Wednesday, July 15, 2026

DNA REPLICATION, TRANSCRIPTION AND TRANSLATION Part-I

 

DNA REPLICATION, TRANSCRIPTION AND TRANSLATION Part-I

Introduction

One of the most remarkable properties of living organisms is their ability to produce offspring that closely resemble themselves. This continuity of life is possible because the genetic material (DNA) is accurately copied before every cell division. This copying process is called DNA Replication.

DNA replication is one of the three fundamental processes of the Central Dogma of Molecular Biology, the other two being Transcription and Translation.

DNA → DNA (Replication)

DNA → RNA (Transcription)

RNA → Protein (Translation)

Without DNA replication:

  • Cells cannot divide.
  • Growth cannot occur.
  • Damaged tissues cannot be repaired.
  • Reproduction becomes impossible.
  • Hereditary information cannot be transmitted.

Thus, DNA replication is fundamental to life.

What Is DNA Replication?

Definition

DNA replication is the biological process by which one DNA molecule produces two genetically identical DNA molecules before cell division.

In simple words, DNA makes an exact copy of itself. Each daughter DNA molecule contains the same genetic information as the parent DNA molecule.

When Does DNA Replication Occur?

DNA replication occurs before cell division.

Cell Cycle

G₁ Phase

S Phase (DNA Replication occurs here)

G₂ Phase

Mitosis / Meiosis

Thus, Replication always precedes nuclear division.

Location Of DNA Replication

In Prokaryotes

Occurs in the cytoplasm because prokaryotes lack a membrane-bound nucleus.

In Eukaryotes

Occurs inside the nucleus during the S phase. DNA in mitochondria and chloroplasts also replicates independently.

IMPORTANCE OF DNA REPLICATION

DNA replication is essential because it:

1. Maintains Genetic Continuity

Each daughter cell receives an identical copy of DNA.

2. Enables Growth

Growth requires repeated cell division. Cell division requires DNA replication.

3. Repairs Damaged Tissues

Wound healing depends upon formation of new cells.

4. Facilitates Reproduction

Sexual and asexual reproduction require DNA replication.

5. Maintains Chromosome Number

Replication ensures accurate chromosome distribution.

6. Prevents Loss of Genetic Information

Faithful replication preserves hereditary information.

Characteristics Of DNA Replication

DNA replication is:

  • Semiconservative
  • Bidirectional
  • Semi-discontinuous
  • Highly accurate
  • Template-directed
  • Enzyme-mediated
  • Energy-dependent

Basic Concept of DNA Replication

DNA consists of two complementary strands.

During replication:

  1. Two strands separate.
  2. Each strand acts as a template.
  3. Complementary nucleotides are added.
  4. Two identical DNA molecules are formed.

Models Of DNA Replication

Before the correct mechanism was discovered, scientists proposed three possible models.

1. Conservative Model

Proposed Idea

Parent DNA remains completely intact. A completely new DNA molecule is synthesized.

Result:

Parent DNA → remains unchanged

New DNA → entirely newly synthesized

Prediction

One molecule: Old + Old

Other molecule: New + New

This model was later disproved.

2. Semiconservative Model

Proposed by

James Watson and Francis Crick (1953)

Principle

Each parental DNA strand serves as a template for a new complementary strand. Each daughter DNA contains:

·       One old strand

·       One newly synthesized strand

This model is correct and accepted

3. Dispersive Model

According to this hypothesis-

Old and new DNA segments become randomly mixed within each strand. Each daughter strand contains alternating patches of old and new DNA. This model was disproved experimentally.

Comparison Of Three Models

Feature

Conservative

Semiconservative

Dispersive

Parent DNA preserved intact

Yes

No

No

Daughter DNA contains old strand

No

Yes

Mixed fragments

Daughter DNA contains new strand

Yes

Yes

Yes

Experimentally supported

No

Yes

No

 

Semiconservative Model of DNA Replication

Definition

During DNA replication, each daughter DNA molecule contains:

  • One parental strand
  • One newly synthesized strand

Hence, Half of the parental DNA is conserved. Therefore, Replication is called semiconservative.

