From Gene to Protein How Genes Work (Ch. 17).

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From Gene to Protein How Genes Work
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From Gene to Protein How Genes Work.
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Presentation transcript:

From Gene to Protein How Genes Work (Ch. 17)

What do genes code for? How does DNA code for cells & bodies? DNA how are cells and bodies made from the instructions in DNA DNA proteins cells bodies

DNA gets all the glory, but proteins do all the work! The “Central Dogma” Flow of genetic information in a cell How do we move information from DNA to proteins? transcription translation DNA RNA protein trait To get from the chemical language of DNA to the chemical language of proteins requires 2 major stages: transcription and translation DNA gets all the glory, but proteins do all the work! replication

Metabolism taught us about genes Inheritance of metabolic diseases suggested that genes coded for enzymes each disease (phenotype) is caused by non-functional gene product lack of an enzyme Taysachs PKU (phenylketonuria) albinism Am I just the sum of my proteins? metabolic pathway disease disease disease disease A B C D E     enzyme 1 enzyme 2 enzyme 3 enzyme 4

one gene : one enzyme hypothesis Beadle & Tatum 1941 | 1958 one gene : one enzyme hypothesis George Beadle Edward Tatum "for their discovery that genes act by regulating definite chemical events"

From gene to protein DNA mRNA protein trait nucleus cytoplasm aa a nucleus cytoplasm transcription translation DNA mRNA protein ribosome trait

From DNA nucleic acid language to RNA nucleic acid language Transcription From DNA nucleic acid language to RNA nucleic acid language

RNA DNA RNA ribose sugar N-bases single stranded lots of RNAs uracil instead of thymine U : A C : G single stranded lots of RNAs mRNA, tRNA, rRNA, siRNA… transcription DNA RNA

Transcription Making mRNA transcribed DNA strand = template strand untranscribed DNA strand = coding strand same sequence as RNA synthesis of complementary RNA strand enzyme RNA polymerase coding strand 3 A G C A T C G T 5 A G A A A G T C T T C T C A T A C G DNA T 3 C G T A A T 5 G G C A U C G U T 3 C unwinding G T A G C A rewinding mRNA RNA polymerase template strand build RNA 53 5

Which gene is read? Promoter region Enhancer region binding site before beginning of gene TATA box binding site binding site for RNA polymerase & transcription factors Enhancer region binding site far upstream of gene turns transcription on HIGH

Transcription Factors Initiation complex transcription factors bind to promoter region suite of proteins which bind to DNA hormones? turn on or off transcription trigger the binding of RNA polymerase to DNA

Matching bases of DNA & RNA Match RNA bases to DNA bases on one of the DNA strands C U G A G U G U C U G C A A C U A A G C RNA polymerase U 5' A 3' G A C C T G G T A C A G C T A G T C A T C G T A C C G T

Eukaryotic genes have junk! Eukaryotic genes are not continuous exons = the real gene expressed / coding DNA introns = the junk inbetween sequence introns come out! intron = noncoding (inbetween) sequence eukaryotic DNA exon = coding (expressed) sequence

mRNA splicing Post-transcriptional processing eukaryotic mRNA needs work after transcription primary transcript = pre-mRNA mRNA splicing edit out introns make mature mRNA transcript eukaryotic RNA is about 10% of eukaryotic gene. intron = noncoding (inbetween) sequence ~10,000 bases eukaryotic DNA exon = coding (expressed) sequence pre-mRNA primary mRNA transcript ~1,000 bases mature mRNA transcript spliced mRNA

Splicing must be accurate No room for mistakes! a single base added or lost throws off the reading frame AUGCGGCTATGGGUCCGAUAAGGGCCAU AUGCGGUCCGAUAAGGGCCAU AUG|CGG|UCC|GAU|AAG|GGC|CAU Met|Arg|Ser|Asp|Lys|Gly|His AUGCGGCTATGGGUCCGAUAAGGGCCAU AUGCGGGUCCGAUAAGGGCCAU AUG|CGG|GUC|CGA|UAA|GGG|CCA|U Met|Arg|Val|Arg|STOP|

we just broke a biological “rule”! RNA splicing enzymes Whoa! I think we just broke a biological “rule”! snRNPs small nuclear RNA proteins Spliceosome several snRNPs recognize splice site sequence cut & paste gene snRNPs exon intron snRNA 5' 3' spliceosome exon excised intron 5' 3' lariat mature mRNA No, not smurfs! “snurps”

More post-transcriptional processing Need to protect mRNA on its trip from nucleus to cytoplasm enzymes in cytoplasm attack mRNA protect the ends of the molecule add 5 GTP cap add poly-A tail longer tail, mRNA lasts longer: produces more protein eukaryotic RNA is about 10% of eukaryotic gene. A 3' poly-A tail mRNA 5' 5' cap 3' G P 50-250 A’s

From nucleic acid language to amino acid language Translation From nucleic acid language to amino acid language

