Chapter 17 From Gene to Protein.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Gene  Protein Chapter 17.
Advertisements

Chapter 17~ From Gene to Protein
FROM GENE TO PROTEIN.
Toe-Tapping Transcription and Translation From Gene to Protein... Chapter 17.
Chapter 17 AP Biology From Gene to Protein.
Protein Synthesis DNA at work.
Transcription: Synthesizing RNA from DNA
Protein Synthesis The genetic code – the sequence of nucleotides in DNA – is ultimately translated into the sequence of amino acids in proteins – gene.
From Gene To Protein Chapter 17. The Connection Between Genes and Proteins Proteins - link between genotype (what DNA says) and phenotype (physical expression)
Protein Synthesis AP Biology Ch. 17.
Chapter 17 Notes From Gene to Protein.
Chapter 17: From Gene to Protein
Chapter 17 Warm-Up 1. Explain the contribution that Beadle and Tatum made to understanding the role of DNA. 2. Compare and contrast DNA to RNA. 3. What.
A PowerPoint presentation by Gene Tempest
Chapter 17~ From Gene to Protein.
Chapter 17 From Gene to Protein.
AP Biology Ch. 17 From Gene to Protein.
From Gene to Protein Chapter 17.
Gene to protein The two main processes that link the gene to protein are: RNA transcription and translation. The bridge between DNA and protein synthesis.
What is the job of p53? What does a cell need to build p53? Or any other protein?
From Gene to Protein Transcription – the synthesis of RNA from the DNA template –messenger RNA (mRNA) – carries a genetic message from the DNA in the.
The initial RNA transcript is spliced into mature mRNA
The information content of DNA is in the form of specific sequences of nucleotides The DNA inherited by an organism leads to specific traits by dictating.
From Gene to Protein A.P. Biology. Regulatory sites Promoter (RNA polymerase binding site) Start transcription DNA strand Stop transcription Typical Gene.
Chapter 17 From Gene to Protein
From Gene To Protein Chapter 17. From Gene to Protein The “Central Dogma of Molecular Biology” is DNA  RNA  protein Meaning that our DNA codes our RNA.
PROTEIN SYNTHESIS. Protein Synthesis: overview  DNA is the code that controls everything in your body In order for DNA to work the code that it contains.
Transcription & Translation Chapter 17 (in brief) Biology – Campbell Reece.
PROTEIN SYNTHESIS The Blueprint of Life: From DNA to Protein.
Protein Synthesis. Transcription DNA  mRNA Occurs in the nucleus Translation mRNA  tRNA  AA Occurs at the ribosome.
Chapter 17 From Gene to Protein. Gene Expression DNA leads to specific traits by synthesizing proteins Gene expression – the process by which DNA directs.
From DNA to Proteins. Same two steps produce all proteins: 1) DNA is transcribed to form RNA –Occurs in the nucleus –RNA moves into cytoplasm 2) RNA is.
Ch. 17 From Gene to Protein. Genes specify proteins via transcription and translation DNA controls metabolism by directing cells to make specific enzymes.
Chapter 17 From Gene to Protein.
Protein Synthesis Chapter 17. Protein synthesis  DNA  Responsible for hereditary information  DNA divided into genes  Gene:  Sequence of nucleotides.
From Gene to Protein AP Biology Mrs. King The Connection between Genes and Proteins The study of metabolic defects provided evidence that genes specify.
PROTEIN SYNTHESIS HOW GENES ARE EXPRESSED. BEADLE AND TATUM-1930’S One Gene-One Enzyme Hypothesis.
Protein Synthesis.
From Gene to Protein n ie: Transcription & Translation.
Genes and Protein Synthesis
Lecture #7Date _________ n Chapter 17~ From Gene to Protein.
Ch 17 From Gene to Protein Proteins: the links from genotype to phenotype.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint Lectures for Biology, Seventh Edition Neil Campbell and Jane Reece.
RNA processing and Translation. Eukaryotic cells modify RNA after transcription (RNA processing) During RNA processing, both ends of the primary transcript.
Protein Synthesis RNA, Transcription, and Translation.
N Chapter 17~ From Gene to Protein. Protein Synthesis: overview n One gene-one enzyme hypothesis (Beadle and Tatum) –The function of a gene is to dictate.
Protein Synthesis Chapter 9 p Protein Synthesis Gene- segment of DNA that codes for a protein. Gene Expression/ Protein Synthesis is the process.
Protein Synthesis. One Gene – One Enzyme Protein Synthesis.
FROM DNA TO PROTEIN Transcription – Translation
AP Biology Crosby High School
Protein synthesis DNA is the genetic code for all life. DNA literally holds the instructions that make all life possible. Even so, DNA does not directly.
From Gene to Protein ie: Transcription & Translation.
Gene Expression: From Gene to Protein
From Gene to Protein Chapter 2 and 7 of IB Bio book.
From Gene to Protein Central Dogma of Biology: DNA  RNA  Protein
Chapter 14~ From Gene to Protein
Translation Now that the mRNA is created, we must translate that information into protein. Transfer RNA (tRNA) will be used in this process. This process.
Gene Expression: From Gene to Protein
Chapter 17 – From Gene to Protein
Chapter 17 From Gene to Protein.
Gene Expression: From Gene to Protein
Protein Synthesis The genetic code – the sequence of nucleotides in DNA – is ultimately translated into the sequence of amino acids in proteins – gene.
Protein Synthesis.
Chapter 17~ From Gene to Protein
CHAPTER 17 FROM GENE TO PROTEIN.
Protein Synthesis The genetic code – the sequence of nucleotides in DNA – is ultimately translated into the sequence of amino acids in proteins – gene.
Transcription/ Translation
Lecture #7 Date _________
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 17 From Gene to Protein