Why Is It Called Semiconservative?

"Semi"

Half

"Conservative"

Old DNA is conserved.

Each daughter DNA conserves one parental strand.

Diagram (Text Representation)

Parent DNA

Old Strand A

||

Old Strand B

Strands separate

Old Strand A + New Strand A'

Old Strand B + New Strand B'

Two daughter DNA molecules

Each contains: One old strand, One new strand

 

Scientific Evidence for Semiconservative Replication

The most famous proof came from the experiment performed by: Matthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl, Year: 1958. It is regarded as one of the most elegant experiments in molecular biology.

Meselson–Stahl Experiment

Objective

To determine how DNA replicates.

Experimental Organism

They used the bacterium: Escherichia coli

Reasons:

  • Rapid growth
  • Short generation time
  • Easy culture
  • Simple chromosome

Principle

Nitrogen occurs in DNA bases.

Normal nitrogen: ¹⁴N (light)

Heavy isotope: ¹⁵N (heavy)

DNA containing ¹⁵N is denser than DNA containing ¹⁴N.

Density differences can be separated by cesium chloride (CsCl) density gradient centrifugation.

Experimental Procedure

Step 1

E. coli was grown for several generations in a medium containing ¹⁵N.

Result: All DNA became heavy (¹⁵N-labelled).

Step 2

These bacteria were transferred to a medium containing normal ¹⁴N.

Now newly synthesized DNA incorporated only ¹⁴N.

Step 3

Samples were collected after:

  • One generation
  • Two generations
  • Subsequent generations

DNA was isolated and analyzed by CsCl density gradient centrifugation.

Observations

Before Transfer

Only heavy DNA band- (¹⁵N–¹⁵N)

After One Generation

Only one intermediate-density (hybrid) band- (¹⁵N–¹⁴N)

No separate heavy or light bands. This ruled out the conservative model.

After Two Generations

Two bands appeared:

  • Intermediate (Hybrid DNA)
  • Light DNA (¹⁴N–¹⁴N)

This ruled out the dispersive model and supported the semiconservative model.

After More Generations

Percentage of light DNA increased. Hybrid DNA decreased proportionally. Heavy DNA never reappeared.

Interpretation

After one replication: Every DNA molecule contained:

·       One old strand

·       One new strand

Exactly as predicted by the semiconservative model.

Conclusion

Meselson and Stahl proved that DNA replication is semiconservative. This remains one of the strongest experimental demonstrations in molecular genetics.

Why Was This Experiment Important?

It:

  • Confirmed Watson and Crick's prediction.
  • Explained the molecular basis of heredity.
  • Became the foundation of molecular genetics.
  • Supported the concept of template-directed replication.
  • Laid the groundwork for modern DNA technology.

Taylor's Experiment (Eukaryotic Evidence)

In 1957, J. Herbert Taylor, together with colleagues, demonstrated semiconservative replication in the root tip cells of the broad bean (Vicia faba).

They used:

  • Radioactive ³H-thymidine
  • Autoradiography

Their results confirmed that eukaryotic chromosomes also replicate in a semiconservative manner.

Comparison of the Two Classic Experiments

Meselson–Stahl

Taylor Experiment

Prokaryotes

Eukaryotes

E. coli

Vicia faba root tip cells

¹⁵N isotope

³H-thymidine

CsCl density gradient centrifugation

Autoradiography

Proved semiconservative replication in bacteria

Confirmed semiconservative replication in eukaryotes

 

Flow Chart of DNA Replication

Parent DNA

Strands Separate

Each Strand Acts as Template

Complementary Nucleotides Added

New DNA Strands Form

Two Daughter DNA Molecules

Each Contains

One Old Strand + One New Strand

High-Yield Facts

DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle.

