Molecular Basis
of Inheritance
The most comprehensive, exam-focused notes on DNA structure, replication, transcription, and translation — with PYQs, mnemonics, and concept maps for NEET, CSIR NET & GATE.
- Introduction & Exam Relevance
- DNA Structure — The Double Helix
- DNA Packaging in Eukaryotes
- DNA Replication
- Transcription (RNA Synthesis)
- The Genetic Code
- Translation (Protein Synthesis)
- Gene Regulation — Lac Operon
- Human Genome Project
- DNA Fingerprinting
- Previous Year Questions (PYQs)
- Quick Revision Power Points
Why This Chapter is Non-Negotiable
Molecular Basis of Inheritance is the crown jewel of biology — the chapter that explains how life copies itself, expresses itself, and evolves. From the elegant double helix of DNA to the intricate machinery of the ribosome, this chapter is where chemistry and biology fuse into something extraordinary.
For exam aspirants, this is a guaranteed scoring machine. It appears in every NEET paper, forms the backbone of CSIR NET Part C analytical questions, and is one of the highest-yielding units in GATE Life Science.
- ~14–15% of Biology section
- 5–7 direct NCERT questions
- DNA structure diagrams
- Replication enzyme names
- Genetic code properties
- Analytical Part C questions
- Mechanism-level detail
- lac operon regulation
- Post-transcriptional processing
- Chromatin remodeling
- Numerical / calculation type
- Semiconservative proof logic
- tRNA charging reactions
- Translation fidelity
- Regulation mechanisms
The Double Helix — Anatomy of a Blueprint
In 1953, James Watson and Francis Crick proposed the double helix model of DNA — one of the most beautiful structures in all of science. Their model was built on X-ray crystallography data provided by Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins, and Chargaff’s base composition rules.
Key Structural Parameters
| Feature | Detail | Exam Tip |
|---|---|---|
| Helix diameter | 2 nm (20 Å) | Both strands together |
| Pitch (one full turn) | 3.4 nm = 34 Å | Contains exactly 10 base pairs |
| Rise per base pair | 0.34 nm (3.4 Å) | Pitch ÷ 10 base pairs |
| A:T base pair | 2 hydrogen bonds | AT = 2H bonds (AT-two) |
| G:C base pair | 3 hydrogen bonds | GC = 3H bonds (GC-three) |
| Strand orientation | Antiparallel (5’→3′ and 3’→5′) | Classic exam trap question |
| Chargaff’s Rule | [A]=[T] and [G]=[C] | A+G = T+C (purines = pyrimidines) |
| Helix type | B-form (right-handed) | Most common in cells; A-form and Z-form also exist |
A pairs with T (2 bonds) · G pairs with C (3 bonds) — GC is “stronger” because more H-bonds means higher melting temperature.
Purines vs Pyrimidines
From 2 Metres to a 6 μm Nucleus
The human genome contains approximately 3.2 × 10⁹ base pairs, stretching to nearly 2 metres if linearized — yet it fits into a nucleus just 6 micrometres wide. This requires a packing ratio of over 10,000:1, achieved through hierarchical chromatin organization.
146 bp of DNA wrapped ~1.65 times around a histone octamer — 2 copies each of H2A, H2B, H3, H4. Linker DNA (~54 bp) + linker histone H1 connects nucleosomes. H1 is NOT part of the octamer.
Nucleosome arrays coil into a 30 nm fiber (~6 nucleosomes/turn). Packing ratio ≈ 40×. H1 stabilizes this level.
Solenoid forms loops (~50–100 kb each) anchored to a non-histone protein scaffold. Packing ratio ≈ 1,000×.
Final compaction gives the classic X-shaped chromosome visible under light microscope. Total packing ratio ≈ 10,000×.
Euchromatin = loosely packed = transcriptionally active (lightly stained). Heterochromatin = densely packed = transcriptionally inactive (darkly stained). Constitutive heterochromatin is always condensed; facultative heterochromatin can switch states (e.g., Barr body / inactive X chromosome).
Copying the Blueprint with Exquisite Fidelity
DNA replication is semiconservative — each daughter DNA contains one parental strand and one new strand. This was proven by the landmark Meselson–Stahl experiment (1958) using heavy nitrogen (¹⁵N) and CsCl density gradient centrifugation.
