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Lecture 1

Bioinformatics is the use of computational techniques to solve biological problems related to data representation, storage, analysis, and biology problems like sequence analysis and structure/function prediction. Living things grow, develop, reproduce and evolve. DNA contains the genetic instructions and is composed of nucleotides with four bases - adenine, cytosine, guanine and thymine. DNA exists as a double helix with two antiparallel strands bonded via base pairing between A-T and C-G. RNA is similar to DNA but is often single stranded and contains uracil instead of thymine. Genes encode proteins via transcription of DNA to mRNA and the genetic code. Proteins perform important functions in cells and organisms.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
72 views22 pages

Lecture 1

Bioinformatics is the use of computational techniques to solve biological problems related to data representation, storage, analysis, and biology problems like sequence analysis and structure/function prediction. Living things grow, develop, reproduce and evolve. DNA contains the genetic instructions and is composed of nucleotides with four bases - adenine, cytosine, guanine and thymine. DNA exists as a double helix with two antiparallel strands bonded via base pairing between A-T and C-G. RNA is similar to DNA but is often single stranded and contains uracil instead of thymine. Genes encode proteins via transcription of DNA to mRNA and the genetic code. Proteins perform important functions in cells and organisms.

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SUNDAS FATIMA
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Bio Informatics

Lecture 1
General Definition of Bioinformatics
• general definition: computational techniques for solving biological
problems.
• data problems: representation (graphics), storage and retrieval
(databases), analysis (statistics, artificial intelligence, optimization,
etc.)
• biology problems: sequence analysis, structure or function prediction,
data mining, etc.
• also called computational biology
Living things: Grow, Develop, Reproduce(evolve) and react.
Prokaryotes (single-celled organisms lacking nuclei) typically have a single circular chromosome
examples: bacteria, archea.

Eukaryotes (organisms with nuclei) have a species-specific number of linear chromosomes


examples: animals, plants, fungi.
DNA - DeoxyriboNucleic Acid
• can be thought of as the “recipe” for an organism
• composed of small molecules called nucleotides–four different
nucleotides distinguished by the four bases: adenine (A), cytosine (C),
guanine (G) and thymine (T)
• is a polymer: large molecule consisting of similar units (nucleotides in
this case)
• a single strand of DNA can be thought of as a string composed of the
four letters: A, C, G, T
• ctgctggaccgggtgctaggaccctgactgcccggggccgggggtgcggggcccgctgag...
The Double Helix
• DNA molecules usually consist of two strands arranged in the famous
double helix.
The Double Helix
• each strand of DNA has a “direction”
at one end, the terminal carbon atom in the backbone is the 5’
carbon atom of the terminal sugar
at the other end, the terminal carbon atom is the 3’ carbon atom
of the terminal sugar
• therefore we can talk about the 5’ and the 3’ ends of a DNA strand
• in a double helix, the strands are antiparallel (arrows drawn from the
5’ end to the 3’ end go in opposite directions)
The Double Helix - Fragment
• in double-stranded DNA A always bonds to T C always bonds to G.
The Central Dogma of Molecular Biology
RNA - RiboNucleic Acid
• RNA is like DNA except:
• backbone is a little different
• often single stranded
• the base uracil (U) is used in place of thymine (T)
• a strand of RNA can be thought of as a string composed of the four
letters: A, C, G, U
Transcription
• RNA polymerase is the enzyme that builds an RNA strand from a gene
• RNA that is transcribed from a gene is called messenger RNA (mRNA)
Genes
• genes are the basic units of heredity
• a gene is a sequence of bases that carries the information required for
constructing a particular protein (more accurately, polypeptide)
• such a gene is said to encode a protein
• the human genome comprises ~ 25,000 protein-coding genes
Gene Density
• not all of the DNA in a genome encodes protein:
• bacteria ~90% coding gene/kb
• human ~1.5% coding gene/35kb
Proteins
• proteins are molecules composed of one or more polypeptides
• a polypeptide is a polymer composed of amino acids
• cells build their proteins from 20 different amino acids
• a polypeptide can be thought of as a string composed from a 20-
character alphabet
Protein Functions
• structural support
• storage of amino acids
• transport of other substances
• coordination of an organism’s activities
• response of cell to chemical stimuli
• movement
• protection against disease
• selective acceleration of chemical reactions

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