DNA replication is semiconservative, bidirectional, and semi-discontinuous.

Each parental DNA strand serves as a template for synthesis of a complementary strand.

The Meselson–Stahl experiment (1958) using ¹⁵N-labeled E. coli conclusively proved the semiconservative mode of DNA replication.

DNA molecules containing ¹⁵N are denser than those containing ¹⁴N and can be separated by CsCl density gradient centrifugation.

Taylor's experiment confirmed semiconservative DNA replication in eukaryotic chromosomes using ³H-thymidine and autoradiography.

Summary

  • DNA replication is semiconservative: each daughter DNA molecule contains one parental and one newly synthesized strand.
  • The semiconservative nature of DNA replication was experimentally demonstrated by Meselson and Stahl in Escherichia coli.
  • DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle before mitosis or meiosis.
  • Complementary base pairing ensures the faithful copying of genetic information during replication.
  • Accurate DNA replication is essential for heredity, growth, repair, and reproduction and forms the molecular basis for the continuity of life.

Sunday, July 12, 2026

Structure, Formation and Functions of RNA

 


Structure, Formation and Functions of RNA

Introduction

Ribonucleic Acid (RNA) is one of the most important biological molecules found in living organisms. Along with DNA, RNA forms the molecular basis of heredity and plays a central role in the expression of genetic information. While DNA stores genetic information, RNA is responsible for reading, carrying, decoding, and translating this information into proteins.

Unlike DNA, which mainly acts as a long-term repository of genetic information, RNA performs multiple dynamic functions inside the cell, including protein synthesis, gene regulation, catalysis, and transport of amino acids. In many viruses, RNA itself serves as the hereditary material.

The discovery of different classes of RNA revolutionized molecular biology and led to the understanding of the Central Dogma of Molecular Biology, which explains the flow of genetic information from DNA to RNA to protein.

What Is RNA?

Definition

RNA (Ribonucleic Acid) is a polymer of ribonucleotides that participates in the storage, transfer, regulation, and expression of genetic information.

Unlike DNA, RNA is usually single-stranded and contains ribose sugar instead of deoxyribose.

Discovery of RNA

Important milestones in RNA research include:

Scientist

Contribution

Friedrich Miescher

Discovery of nucleic acids (1869)

Phoebus Levene

Identified ribose sugar and nucleotide components

Severo Ochoa

Work on RNA synthesis enzymes

Marshall Nirenberg

Helped decipher the genetic code using RNA

Har Gobind Khorana

Confirmed codon assignments and genetic code

 

Occurrence of RNA

RNA is present in:

Eukaryotic Cells

  • Nucleus
  • Nucleolus
  • Cytoplasm
  • Ribosomes
  • Mitochondria
  • Chloroplasts

Prokaryotic Cells

RNA occurs in:

  • Cytoplasm
  • Ribosomes
  • Nucleoid region

RNA as Genetic Material

In most organisms: DNA is the genetic material. However, in several viruses, RNA itself acts as hereditary material. Examples include:

  • Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)
  • Influenza virus
  • SARS-CoV-2
  • Tobacco Mosaic Virus (certain strains)

Chemical Composition of RNA

RNA is a polynucleotide. It consists of repeating units called ribonucleotides. Each nucleotide contains three components:

  1. Nitrogenous base
  2. Pentose sugar
  3. Phosphate group

Components Of RNA

1. Nitrogenous Bases

RNA contains four bases.

Purines

  • Adenine (A)
  • Guanine (G)

Pyrimidines

Unlike DNA, RNA contains: Uracil instead of Thymine.

2. Pentose Sugar

RNA contains: Ribose sugar

Characteristics

  • Five-carbon sugar
  • Contains hydroxyl (-OH) group at the 2′ carbon

This additional hydroxyl group makes RNA less chemically stable than DNA.

3. Phosphate Group

Phosphate groups connect adjacent nucleotides through 3′–5′ phosphodiester bonds, forming the sugar-phosphate backbone.