The Meselson–Stahl Experiment — A Must-Know Classic
E. coli grown in ¹⁵N medium → shifted to ¹⁴N. After Gen 1: ALL DNA = hybrid density. After Gen 2: 50% hybrid + 50% light (¹⁴N/¹⁴N). This pattern proves semiconservative replication uniquely — conservative would give 50% heavy + 50% light after Gen 1.
Key Enzymes of DNA Replication
| Enzyme | Function | Key Facts |
|---|---|---|
| Helicase | Unwinds double helix at replication fork | Breaks H-bonds; requires ATP; moves 5’→3′ |
| SSB Proteins | Stabilize single-stranded regions | Prevent re-annealing after strand separation |
| Topoisomerase | Relieves torsional strain ahead of fork | Gyrase (Type II) in prokaryotes; Topo I/II in eukaryotes |
| Primase | Synthesizes short RNA primers (~10 nt) | DNA pol cannot start de novo; needs free 3′-OH |
| DNA Pol III (Prok.) | Main replication enzyme; adds dNTPs 5’→3′ | 3’→5′ exonuclease for proofreading; error rate 1 in 10⁹ |
| DNA Pol I | Removes RNA primers; fills gap | Has unique 5’→3′ exonuclease activity |
| DNA Ligase | Joins Okazaki fragments (seals nicks) | Uses NAD⁺ (prokaryotes) or ATP (eukaryotes) |
| Telomerase | Extends telomeres in eukaryotes | A reverse transcriptase; uses its own RNA as template |
Leading vs Lagging Strand
Leading strand — synthesized continuously in the 5’→3′ direction toward the fork. Requires only one RNA primer.
Lagging strand — synthesized discontinuously away from the fork as Okazaki fragments (1,000–2,000 nt in prokaryotes; 100–200 nt in eukaryotes). Each Okazaki fragment needs its own RNA primer.
Key insight: DNA Pol can only add to a 3′-OH end — this single constraint drives the entire leading/lagging strand asymmetry.
In E. coli, replication starts at a single origin called oriC (245 bp) and proceeds bidirectionally. Eukaryotes use multiple origins (Autonomously Replicating Sequences / ARS) to replicate their large genomes during S-phase. A human cell has ~30,000 replication origins firing simultaneously. The speed of replication fork movement: ~1,000 bp/sec in prokaryotes; ~100 bp/sec in eukaryotes.
From DNA to RNA — The First Messenger
Transcription uses one strand of DNA (template/antisense strand, read 3’→5′) to synthesize a complementary RNA molecule in the 5’→3′ direction. Only a specific region of one DNA strand is transcribed for any given gene.
Prokaryotic Transcription — One Enzyme, Simple Promoter
A single RNA Polymerase holoenzyme (α₂ββ’ωσ) handles all RNA synthesis. The sigma (σ) factor recognizes promoter elements: –10 box (TATAAT / Pribnow box) and –35 box (TTGACA). After ~10 nucleotides are synthesized, σ is released and the core enzyme continues elongation.
Termination: Rho-independent (GC hairpin + poly-U) or Rho-dependent (Rho helicase dissociates RNA-DNA hybrid).
Three RNA Polymerases in Eukaryotes
| Polymerase | Location | Products | α-Amanitin Sensitivity |
|---|---|---|---|
| RNA Pol I | Nucleolus | 28S, 18S, 5.8S rRNA | Resistant |
| RNA Pol II | Nucleoplasm | hnRNA (pre-mRNA), some snRNA | Highly sensitive (nanomolar) |
| RNA Pol III | Nucleoplasm | tRNA, 5S rRNA, snRNA | Moderately sensitive (micromolar) |
Post-Transcriptional Processing (Eukaryotes)
Added co-transcriptionally when RNA is ~25 nt. Linked via a unique 5′-5′ triphosphate bridge. Protects from 5′ exonucleases, required for ribosome binding, aids nuclear export.
Added by poly-A polymerase after cleavage at the AAUAAA polyadenylation signal. Stabilizes mRNA, promotes translation, required for export from nucleus.
Introns excised and exons joined by the spliceosome (U1, U2, U4, U5, U6 snRNPs). GT-AG rule: introns begin with GU (5′ splice site) and end with AG (3′ splice site). Alternative splicing allows one gene to produce multiple protein isoforms.
The Universal Dictionary of Life
The genetic code — rules by which nucleotide triplets (codons) specify amino acids — was cracked between 1961–1967 by Nirenberg, Khorana, and Holley (Nobel Prize 1968). It is one of the most elegant solutions evolution has produced.
