Molecular Basis of Inheritance Class 12 Notes — CBSE Biology Chapter 6

Chapter 6 — Molecular Basis of Inheritance — is the molecular genetics chapter covering DNA structure, replication, transcription, translation, gene regulation, and the Human Genome Project. This carries 10-12 marks — one of the highest-weightage chapters in Biology. Master DNA replication, central dogma, and the lac operon.

Key Concepts

DNA Structure (Watson-Crick Model)

Double helix: Two antiparallel polynucleotide strands (5’→3′ and 3’→5′)
Base pairing: A=T (2 H-bonds), G≡C (3 H-bonds) → Chargaff’s rule: A=T, G=C
Sugar-phosphate backbone: Deoxyribose sugar + phosphodiester bonds
Pitch: 3.4 nm per turn; 10 bp per turn; each bp = 0.34 nm apart
Diameter: 2 nm; Right-handed helix

DNA Replication

Semiconservative (proved by Meselson and Stahl, 1958 using E. coli + ¹⁵N/¹⁴N)

Key enzymes:
Helicase → unwinds double helix
SSB proteins → stabilise single strands
Primase → synthesises RNA primer
DNA Polymerase III → adds nucleotides (5’→3′ only)
DNA Polymerase I → removes RNA primer, fills gaps
Ligase → joins Okazaki fragments

Leading strand: Continuous synthesis (5’→3′ towards replication fork)
Lagging strand: Discontinuous (Okazaki fragments, 5’→3′ away from fork)

Central Dogma

DNA →(Transcription) mRNA →(Translation) Protein

Transcription (DNA → mRNA)

Template strand: 3’→5′ (read by RNA polymerase)
Coding/sense strand: 5’→3′ (same sequence as mRNA, except T→U)
RNA polymerase synthesises mRNA in 5’→3′ direction

In prokaryotes: single RNA polymerase
In eukaryotes: RNA Pol I (rRNA), RNA Pol II (mRNA), RNA Pol III (tRNA)

Post-transcriptional processing (eukaryotes):
Capping (5′ cap) + Polyadenylation (3′ poly-A tail) + Splicing (remove introns, join exons)

Genetic Code

PropertyDetails
Triplet3 bases = 1 codon = 1 amino acid
DegenerateMore than one codon for most amino acids (61 sense codons for 20 amino acids)
UniversalSame code in almost all organisms
Non-overlappingCodons read sequentially without overlap
Non-ambiguousOne codon codes for only one amino acid
Start codonAUG (methionine) — initiates translation
Stop codonsUAA, UAG, UGA — terminate translation

Translation (mRNA → Protein)

Occurs on ribosomes. tRNA brings amino acids.

Steps:
1. Initiation: Small ribosomal subunit + mRNA + initiator tRNA (with Met) → start at AUG
2. Elongation: Aminoacyl-tRNA enters A-site → peptide bond formed → ribosome translocates
3. Termination: Stop codon (UAA/UAG/UGA) → release factor → polypeptide released

Regulation of Gene Expression — Lac Operon

Jacob and Monod model (E. coli):
Structural genes: lacZ, lacY, lacA (encode β-galactosidase, permease, transacetylase)
Promoter: RNA polymerase binds here
Operator: Repressor protein binds here
Regulator gene (i): produces repressor

Without lactose: Repressor binds to operator → blocks transcription → genes OFF
With lactose: Lactose (inducer) binds to repressor → repressor falls off → RNA polymerase transcribes → genes ON
This is an inducible operon (switched on by inducer).

Human Genome Project (HGP)

  • 1990-2003, coordinated by NIH (USA) and Wellcome Trust (UK)
  • Total human genome: ~3.2 billion base pairs
  • ~20,000-25,000 genes (only ~2% of genome codes for proteins)
  • Chromosome 1 has most genes; Y chromosome has fewest
  • Used BAC and YAC vectors; Sanger’s method and shotgun sequencing

DNA Fingerprinting

Based on VNTRs (Variable Number Tandem Repeats) — unique to each individual
Steps: Isolation → Restriction digestion → Gel electrophoresis → Southern blotting → Hybridisation with probe → Autoradiography
Applications: paternity testing, forensics, immigration disputes

Solved Examples

Example 1

Q: The sequence of one strand of DNA is 3′-ATGCATGCATGC-5′. Write the mRNA sequence.

Solution: mRNA is synthesised using the template (3’→5′) strand. mRNA = 5′-UACGUACGUACG-3′ (complementary, with U replacing T).

Example 2

Q: Explain why the lac operon is called an inducible operon.

Solution: The lac operon is normally switched OFF (repressor blocks operator). It is switched ON only when lactose (inducer) is present — lactose binds to repressor, changes its shape, repressor detaches from operator, allowing transcription. Since it needs an inducer to turn on, it’s called an inducible operon.

Important Questions

3 Mark

  1. Describe the semiconservative nature of DNA replication.
  2. What is the central dogma? Draw a flow chart.
  3. Explain the regulation of lac operon in E. coli.

5 Mark

  1. Describe the process of translation with a diagram.
  2. Explain the Watson-Crick model of DNA. How did Meselson and Stahl prove semiconservative replication?

Quick Revision Points

  • DNA: double helix, antiparallel, A=T (2 H-bonds), G≡C (3 H-bonds), 3.4 nm pitch
  • Replication: semiconservative (Meselson-Stahl); leading (continuous) + lagging (Okazaki fragments)
  • Transcription: template 3’→5′; RNA Pol II makes mRNA in eukaryotes
  • Genetic code: 64 codons (61 sense + 3 stop); AUG = start; degenerate, universal
  • Translation: initiation (AUG) → elongation → termination (UAA/UAG/UGA)
  • Lac operon: inducible; lactose = inducer; repressor blocks operator when no lactose
  • HGP: 3.2 billion bp, ~20,000 genes, 2% coding
  • DNA fingerprinting: VNTRs, Southern blotting, used in forensics

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