Structure of RNA

RNA is usually:

  • Single-stranded
  • Linear
  • Flexible
  • Shorter than DNA

However, many RNA molecules fold into complex secondary and tertiary structures through intramolecular complementary base pairing.

Base Pairing in RNA

When complementary pairing occurs:

  • Adenine pairs with Uracil (A–U)
  • Guanine pairs with Cytosine (G–C)

Hydrogen bonds stabilize these regions.

Characteristics of RNA

  • Usually single-stranded
  • Contains ribose sugar
  • Contains uracil
  • Less stable than DNA
  • Synthesized by transcription
  • Found in nucleus and cytoplasm
  • Participates in protein synthesis
  • Can act as genetic material in some viruses

Formation of RNA (Transcription)

Definition

Transcription is the process by which genetic information stored in DNA is copied into RNA. It is the first step of gene expression.

Location of Transcription

Eukaryotes

Occurs inside the nucleus.

Prokaryotes

Occurs in the cytoplasm, as there is no membrane-bound nucleus.

Enzyme Involved

The enzyme responsible is: RNA Polymerase

It synthesizes RNA using one DNA strand as the template. Unlike DNA polymerase, RNA polymerase does not require a primer to initiate synthesis.

Steps of Transcription

1. Initiation

  • RNA polymerase binds to a promoter sequence on DNA.
  • DNA strands locally unwind.
  • The template strand becomes available.

2. Elongation

  • RNA polymerase reads the DNA template in the 3′ → 5′ direction.
  • RNA is synthesized in the 5′ → 3′ direction.
  • Complementary ribonucleotides are added:

DNA Base

RNA Base

A

U

T

A

G

C

C

G

 

3. Termination

  • RNA polymerase reaches a termination sequence.
  • The newly synthesized RNA is released.
  • DNA rewinds into the double helix.

Types of RNA

Three major classes of RNA are directly involved in protein synthesis.

1. Messenger RNA (mRNA)

Definition

mRNA carries genetic information from DNA to ribosomes. It acts as the template for protein synthesis.

Characteristics

  • Single-stranded
  • Linear
  • Contains codons
  • Short-lived
  • Synthesized during transcription

In eukaryotes, mature mRNA possesses:

  • 5′ cap
  • Coding region
  • 3′ poly(A) tail

These modifications increase stability and facilitate translation.

Functions

  • Carries genetic message.
  • Determines amino acid sequence.
  • Serves as template during translation.

2. Transfer RNA (tRNA)

Definition

tRNA transports specific amino acids to ribosomes during protein synthesis. It is called the adapter molecule because it links codons with amino acids.

Structure

Often described as a cloverleaf (secondary structure). Important regions:

Amino Acid Acceptor Arm, Binds amino acid.

Anticodon Loop

Contains three bases (anticodon) complementary to the mRNA codon.

D-arm

Contains dihydrouridine. Important in enzyme recognition.

TΨC Arm (T Arm or T Loop)

Contains ribothymidine, pseudouridine, and cytidine. Helps bind the ribosome.

(Ψ psi- pronounced as psigh)

Functions

  • Transfers amino acids.
  • Recognizes codons.
  • Ensures correct amino acid incorporation into proteins.

3. Ribosomal RNA (rRNA)

Definition

rRNA combines with proteins to form ribosomes. It is the most abundant RNA in cells.

Functions

  • Forms structural framework of ribosomes.
  • Catalyzes peptide bond formation (peptidyl transferase activity).
  • Positions mRNA and tRNA correctly during translation.

Thus, rRNA is both structural and catalytic.

Other Types of RNA

Small Nuclear RNA (snRNA)

  • Involved in splicing of pre-mRNA.
  • Forms part of the spliceosome.

Small Nucleolar RNA (snoRNA)

  • Modifies and processes rRNA in the nucleolus.

MicroRNA (miRNA)

  • Regulates gene expression by binding to target mRNA and reducing its translation or promoting degradation.

