:04
this is called the base pair rule
00:02:09
scientists classify nitrogenous bases
00:02:12
according to the shape of their
00:02:13
molecules
00:02:15
adenine and guanine both have a double
00:02:18
ring structure containing a six membered
00:02:20
and a five-membered nitrogen-containing
00:02:23
ring fused together
00:02:26
these types of ring structures are
00:02:28
chemically classified as purines
00:02:33
but thymine and cytosine both only have
00:02:36
a single six-membered
00:02:37
nitrogen-containing ring shape so they
00:02:40
are chemically classified as pyrimidines
00:02:44
here's a little hint to help you
00:02:45
remember this
00:02:46
pyrimidine has a y in its name and so do
00:02:50
the bases classified as pyrimidines
00:02:53
thymine and cytosine
00:02:57
like dna an rna nucleotide may have the
00:03:00
nitrogenous bases adenine guanine or
00:03:04
cytosine
00:03:05
but unlike dna which has the nitrogenous
00:03:08
base thymine
00:03:10
rna has the nitrogenous base uracil
00:03:14
instead
00:03:16
this means that any nucleic acid that
00:03:19
contains thymine must be a strand of dna
00:03:24
and that any nucleic acid that contains
00:03:26
uracil must be a piece of rna
00:03:31
like thymine uracil has a single
00:03:34
nitrogen-containing ring so it would
00:03:37
also be classified as a pyrimidine
00:03:43
so what do the nitrogenous bases have to
00:03:45
do with building a dna molecule
00:03:48
well
00:03:50
each strand of dna begins to assemble
00:03:52
when the phosphate group in one
00:03:54
nucleotide bonds with the five carbon
00:03:57
sugar in another nucleotide
00:04:02
the two strands that make up a dna
00:04:04
molecule are linked through hydrogen
00:04:06
bonds between their nitrogenous bases
00:04:10
when the spiral dna molecule is
00:04:13
untwisted
00:04:14
these base pairs look like rungs on a
00:04:17
ladder
00:04:18
the spiral dna molecule is described as
00:04:21
having a double helix shape
00:04:27
james watson and francis crick first
00:04:29
described dna's double-stranded helical
00:04:31
structure in 1953
00:04:35
after looking at x-ray images of a dna
00:04:38
molecule taken by rosalind franklin
00:04:43
now let's look at the structure of rna
00:04:46
and see how it compares to the structure
00:04:48
of dna
00:04:50
while dna is a double-stranded molecule
00:04:54
rna is always single stranded
00:04:59
in eukaryotic cells dna is found only in
00:05:03
the nucleus
00:05:05
but rna can be found in the cytoplasm as
00:05:08
well as in the nucleus
00:05:13
dna controls heredity by containing the
00:05:16
code or set of instructions for building
00:05:19
the functional and structural proteins
00:05:21
that make up your body
00:05:27
and rna uses these varied instructions
00:05:30
to build all the proteins a living
00:05:32
organism needs
00:05:35
there are three types of rna
00:05:38
messenger rna referred to as mrna
00:05:42
ribosomal rna referred to as rrna
00:05:46
and transfer rna referred to as trna
00:05:53
messenger rna starts off in a cell's
00:05:56
nucleus
00:05:57
here it transcribes or copies the
00:06:00
instructions for assembling a protein
00:06:03
from a portion of the cell's dna
00:06:07
next the messenger rna takes these
00:06:09
instructions or protein recipe to a
00:06:12
ribosome in the cytoplasm
00:06:16
the ribosome which is made out of
00:06:18
ribosomal rna and proteins is the site
00:06:22
where this recipe is read and translated
00:06:25
into a protein
00:06:29
finally transfer rna in the cytoplasm
00:06:33
brings specific amino acids to the
00:06:35
ribosome so that the particular protein
00:06:38
encoded by the recipe can be made
00:06:42
we'll cover more detail about the way
00:06:44
dna and rna make proteins in another
00:06:47
video
00:06:48
to sum up
00:06:50
dna and rna are the only two nucleic
00:06:53
acids that exist
00:06:56
both dna and rna are built from nucleic
00:06:59
acid monomers called nucleotides
00:07:03
nucleotides always contain a phosphate
00:07:06
group of five carbon sugar and a
00:07:08
nitrogenous base
00:07:11
deoxyribose
00:07:12
is the sugar in dna
00:07:14
and ribose is the sugar in rna
00:07:18
the nitrogenous bases in dna are adenine
00:07:22
thymine cytosine and guanine
00:07:25
the nitrogenous bases in rna are adenine
00:07:29
uracil
00:07:30
cytosine and guanine
00:07:33
in dna
00:07:34
adenine always pairs together with
00:07:37
thymine
00:07:38
and cytosine always pairs together with
00:07:41
guanine
00:07:42
adenine and guanine are purines
00:07:46
cytosine thymine and uracil are
00:07:48
pyrimidines
00:07:50
dna is composed of two strands linked
00:07:53
through hydrogen bonds between their
00:07:55
nitrogenous bases
00:07:57
the two dna strands are twisted into a
00:08:00
double helix shape first identified by
00:08:02
watson and crick
00:08:04
rna is a single stranded molecule
00:08:08
in cells
00:08:09
dna is found only in the nucleus while
00:08:12
rna is found in the cytoplasm as well as
00:08:15
the nucleus
00:08:17
dna controls heredity by containing the
00:08:20
instructions for building the proteins
00:08:23
that make up an organism and allow it to
00:08:25
function
00:08:27
rna uses these instructions to build
00:08:30
proteins
00:08:31
there are three types of rna
00:08:34
messenger rna ribosomal rna and transfer
00:08:38
rna messenger rna copies the
00:08:41
instructions for building a protein and
00:08:44
takes them to a ribosome
00:08:46
ribosomal rna is the site where the
00:08:48
instructions are translated into a
00:08:50
protein
00:08:52
transfer rna brings specific amino acids
00:08:55
to the ribosome so the correct proteins
00:08:58
can be made
00:09:02
[Music]
00:09:07
[Music]
00:09:18
you