Chapter 05. Building Proteins DNA’s instructions are translated into thousands of proteins that do a cell’s work Protein molecules communicate and coordinate.

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Presentation transcript:

Chapter 05

Building Proteins DNA’s instructions are translated into thousands of proteins that do a cell’s work Protein molecules communicate and coordinate activities to perform life’s functions

Roles of Proteins Enzymes: Catalysts Have specific shapes that recognize specific molecules (active sites) Remain unchanged in reactions – can be used over again

Roles of Proteins Transporters Located in cell membrane Function as tunnels and pumps – allow material to pass in and out of cell

Transport Proteins Facilitated Diffusion (top) and Active Transport (bottom)

Roles of Proteins Movers Protein chains can change shape in response to energy (ATP)

Roles of Proteins Supporters Long chains of folded or coiled proteins Form sheets or tubes Help support and shape the cell

Types of Support Fibers Found in Cells

Roles of Proteins Regulators Enzymes that respond to feedback Notice when enough final product accumulates and stop assembly cycle

Roles of Proteins Defenders Antibodies – recognize and bind to foreign substances so that scavenger cells can destroy them

Structure of an Antibody Molecule

Roles of Proteins Communicators Example – hormones Act as cell’s chemical messengers

How Peptide Hormones Work

Proteins at Work Example: Actin and Myosin Make muscles work Small molecular changes produce large effects

Proteins at Work Actin and myosin line up and use ATP to shorten and lengthen themselves

Proteins at Work Muscle contraction is collective action of millions of actin-myosin combinations

Actin Microfilaments

Proteins Chains of amino acids linked by strong covalent bonds 20 different amino acids Shape and function of protein are determined by amino acid sequence

Proteins

Amino Acids All twenty contain carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen Two contain sulfur Ten have electrically charged side groups that are attracted to water – cluster on surface of protein Ten have no electrical charge – cluster on inside of protein

Some Common Amino Acids

Protein Folding Weak bonds between amino acids in a chain allow protein to fold Weak bonds are easily broken and reformed – provide flexibility and mobility

Protein Folding Water environment: fat- liking amino acids fold inside protein molecule, water- liking amino acid face out Fat environment: water-liking amino acids inside, fat- liking amino acids face out

Amino Acid Sequence Determines Protein Shape

Translation DNA is a chain of nucleotides Nucleotide triplets are translated into one of twenty different amino acids Average gene = 1200 nucleotides – translates into protein 400 amino acids long

Nucleotide Triplets are Translated into Amino Acids

How To Read the Genetic Code

Overview of Protein Synthesis Copy nucleotide sequence of a gene into messenger RNA (transcription) Attach amino acids to transfer RNA Bring transfer RNA with amino acids and messenger RNA to ribosome (protein synthesis factory) Ribosome links amino acids to make a protein

Overview of Protein Synthesis

Translation Energizing Amino Acids and Linking Them to Transfer RNA Key Players: Amino Acid Transfer RNA (adaptor) ATP Activating Enzyme

Transfer RNA

Translation Energizing Amino Acids and Linking Them to Transfer RNA 1. ATP and an amino acid dock on the activating enzyme and bond with each other

Translation Energizing Amino Acids and Linking Them to Transfer RNA 2. The amino acid is energized

Translation Energizing Amino Acids and Linking Them to Transfer RNA 3. Transfer RNA (adaptor) docks at a nearby site on the enzyme

Translation Energizing Amino Acids and Linking Them to Transfer RNA 4. The transfer RNA and the amino acid are joined. The spent ATP is released.

Translation Energizing Amino Acids and Linking Them to Transfer RNA 5. The transfer RNA is released with the amino acid attached

Translation Assembling the Protein Chain Key Players: Ribosomes- Organelles where proteins are manufactured Consists of two subunits Some attached to rough endoplasmic reticulum, others bound to cytoskeletal fibers

Translation Assembling the Protein Chain 1. Messenger RNA attaches to the smaller subunit of the ribosome

Translation Assembling the Protein Chain 2. The first transfer RNA matches the messenger RNA’s first three nucleotides

Translation Assembling the Protein Chain 3. The larger ribosome subunit joins with the smaller subunit

Translation Assembling the Protein Chain 4. The second transfer RNA the second dock on the messenger RNA

Translation Assembling the Protein Chain 5. The backbones of the first two amino acid link

Translation Assembling the Protein Chain 6. The messenger RNA shifts to the right and the first transfer RNA drops off

Translation Assembling the Protein Chain 7. The next transfer RNA arrives to add the next amino acid

Translation Assembling the Protein Chain 8. One by one, triplets are read and the protein chain grows

Translation Assembling the Protein Chain 9. The final triplet signals “stop”. No transfer RNA fits here.

Translation Assembling the Protein Chain 10. The ribosome separates and drops off the messenger RNA

Translation Assembling the Protein Chain 11. For efficiency, the messenger RNA is read by more than one ribosome simultaneously

Translation Overview

Overview of Protein Synthesis

The Flow of Information DNA’s message is transcribed into RNA and RNA is translated into protein.

The Unity of Biology All living creatures - Use DNA and RNA to store and replicate information Make nucleotides using similar pathways Translate nucleotide chains into proteins using the same twenty amino acids and the same genetic code Use similar translation apparatus Have similar proteins

Examples of Nature’s Unity Locomotion The cilia that propel many single cell creatures also serve to protect our lungs by sweeping up dirt particles. Bones A bone that was once part of a reptile’s jaw has evolved into a device in the ear for transmitting sound waves.