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Protein Synthesis Chapter 17. Protein synthesis  DNA  Responsible for hereditary information  DNA divided into genes  Gene:  Sequence of nucleotides.

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Presentation on theme: "Protein Synthesis Chapter 17. Protein synthesis  DNA  Responsible for hereditary information  DNA divided into genes  Gene:  Sequence of nucleotides."— Presentation transcript:

1 Protein Synthesis Chapter 17

2 Protein synthesis  DNA  Responsible for hereditary information  DNA divided into genes  Gene:  Sequence of nucleotides  Determines amino acid sequence in proteins  Genes provide information to make proteins

3 Protein synthesis DNA RNA protein

4 Central Dogma  Mechanism of reading & expressing genes  Information passes from the genes (DNA) to an RNA copy  Directs sequence of amino acids to make proteins

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6 Protein synthesis  Transcription:  DNA sequence is copied into an RNA  Translation:  Information from the RNA is turned into an amino acid sequence

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9 RNA  RNA (ribonucleic acid)  Single strand  Sugar –ribose (-OH on 2’ carbon)  Uracil instead of thymine

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12 RNA  mRNA:  Messenger RNA  Transcribes information from DNA  Codons  (3 nucleotides) CGU  mRNA  Codes for amino acids  rRNA:  Ribosomal RNA  Polypeptides are assembled

13 RNA  tRNA:  Transfer RNA  Transports aa to build proteins  Positions aa on rRNA  Anticodons  (3 complementary nucleotides) GCA

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16 Cracking the code  Francis Crick  Codons (Triplet code)-mRNA  Each codon corresponds to an aa  20 amino acids  Reading frame  Reading symbols in correct groupings

17 Cracking the code  1 or 2 deletions or additions  Gene was transcribed incorrectly  3 deletions  Reading frame would shift  Gene was transcribed correctly

18 WHYDIDTHEREDCATEATTHEFATRAT WHYIDTHEREDCATEATTHEFATRAT WHYDTHEREDCATEATTHEFATRAT WHYTHEREDCATEATTHEFATRAT

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20 The code  Universal code  AGA codes for amino acid Arginine  Humans & bacteria  Genes from humans can be transcribed by mRNA from bacteria  Produce human proteins  Insulin

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22 Protein synthesis DNA RNA Protein Transcription Translation

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24 Prokaryotes  Transcription  Getting the code from DNA  Template strand  Strand of DNA that is transcribed or read  Transcribed RNA is complementary to the DNA

25 Prokaryotes  Coding strand  DNA strand not coded  Same sequence of nucleotides as the RNA transcript  Only T instead of U.

26 Prokaryotes  RNA polymerase  Enzyme  Adds nucleotides to the 3’end  5’to3’ direction  Does not need a primer to start

27 Prokaryotes  Stages of transcription  Initiation  Elongation  Termination

28 Prokaryotes  Initiation  Promoters:  Sequence on DNA where transcription starts  -35 sequence TTGACA  -10 sequence TATAAT  Sequences are not transcribed

29 Prokaryotes  RNA polymerase binds promoter  Unwinds DNA  Uses an ATP or GTP to start  Uses phosphate group  Transcription bubble:  RNA polymerase, DNA & growing RNA strand

30 Prokaryotes  Termination  Stop signal  Sequence on DNA  RNA transcript signals polymerase to detach from DNA  RNA strand separates from the DNA

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33 Prokaryotes  Translation  Passing the code to make a polypeptide  mRNA binds to rRNA on the ribosome  mRNA attaches so only one codon is exposed at a time

34 Ribosome  Located in the cytoplasm  Site of translation  2 subunits composed of protein & RNA  Small (20 proteins and 1 RNA)  Large (30 proteins and 2 RNA)  3 sites on ribosome surface involved in protein synthesis  E, P, and A sites

35 Ribosome

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37 Prokaryotes  tRNA (anti-codon)  Complementary sequence  Binds to mRNA  tRNA carries a specific amino acid  Adds to growing polypeptide  45 tRNA’s

38 Prokaryotes  Aminoacyl-t-RNA synthetases  Activating enzymes  Link correct tRNA code to correct aa  One for each 20 amino acids  Some read one code, some read several codes

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42 Prokaryotes  Nonsense codes  UAA, UAG, UGA code to stop  AUG codes for start as well as methionine  Ribosome starts at the first AUG it comes across in the code

43 Prokaryotes  Translation  1. Initiation  2. Elongation  3. Termination

44 Prokaryotes  Initiation  Initiation complex  1. tRNA with formylmethionine attached binds to a small ribosome  2. Initiation factors position the tRNA on the P site  3. A site (aminoacyl) where other tRNA’s form

45 Prokaryotes  4. tRNA is positioned on to the mRNA at AUG  5. Attachment of large ribosomal unit

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47 Prokaryotes  Elongation factors  Help second tRNA bind to the A-site  Two amino acids bind (peptide bond)  Translocation:  Ribosome moves 3 more nucleotides along mRNA in the 5’to 3’ direction