How does mRNA code for proteins? TACGCACATTTACGTACGCGG DNA 4 ATCG AUGCGUGUAAAUGCAUGCGCC mRNA 4 AUCG ? MetArgValAsnAlaCysAla protein 20 How can you code for 20 amino acids with only 4 nucleotide bases (A,U,G,C)?

mRNA codes for proteins in triplets TACGCACATTTACGTACGCGG DNA codon AUGCGUGUAAAUGCAUGCGCC mRNA ? Met Arg Val Asn Ala CysAla protein

The code Code for ALL life! strongest support for a common origin for all life Code is redundant several codons for each amino acid 3rd base “wobble” Why is the wobble good? Strong evidence for a single origin in evolutionary theory. Start codon AUG methionine Stop codons UGA, UAA, UAG

How are the codons matched to amino acids? 3 5 DNA TACGCACATTTACGTACGCGG 5 3 mRNA AUGCGUGUAAAUGCAUGCGCC codon 3 5 UAC Met GCA Arg tRNA CAU Val anti-codon amino acid

Transfer RNA structure “Clover leaf” structure anticodon on “clover leaf” end amino acid attached on 3 end

tryptophan attached to tRNATrp tRNATrpbinds to UGG condon of mRNA Loading tRNA AminoacyltRNAsynthetase enzyme which bonds amino acid to tRNA bond requires energy ATP AMP bond is unstable so it can release amino acid at ribosome easily Trp C=O Trp Trp C=O OH H2O The tRNA-amino acid bond is unstable. This makes it easy for the tRNA to later give up the amino acid to a growing polypeptide chain in a ribosome. OH O C=O O activating enzyme tRNATrp A C C U G G mRNA anticodon tryptophan attached to tRNATrp tRNATrpbinds to UGG condon of mRNA

Ribosomes Facilitate coupling of tRNAanticodon to mRNA codon Structure organelle or enzyme? Structure ribosomal RNA (rRNA) & proteins 2 subunits large small E P A

Ribosomes A site (aminoacyl-tRNA site) P site (peptidyl-tRNA site) holds tRNA carrying next amino acid to be added to chain P site (peptidyl-tRNA site) holds tRNA carrying growing polypeptide chain E site (exit site) emptytRNA leaves ribosome from exit site Met U A C 5' U G A 3' E P A

Building a polypeptide 1 2 3 Initiation mRNA, ribosome subunits, initiator tRNA come together Elongation adding amino acids based on codons Termination STOP codon = Release factor Leu Val release factor Ser Met Met Met Met Leu Leu Leu Ala Trp tRNA C A G U A C U A C G A C A C G A C A 5' U 5' U A C G A C 5' A A A U G C U G U A U G C U G A U A U G C U G A A U 5' A A U mRNA A U G C U G 3' 3' 3' 3' A C C U G G U A A E P A 3'

start of a secretory pathway Protein targeting Destinations: secretion nucleus mitochondria chloroplasts cell membrane cytoplasm etc… Signal peptide address label start of a secretory pathway

Can you tell the story? exon intron 5' GTP cap RNA polymerase DNA Can you tell the story? amino acids exon intron tRNA pre-mRNA 5' GTP cap mature mRNA aminoacyltRNA synthetase poly-A tail large ribosomal subunit 3' polypeptide 5' tRNA small ribosomal subunit E P A ribosome

Protein Synthesis in Prokaryotes (Ch. 18) Bacterial chromosome Protein Synthesis in Prokaryotes (Ch. 18) Transcription mRNA Psssst… no nucleus! Cell membrane Cell wall

Prokaryote vs. Eukaryote genes Prokaryotes DNA in cytoplasm circular chromosome naked DNA no introns Eukaryotes DNA in nucleus linear chromosomes DNA wound on histone proteins introns vs. exons Walter Gilbert hypothesis: Maybe exons are functional units and introns make it easier for them to recombine, so as to produce new proteins with new properties through new combinations of domains. Introns give a large area for cutting genes and joining together the pieces without damaging the coding region of the gene…. patching genes together does not have to be so precise. intron = noncoding (inbetween) sequence eukaryotic DNA introns come out! exon = coding (expressed) sequence

Translation in Prokaryotes Transcription & translation are simultaneous in bacteria DNA is in cytoplasm no mRNA editing ribosomes read mRNA as it is being transcribed

Translation: prokaryotes vs. eukaryotes Differences between prokaryotes & eukaryotes time & physical separation between processes takes eukaryote ~1 hour from DNA to protein no RNA processing

Mutations (Ch. 17)

When do mutations affect the next generation? Point mutations single base change silent mutation no amino acid change redundancy in code missense change amino acid nonsense change to stop codon When do mutations affect the next generation?

Point mutation lead to Sickle cell anemia What kind of mutation? Missense!

Mutations Frameshift shift in the reading frame changes everything “downstream” insertions adding base(s) deletions losing base(s) Where would this mutation cause the most change: beginning or end of gene?

What’s the value of mutations?