Protein Synthesis: overview One gene-one enzyme hypothesis (Beadle and Tatum) One gene-one polypeptide (protein) hypothesis Transcription synthesis of RNA under the direction of DNA (mRNA) Translation actual synthesis of a polypeptide under the direction of mRNA

The Triplet Code The genetic instructions for a polypeptide chain are ‘written’ in the DNA as a series of 3-nucleotide ‘words’ Codon = one three nucleotide sequence ‘U’ (uracil) replaces ‘T’ in RNA

Transcription, I RNA polymerase Promoter region on DNA pries DNA apart and hooks RNA nucleotides together from the DNA code Promoter region on DNA where RNA polymerase attaches and where initiation of RNA begins Terminator region sequence that signals the end of transcription Transcription unit stretch of DNA transcribed into an RNA molecule

Transcription, II Initiation Elongation Termination transcription factors mediate the binding of RNA polymerase to an initiation sequence (TATA box) Elongation RNA polymerase continues unwinding DNA and adding nucleotides to the 3’ end Termination RNA polymerase reaches terminator sequence

mRNA modification 1) 5’ cap: modified guanine; protection; recognition site for ribosomes 2) 3’ tail: poly(A) tail (adenine); protection; recognition; transport 3) RNA splicing: exons (expressed sequences) kept,introns (intervening sequences) spliced out; spliceosome

Translation, I mRNA from nucleus is ‘read’ along its codons by tRNA’s anticodons at the ribosome tRNA anticodon (nucleotide triplet); amino acid

Translation, II rRNA P site A site E site site of mRNA codon & tRNA anticodon coupling P site holds the tRNA carrying the growing polypeptide chain A site holds the tRNA carrying the next amino acid to be added to the chain E site discharged tRNA’s

Translation, III Initiation Elongation Termination Polyribosomes union of mRNA, tRNA, small ribosomal subunit; followed by large subunit Elongation codon recognition peptide bond formation translocation Termination ‘stop’ codon reaches ‘A’ site Polyribosomes translation of mRNA by many ribosomes (many copies of a polypeptide very quickly) Translation, III

Mutations: genetic material changes in a cell Point mutations: Changes in 1 or a few base pairs in a single gene Base-pair substitutions: Silent mutations no effect on protein Missense mutations Changes to a different protein through conformation or amino acid sequence alterations Nonsense mutations Changes to a stop codon and a nonfunctional protein Base-pair insertions or deletions Frameshift Mutation Additions or losses of nucleotide pairs in a gene; alters the ‘reading frame’ of triplets Mutagens physical and chemical agents that change DNA