Small Interfering RNA (siRNA)

  • Mediates RNA interference (RNAi), leading to sequence-specific degradation of complementary mRNA.

Long Non-coding RNA (lncRNA)

  • Regulates chromatin structure, transcription, and gene expression.

COMPARISON OF THREE MAJOR RNAs

Feature

mRNA

tRNA

rRNA

Shape

Linear

Cloverleaf (secondary structure)

Folded, complex

Function

Carries genetic message

Transfers amino acids

Forms ribosomes and catalyzes peptide bond formation

Percentage of cellular RNA

3–5%

10–15%

80–85%

Stability

Least stable

Moderate

Most stable

 

Functions of RNA

1. Protein Synthesis

RNA plays the central role.

  • mRNA carries message.
  • tRNA carries amino acids.
  • rRNA forms ribosomes and catalyzes peptide bond formation.

2. Gene Expression

RNA transfers information from DNA to proteins.

DNA

RNA

Protein

3. Catalytic Activity

Some RNA molecules possess enzymatic activity. These catalytic RNAs are called: Ribozymes

4. Regulation of Gene Expression

Certain RNAs regulate:

  • Transcription
  • Translation
  • mRNA stability

5. Viral Genetic Material

RNA serves as hereditary material in many viruses.

6. Evolutionary Importance

The RNA World Hypothesis proposes that early life forms may have used RNA for both information storage and catalysis before DNA and proteins became dominant.

DNA VS RNA

DNA

RNA

Deoxyribose sugar

Ribose sugar

Thymine present

Uracil present

Usually double-stranded

Usually single-stranded

More stable

Less stable

Long-lived

Short-lived (especially mRNA)

Stores hereditary information

Expresses genetic information

Replicates

Synthesized by transcription

Found mainly in nucleus (also mitochondria / chloroplasts)

Found in nucleus and cytoplasm

Central Dogma

Proposed by Francis Crick

DNA

Transcription

RNA

Translation

Protein

RNA is the essential intermediate between DNA and protein.

Flow Chart of RNA Formation and Functions

DNA

Transcription (RNA Polymerase)

RNA

mRNA → Carries message

tRNA → Brings amino acids

rRNA → Forms ribosome & catalyzes peptide bond formation

Protein Synthesis

Expression of Traits

Biological Importance of RNA

RNA is essential for:

  • Growth
  • Cell division
  • Protein synthesis
  • Gene regulation
  • Development
  • Evolution
  • Biotechnology
  • Molecular diagnostics
  • Vaccine technology (e.g., mRNA vaccines)

High-Yield Facts

  • ·       RNA contains ribose sugar and uracil instead of thymine.
  • ·       RNA is generally single-stranded, though it can fold into complex structures.
  • ·       RNA is synthesized by RNA polymerase during transcription.
  • ·       Transcription occurs in the nucleus of eukaryotes and in the cytoplasm of prokaryotes.
  • ·       mRNA carries genetic information from DNA to ribosomes.
  • ·       tRNA is the adapter molecule that transports amino acids.
  • ·       rRNA is the most abundant RNA and forms the structural and catalytic core of ribosomes.
  • ·       Ribozymes are RNA molecules with catalytic activity.
  • ·       RNA acts as the hereditary material in several viruses, including HIV, influenza virus, and SARS-CoV-2.

Summary

  • RNA is synthesized from a DNA template through transcription.
  • Messenger RNA carries the genetic code, transfer RNA decodes the message by bringing amino acids, and ribosomal RNA forms the catalytic and structural core of ribosomes.
  • Uracil replaces thymine in RNA, and ribose replaces deoxyribose, making RNA chemically distinct from DNA.
  • The coordinated action of mRNA, tRNA, and rRNA is essential for accurate protein synthesis and the expression of genetic information.
  • RNA serves as both an information carrier and, in some cases, a catalytic molecule, making it indispensable for life and central to the molecular basis of inheritance.