AUG — The Start Codon (Most Tested Single Fact)
AUG codes for Methionine. In prokaryotes, the initiator tRNA carries formyl-methionine (fMet). In eukaryotes, it carries regular Met. The mRNA region around AUG (Kozak sequence in eukaryotes; Shine-Dalgarno in prokaryotes) is critical for ribosome positioning.
Building the Protein — Ribosome as Molecular Factory
Ribosome Architecture
| Feature | Prokaryote (70S) | Eukaryote (80S) |
|---|---|---|
| Large subunit | 50S: 23S + 5S rRNA + ~31 proteins | 60S: 28S + 5.8S + 5S rRNA + ~49 proteins |
| Small subunit | 30S: 16S rRNA + ~21 proteins | 40S: 18S rRNA + ~33 proteins |
| A site | Aminoacyl-tRNA binding (incoming) | |
| P site | Peptidyl-tRNA binding (elongating chain) | |
| E site | Exit site for empty (deacylated) tRNA | |
Three Stages of Translation
Prokaryote: 30S binds Shine-Dalgarno sequence (AGGAGG, ~10 nt upstream of AUG) via 16S rRNA. fMet-tRNA enters P site. 50S joins. Requires IF-1, IF-2 (GTP), IF-3.
Eukaryote: 43S complex (40S + eIFs + Met-tRNA) scans from 5′ cap until AUG in Kozak context. 60S joins upon GTP hydrolysis by eIF2.
1. Codon recognition: aminoacyl-tRNA delivered to A site by EF-Tu·GTP (prokaryotes).
2. Peptide bond formation: peptidyl transferase activity of 23S/28S rRNA (the ribosome is a ribozyme!).
3. Translocation: ribosome moves 3 nt (5’→3′); EF-G·GTP (prokaryotes). A→P, P→E, E→exit.
Stop codon in A site is recognized by Release Factors (RF-1/RF-2 in prokaryotes; eRF1 in eukaryotes). Peptide released; ribosome disassembles into subunits. RF-3/eRF3 uses GTP to facilitate release.
Wobble Hypothesis (Crick, 1966): Positions 1 and 2 of a codon pair strictly (Watson-Crick). Position 3 (3′ end of codon = 5′ end of anticodon) can “wobble,” allowing non-standard pairing. Inosine (I) at the wobble position of tRNA can pair with U, C, or A. This allows fewer than 61 tRNAs to decode all 61 sense codons — elegant efficiency.
The Lac Operon — Bacterial Logic at Its Finest
The lac operon (Jacob & Monod, 1961 — Nobel Prize 1965) is the textbook model of prokaryotic gene regulation. It controls lactose metabolism in E. coli through a dual-control “need-based” switch combining negative regulation (repressor) and positive regulation (CAP-cAMP).
Lac Operon Structure
lacI (Repressor gene, constitutive) → P (Promoter) → O (Operator, repressor-binding site) → lacZ (β-galactosidase) → lacY (Permease) → lacA (Transacetylase)
| Condition | Repressor | CAP-cAMP | Transcription |
|---|---|---|---|
| Glucose ✓ / Lactose ✗ | Active (O blocked) | Absent (low cAMP) | OFF |
| Glucose ✗ / Lactose ✓ | Inactive (allolactose binds) | Present (high cAMP) | MAXIMUM ✓ |
| Glucose ✓ / Lactose ✓ | Inactive | Absent (low cAMP) | Low (basal) |
| Both absent | Active | Present | OFF |
Yes Lactose → Allolactose inactivates repressor → Operator free.
Both conditions together = Maximum transcription. Note: Lactose must first be converted to allolactose (the true inducer) by a small amount of basal β-galactosidase.
