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What is bioinformatics? Answer: It depends who you ask.

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Presentation on theme: "What is bioinformatics? Answer: It depends who you ask."— Presentation transcript:

1 What is bioinformatics? Answer: It depends who you ask.

2 Various definitions: The science of using information to understand biology. The science that uses computational approaches to answer biological questions. (subtle distinction - bioinformatics is subset of the larger field of computational biology). Organizing and analyzing complex data resulting from molecular and biochemical techniques

3 What skills should a bioinformatician have? You should have fairly deep background in molecular biology. You must understand the central dogma of molecular biology. You should have experience with programming. You should be comfortable working in a command line computing environment.

4 Why teach a course in bioinformatics? Part of answer: Bioinformaticians are needed.

5 From Science ‘next wave’: Imagine a job fair with 50 high-tech companies competing to recruit one of the handful of properly qualified scientists who bothered to show up. Sounds like a pie-in- the-sky dream, doesn't it? But according to Victor Markovitz, vice president of bioinformatics systems at Gene Logic Inc., this actually happened at a recent biotech fair. And it is more or less typical of the prevailing global job market in bioinformatics and computational biology, where there are many more headhunters than heads.Gene Logic Inc.

6 Why now?? Easy Answer: * The astronomical growth of Genbank and The Protein Data Bank!

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9 More complex answer: The way biology is done is changing. *one of goals of this course: to illustrate the ways biology is changing

10 Biology is scaling up. Genetics lab don’t do things one gene at a time anymore. Genetics lab use a ‘Genomic Approach’. *These types of large scale projects required, more than anything, a change in mindset: 1.Focus isn't everything. 2.Do things smarter and save work. 3.Think big!

11 Collaborative projects require centralized databases and systematic methods for sharing data. A good example is the C. elegans genome project.

12 . Knowledge is built by constructing relations between different kinds of data. SMD (Stanford Microarray Database) stores raw and normalized data from microarray experiments. The data for a given gene is linked to a mass of genetic information, including an expression history for that entity, a description of the associated protein, chromosomal location, etc.

13 . Data is a resource that can be mined. Beyond the initial project, data is still a valuable resource. Results from numerous research projects that might themselves be of minimal significance, can often be put together to make generalizations or observations that could be quite significant.

14 Why teach a course in bioinformatics? Part of answer: Biologists who understand bioinformatics are needed.

15 Introduction to Molecular Biology

16 Overview The DNA-based Genome Biology’s Central Dogma Genotype to Phenotype

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18 A & G = Purines C & T = Pyrimidines

19 Purine Pyrimidine

20 G-C and A-T pairing.

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26 Double-stranded DNA is peeled apart to replicate DNA

27 The 2 daughter molecules are identical to each other and exact duplicates of the original (assuming error- free replication).

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29 One Chromosome is one long twisted, dramatically compacted DNA molecule. The average length of a human chromosome is 130 million b.p.

30 Genes are defined segments of DNA

31 The information content of the DNA molecule consists of the order of bases (A, C, G, and T) along the length of the molecule.

32 How Genes are Expressed- the Central Dogma.

33 RNA is quite similar to DNA, but usually single- stranded.

34 In RNA, “U” replaces “T “

35 Transcription = RNA synthesis Translation = Protein synthesis

36 Eukaryotic transcription operates ‘gene by gene’.

37 One strand of DNA is copied (sense strand); the antisense strand is never transcribed.

38 Transcription produces an RNA ‘copy’ of a gene (DNA) animation

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40 Eukaryotic transcripts (mRNA) are processed and leave the nucleus

41 The mRNA are translated in the cytoplasm

42 Three consecutive bases in the mRNA form one codon No exceptions- the genetic code is a triplet code.

43 tRNA are the ‘bilingual’ molecules

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45 The genetic code is the codon-amino acid conversion table

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49 Two amino acids are joined by a peptide bond.

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51 http://academy.d20.co.edu/kadets/lundbe rg/DNA_animations/protein.mov

52 The immediate product of translation is the primary protein structure

53 The primary sequence dictates the secondary and tertiary structure of the protein

54 Genetic information, stored in DNA, is conveyed as proteins

55 A mutation in the DNA may alter the primary sequence of the corresponding protein

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57 Alteration of the primary sequence of the polypeptide may alter the secondary and tertiary sequence of the protein. The altered protein may not function properly.

58 Sickle-cell anemia is caused by one amino acid change.

59 One nucleotide change is responsible for the one amino acid change.

60 A single base-pair mutation is often the cause of a human genetic disease.

61 mid 1970s- The discovery of ‘split genes’. Split genes are the norm in eukaryotic organisms.

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63 Exon = Genetic code Intron = Non-essential DNA ? ?

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65 The mechanism of splicing is not well understood.

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69 Molecular evolution is the study of organismal relationship, based in part on the comparison of conserved exon sequences. Comparison of intron sequences are rare. Why?

70 . Most mutations in introns are (apparently) harmless Consequently, intron sequences diverge much quicker than exons.

71 Prokaryotic cells- No splicing (i.e. – no split genes) Eukaryotic cells- Intronless genes are rare.

72 Promoters are DNA regions that control when genes are activated.

73 Exon encode the information that determines what product will be produced. Promoters encode the information that determines when the protein will be produced.

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75 Deomonstration of a consensus sequence. De

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79 The End

80 The IUPAC-IUB symbols for nucleotide nomenclature are shown below: SymbolMeaning SymbolMeaning GGuanine K G or T AAdenineSG or C CCytosineWA or T TThymineHA or C or T UUracilBG or T or C RPurine (A or G)VG or C or A YPyrimidine (C,T)DG or T or A MA or CNG, A, T, or C

81 List of Amino Acids and Their Abbreviations amino acid3 letter code1 letter code glycineGlyG alanineAlaA valineValV leucineLeuL isoleucineIleI methionineMetM phenylalanin e PheF tryptophanTrpW prolineProP

82 Polar (hydrophilic) serineSerS threonineThrT cysteineCysC tyrosineTyrY asparagineAsnN glutamineGlnQ Electrically Charged (negative and hydrophilic) aspartic acidAspD glutamic acidGluE Electrically Charged (positive and hydrophilic) lysineLysK arginineArgR Histidine Others X = unknown HisH * = STOP


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