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TRANSCRIPTION Sections 5.2 & 5.3.

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Presentation on theme: "TRANSCRIPTION Sections 5.2 & 5.3."— Presentation transcript:

1 TRANSCRIPTION Sections 5.2 & 5.3

2 Recall… Protein synthesis occurs in two distinct stages:
Transcription, in the nucleus Product: mRNA Translation, in the cytoplasm Product: polypeptide

3 Transcription The process of copying DNA’s instructions for building a protein. The instructions are copied into a complementary mRNA molecule.

4 Overview Three stages: Initiation Elongation Termination

5 Stage Events Initiation RNA polymerase binds to the DNA and unwinds it Elongation RNA polymerase creates a complementary mRNA strand. It adds on ribonucleotides in the 5’  3’ direction Termination Translation ceases, and the mRNA is released

6 Terminology The strand used as the template is the “template strand”

7 The strand not used as the template is the “coding strand.”
The mRNA is identical to the coding strand except for one difference... uracil in RNA is complementary to adenine in DNA coding strand

8 The details of eukaryotic transcription
Section 5.3 The details of eukaryotic transcription

9 Initiation RNA polymerase binds to a promoter region located upstream of the gene The promoter region is high in A-T base pairs Only two H-bonds; easy to break RNA polymerase unzips the double strands in order to expose the bases

10 Initiation Binding to promoter Unzipping the DNA

11 Elongation RNA polymerase builds an mRNA strand
Incorporates ribonucleotides that are complementary to the template DNA Catalyzes formation of phosphodiester bonds A primer is not required

12 Elongation

13 Transcription (like replication) occurs in the 5’  3’ direction
(ribonucleotides are added on to the 3’ end of the nascent strand) The promoter does not get transcribed

14 Termination A terminator sequence is located at the end of the gene
Eukaryotes vs. prokaryotes: different sequences RNA polymerase recognizes the terminator, and releases the mRNA strand

15 Termination

16 After transcription… The mRNA will exit the nucleus
Transcription of mRNA  protein will occur in the cytoplasm BUT Before it exits, the mRNA is modified

17 Post-transcriptional modifications
“Primary transcript” – the newly-built mRNA Must be modified before it exits the nucleus. Why? remove non-coding regions protect the mRNA from cytoplasmic nucleases and phosphatases (enzymes that can degrade the RNA)

18 Modifications Splicing Add 5’ cap
Add poly-A tail addition (“polyadenylation”)

19 Splicing removal of non-coding regions (introns) in the transcript
spliceosomes (a) excise the introns, and (b) ligate the exons spliced introns are degraded in the nucleus

20 5’ cap is added poly-A tail is added 7-methyl guanosine
200 adenine nucleotides Catalyzed by poly-A polymerase

21

22 primary transcript (modification)  mRNA TRANSCRIPT
Following modification, the primary transcript is now called the “mRNA transcript” primary transcript (modification)  mRNA TRANSCRIPT It is ready to leave the nucleus!!

23 Transcription: Quality control
no proofreading mechanisms (unlike replication) more errors in transcription than replication but more copies of mRNA in a cell than DNA  errors are less detrimental Backup mechanism: redundancy of the genetic code used in translation *more on this later on…

24 Homework Pg. 249 #1-9


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