Reading the Complete Book of Life
| Fact | Detail |
|---|---|
| Duration | 1990–2003 (13 years) |
| Total base pairs | ~3.2 × 10⁹ (3.2 billion bp) |
| Protein-coding genes | ~20,000–25,000 (only ~1.5–2% of genome) |
| Repetitive sequences | >50% of genome (SINEs, LINEs, satellite DNA) |
| Chromosomes sequenced | All 24 (22 autosomes + X + Y) |
| Technologies used | Shotgun sequencing, BAC cloning, bioinformatics |
| Model organisms | E. coli, S. cerevisiae, C. elegans, Drosophila, Mus musculus |
| Countries involved | USA, UK, France, Germany, Japan, China |
| Most/Fewest genes | Chromosome 1 (most) · Chromosome Y (fewest) |
| Largest human gene | Dystrophin (~2.4 Mb, 79 exons) |
The Identity Code Within Every Cell
DNA fingerprinting was developed by Alec Jeffreys (1984) at the University of Leicester. It exploits VNTRs (Variable Number Tandem Repeats) — hypervariable satellite DNA regions where repeat number differs between individuals, generating a unique banding pattern.
From blood, hair follicles, buccal cells, semen, or any nucleated cells
Cut with restriction endonucleases (e.g., EcoRI, HindIII) at specific recognition sites
Fragments separated by size — smaller fragments migrate farther on agarose gel
DNA transferred to nitrocellulose/nylon membrane; denatured to single strands
Radioactive/fluorescent VNTR probes hybridize to complementary sequences → X-ray film reveals unique banding pattern (DNA fingerprint)
Applications
Forensic identification · Paternity/maternity testing · Disaster victim identification · Population genetics · Wildlife conservation · Immigration disputes · Genetic disease detection
Practice PYQs — Test Yourself
Click an option to check your answer. Modeled on actual NEET, CSIR NET, and GATE questions.
Last-Minute Power Points ⚡
🧬 DNA Structure — Must Know
- → Watson & Crick (1953) · X-ray data from Rosalind Franklin
- → Right-handed B-form · 2 nm diameter · 3.4 nm pitch · 10 bp/turn · 0.34 nm/bp
- → Antiparallel strands · A=T (2H bonds) · G≡C (3H bonds)
- → Sugar-phosphate backbone OUTSIDE · Bases INSIDE (stacking stabilizes)
- → Chargaff: [A]=[T], [G]=[C], A+G = T+C
🔄 Replication — Must Know
- → Semiconservative · Meselson-Stahl (1958)
- → Bidirectional · Single origin (oriC) in E. coli · Multiple origins in eukaryotes
- → DNA Pol only adds 5’→3′ · Needs primer (3′-OH) · Proofreading by 3’→5′ exonuclease
- → Leading = continuous · Lagging = Okazaki fragments (discontinuous)
- → Telomerase = reverse transcriptase · Prevents chromosome shortening
- → DNA Pol I removes primers (5’→3′ exonuclease) · Ligase seals nicks
🎙 Transcription — Must Know
- → Template strand = antisense (3’→5′) · mRNA = 5’→3′
- → Prokaryote: One RNA Pol · –10 (TATAAT) & –35 (TTGACA)
- → Eukaryote: RNA Pol I (rRNA) · Pol II (mRNA) · Pol III (tRNA)
- → α-Amanitin: Pol II most sensitive (nm) · Pol III moderate · Pol I resistant
- → Pre-mRNA processing: 5′ Cap (7mG) → Poly-A tail → Splicing (GT-AG rule)
- → Spliceosome = U1, U2, U4, U5, U6 snRNPs
🔠 Genetic Code + Translation — Must Know
- → Triplet · Non-overlapping · Commaless · Degenerate · Universal · Non-ambiguous
- → Start codon: AUG (Met/fMet) · Stop codons: UAA, UAG, UGA
- → Only Met (AUG) and Trp (UGG) have one codon · Leu/Ser/Arg have 6
- → Prokaryote: 70S (50S + 30S) · SD sequence · IF-1,2,3
- → Eukaryote: 80S (60S + 40S) · Kozak sequence · eIF-2 (GTP)
- → Peptidyl transferase = 23S/28S rRNA → Ribosome is a RIBOZYME
- → Wobble at 3rd codon position · Inosine pairs with U, C, A
For NEET 2026: Every line of NCERT Class 12 Chapter 6 is fair game. Master all labeled diagrams: DNA structure, replication fork, transcription unit, and lac operon. Memorize all enzyme names and their specific functions.
For CSIR NET Part C: Focus on mechanisms — WHY enzymes work, pathway logic (especially lac operon dual regulation), and experimental design interpretation (Meselson-Stahl, pulse-chase labeling).
For GATE Life Science: Be comfortable with numerical problems — GC% ↔ Tm calculations, reading frame analysis (open reading frames), base composition from Chargaff ratios, and replication origin firing time calculations.