48 Prokaryotes  Initial tRNA moves to E site  Released  New tRNA moves into A site  Continues to add more aa to form the polypeptide

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52 Prokaryotes  Release factors:  Proteins that release newly made polypeptides  Codon (UAG, UAA, UGA)  Release factor binds to the codon  Polypeptide chain is released from A site

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55 Eukaryotes  Transcription (nucleus)  Initiation  Elongation  Termination

56 Eukaryotes  Initiation  Transcription Initiation Complex is formed  Transcription factors bind first to the promoter  RNA pol II binds DNA  Starts to transcribe

57 Fig. 17-7b Elongation RNA polymerase Nontemplate strand of DNA RNA nucleotides 3 end Direction of transcription (“downstream”) Template strand of DNA Newly made RNA 3 5 5

58 Fig. 17-UN1 Transcription unit Promoter RNA transcript RNA polymerase Template strand of DNA 5 5 53 3 3

59 Eukaryotes  Termination  Polyadenylation signal sequence  Recognized by RNA polymerase II  mRNA is released

60 Transcription D:\Chapter_17\A_PowerPoint_Lectures\17_Lectu re_Presentation\1707TranscriptionIntroA.html

61 Eukaryotes  mRNA is modified  Nucleus  RNA processing

62 Eukaryotes  5’ cap  Addition of a GTP  5’ phosphate of the first base of mRNA  Methyl group is added to the GTP  3’poly-A-tail  Several A’s on the end of the mRNA

63 Eukaryotes  Introns:  non-coding sequences of nucleic acids  Exons:  coding sequences of nucleic acids

64 Euraryotes  RNA splicing  Cut out introns  Reconnect exons  snRNP’s (small nuclear RNA’s)  Spliceosome:  Many snRNP’s come together & remove introns

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68 Eukaryotes  Translation  1. Initiating aa is methionine  2. Initiation complex is more detailed

69 Fig. 17-16b P site (Peptidyl-tRNA binding site) A site (Aminoacyl- tRNA binding site) E site (Exit site) mRNA binding site Large subunit Small subunit (b) Schematic model showing binding sites Next amino acid to be added to polypeptide chain Amino end Growing polypeptide mRNA tRNA EP A E Codons (c) Schematic model with mRNA and tRNA 5 3

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71 Second nucleotide

72 <>

73 Fig. 17-UN3 mRNA Ribosome Polypeptide

74 <> D:\Chapter_17\A_PowerPoint_Lectures\17_Le cture_Presentation\1718TranslationIntroA.html

75 Similarities DNA RNA Protein Transcription Translation

76 Differences in gene expression  Transcription  1. Prokaryotes one RNA polymerase  Eukaryotes 3 RNA polymerases (poli-II mRNA synthesis)  2. Prokaryotes mRNA contain transcripts of several genes  Eukaryotes only one gene  3. Prokaryotes no nucleus so start translation before transcription is done

77 Differences in gene expression  3. Eukaryotes complete transcription before leaving the nucleus  4. Eukaryotes modify RNA Introns/exons  5. Prokaryotes Polymerase binds promoters  Eukaryotes transcription factors bind first then enzyme  6. Termination

78 Differences in gene expression  Translation  1. Prokaryotes start translation with AUG  Eukaryotes 5’cap initiates translation  2. Prokaryotes smaller ribosomes

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80 Mutations  Changes in genetic information  Point mutations:  Change in a single base pair  Sickle cell mutation

81 Mutations  Two types  1. Base-pair substitution  Exchange one nucleotide and base pair with another  Silent mutations  No effect on proteins

82 Mutations  Missense mutations:  Substitutions that change one aa for another  Little effect

83 Mutations  Nonsense mutations  Point mutation codes for stop codon  Stops translation too soon  Shortens protein  Non-functional proteins

84 Mutations  2. Insertions or deletions  Additions or losses of nucleotides  Frameshift mutations  Improperly grouped codons  Nonfuctional proteins

85 Fig. 17-23 Wild-type 3 DNA template strand 5 5 5 3 3 Stop Carboxyl end Amino end Protein mRNA 3 3 3 5 5 5 A instead of G U instead of C Silent (no effect on amino acid sequence) Stop T instead of C 3 3 3 5 5 5 A instead of G Stop Missense A instead of T U instead of A 3 3 3 5 5 5 Stop Nonsense No frameshift, but one amino acid missing (3 base-pair deletion) Frameshift causing extensive missense (1 base-pair deletion) Frameshift causing immediate nonsense (1 base-pair insertion) 5 5 5 3 3 3 Stop missing 3 3 3 5 5 5 Stop 5 5 5 3 3 3 Extra U Extra A (a) Base-pair substitution(b) Base-pair insertion or deletion

86 Mutagens  Chemical or physical agents  Mutations in DNA


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