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Forensic DNA Analysis Protein Synthesis.

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Presentation on theme: "Forensic DNA Analysis Protein Synthesis."— Presentation transcript:

1 Forensic DNA Analysis Protein Synthesis

2 Overview: The Flow of Genetic Information
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 the synthesis of proteins Proteins are the links between genotype and phenotype Gene expression, the process by which DNA directs protein synthesis, includes two stages: transcription and translation

3 The central dogma… DNA RNA Protein
RNA is the intermediate between genes and the proteins for which they code Transcription is the synthesis of RNA under the direction of DNA Happens in the nucleus Transcription produces messenger RNA (mRNA), carries DNA message to ribosome Translation is the synthesis of a polypeptide, which occurs under the direction of mRNA Ribosomes are the sites of translation

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5 Codons There are 20 amino acids, but there are only four nucleotide bases in DNA The flow of information from gene to protein is based on a triplet code: a series of non-overlapping, three-nucleotide words A triplet=1 codon=1 amino acid

6 Overview During transcription, one of the two DNA strands called the template strand provides a template for ordering the sequence of nucleotides in an RNA transcript During translation, the mRNA base triplets, called codons, are read in the 5 to 3 direction Each codon specifies the order of amino acids to make a protein RNA bases: A, G, C, and Uracil instead of Thymine

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8 Transcription The three stages of transcription: Initiation
Promoters signal the initiation of RNA synthesis and transcription factors mediate the binding of RNA polymerase and the initiation of transcription Elongation RNA polymerase unwinds helix and adds RNA nucleotides to the 3’ end. DNA helix reforms after RNA Polymerase moves away Termination The polymerase falls off the DNA after the mRNA is formed

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10 mRNA processing mRNA is ‘processed’ after transcription to prepare it for leaving the nucleus to travel to the ribosome. It receives a 5’ cap and poly A tail to the 3’ end Parts of the mRNA transcript are removed (spliced) 5 Exon Intron Exon Intron Exon 3 Pre-mRNA 5 Cap Poly-A tail 1 30 31 104 105 146 Introns cut out and exons spliced together Coding segment mRNA 5 Cap Poly-A tail 1 146 5 UTR 3 UTR

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12 Translation The three stages of translation: Initiation
mRNA binds with the ribosome and moves along it until it reaches a start codon (AUG) Elongation tRNA (transfer) brings amino acids to the ribosome and adds them 1 by 1 based on the mRNA sequence Termination Codons (3-bases) are read and amino acids are added until the ribosome reaches a STOP codon (UGA, UAA, UAG)

13 GDP GDP Amino end of polypeptide E 3 mRNA Ribosome ready for
Fig Amino end of polypeptide E 3 mRNA Ribosome ready for next aminoacyl tRNA P site A site 5 GTP GDP E E P A P A Figure The elongation cycle of translation GDP GTP E P A

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15 Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

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17 Mutations Mutations are changes in the genetic material of a cell or virus Point mutations are chemical changes in just one base pair of a gene

18 Types of Point Mutation
A base-pair substitution replaces one nucleotide with another pair Silent mutations have no effect on the amino acid produced by a codon (codes for the same amino acid) Missense mutations still code for an amino acid, but not the right amino acid Nonsense mutations change an amino acid codon into a stop codon, nearly always leading to a nonfunctional protein Insertions and deletions are additions or losses of nucleotide pairs in a gene (changes the reading frame)

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

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