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Chapter 17 From Gene to Protein. Question? u How does DNA control a cell? u By controlling Protein Synthesis. u Proteins are the link between genotype.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 17 From Gene to Protein. Question? u How does DNA control a cell? u By controlling Protein Synthesis. u Proteins are the link between genotype."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 17 From Gene to Protein

2 Question? u How does DNA control a cell? u By controlling Protein Synthesis. u Proteins are the link between genotype and phenotype.

3 Central Dogma DNA Transcription RNA Translation Polypeptide

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5 Explanation u DNA - the Genetic code or genotype. u RNA - the message or instructions. u Polypeptide - the product for the phenotype.

6 DNA vs RNA DNA RNA Sugar – deoxyribose ribose Bases – ATGC AUGC Backbones – 2 1 Size – very large small Use – genetic code varied

7 Genetic Code u Sequence of DNA bases that describe which Amino Acid to place in what order in a polypeptide. u The genetic code gives the primary protein structure.

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9 Genetic Code u Is based on triplets of bases. u Has redundancy; some AA's have more than 1 code. u Proof - make artificial RNA and see what AAs are used in protein synthesis (early 1960’s).

10 Codon u A 3-nucleotide “word” in the Genetic Code. u 64 possible codons known.

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12 Codon Dictionary u Start- AUG (Met) u Stop- UAA UAG UGA u 60 codons for the other 19 AAs.

13 Code Redundancy u Wobble effect: Third base in a codon shows "wobble”. u First two bases are the most important in reading the code and giving the correct AA. The third base often doesn’t matter.

14 Code Evolution u The genetic code is nearly universal. u Ex: CCG = proline (all life) u Reason - The code must have evolved very early. Life on earth must share a common ancestor.

15 Reading Frame and Frame Shift u The “reading” of the code is every three bases (Reading Frame) u Ex: the red cat ate the rat u Frame shift – improper groupings of the bases u Ex: thr edc ata tet her at u The “words” only make sense if “read” in this grouping of three.

16 Transcription u Process of making RNA from a DNA template.

17 Transcription Steps 1. RNA Polymerase Binding 2. Initiation 3. Elongation 4. Termination

18 RNA Polymerase u Enzyme for building RNA from RNA nucleotides.

19 Binding u Requires that the enzyme find the “proper” place on the DNA to attach and start transcription.

20 Binding u Is a complicated process u Uses Promoter Regions on the DNA (upstream from the information for the protein) u Requires proteins called Transcription Factors.

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22 TATA Box u Short segment of T,A,T,A u Located 25 nucleotides upstream from the initiation site. u Recognition site for transcription factors to bind to the DNA.

23 Transcription Factors u Proteins that bind to DNA before RNA Polymerase. u Recognizes TATA box, attaches, and “flags” the spot for RNA Polymerase.

24 Initiation u Actual unwinding of DNA to start RNA synthesis. u Requires Initiation Factors.

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26 Elongation u RNA Polymerase untwists DNA 1 turn at a time and adds complimentary bases. u Exposes 10 DNA bases for pairing with RNA nucleotides.

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28 Elongation u Enzyme moves 5’ 3’. u Rate is about 60 nucleotides per second.

29 Comment u Each gene can be read by sequential RNA Polymerases giving several copies of RNA. u Result - several copies of the protein can be made.

30 Termination u DNA sequence that tells RNA Polymerase to stop. u Ex: AATAAA u RNA Polymerase detaches from DNA after closing the helix.

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32 Final Product u Pre-mRNA u This is a “raw” RNA that will need processing.

33 Modifications of RNA 1. 5’ Cap 2. Poly-A Tail 3. Splicing

34 5' Cap u Modified Guanine nucleotide added to the 5' end. u Protects mRNA from digestive enzymes. u Recognition sign for ribosome attachment.

35 Poly-A Tail u 150-200 Adenine nucleotides added to the 3' tail u Protects mRNA from digestive enzymes. u Aids in mRNA transport from nucleus.

36 RNA Splicing u Removal of non-protein coding regions of RNA. u Coding regions are then spliced back together.

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38 Introns u Intervening sequences. u Removed from RNA. u Some contain sequences that regulate gene expression and many affect gene products

39 Exons u Expressed sequences of RNA. u Translated into AAs.

40 Introns - Function u Left-over DNA (?) u Way to lengthen genetic message to protect coding regions. u Old virus inserts (?)

41 Introns- Function u Way to create new proteins with exon shuffling u New combinations of exons= new proteins for evolution

42 Final RNA Transcript

43 Translation u Process by which a cell interprets a genetic message and builds a polypeptide.

44 Materials Required u tRNA u Ribosomes u mRNA

45 Transfer RNA = tRNA u Made by transcription. u About 80 nucleotides long. u Carries AA for polypeptide synthesis.

46 Structure of tRNA You have a diagram of this u Has double stranded regions and 3 loops. u AA attachment site at the 3' end. u 1 loop serves as the Anticodon.

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48 Anticodon u Region of tRNA that base pairs to mRNA codon. u Is a compliment to the mRNA bases, so reads the same as the DNA codon.

49 Example u DNA - GAC u mRNA - CUG u tRNA anticodon - GAC

50 Ribosomes u Two subunits made in the nucleolus. u Made of rRNA (60%)and protein (40%). u rRNA is the most abundant type of RNA in a cell.

51 Large subunit Proteins rRNA

52 Both sununits

53 Large Subunit u Has 3 sites for tRNA. u P site: Peptidyl-tRNA site - carries the growing polypeptide chain. u A site: Aminoacyl-tRNA site - holds the tRNA carrying the next AA to be added. u E site: Exit site

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55 Translation Steps 1. Initiation 2. Elongation 3. Termination

56 Initiation u Brings together: u mRNA u A tRNA carrying the 1st AA u 2 subunits of the ribosome

57 Initiation Steps: 1. Small subunit binds to the mRNA. 2. Initiator tRNA (Met, AUG) binds to mRNA. 3. Large subunit binds to mRNA. Initiator tRNA is in the P-site

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59 Initiation u Requires other proteins called "Initiation Factors”. u GTP used as energy source.

60 Elongation Steps: 1. Codon Recognition 2. Peptide Bond Formation 3. Translocation

61 Codon Recognition u tRNA anticodon matched to mRNA codon in the A site.

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63 Peptide Bond Formation u A peptide bond is formed between the new AA and the polypeptide chain in the P-site. u Bond formation is by rRNA acting as a ribozyme

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65 After bond formation u The polypeptide is now transferred from the tRNA in the P-site to the tRNA in the A-site.

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67 Translocation u tRNA in P-site is released. u Ribosome advances 1 codon, 5’ 3’. u tRNA in A-site is now in the P-site. u Process repeats with the next codon.

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69 Comment u Elongation takes 60 milliseconds for each AA added.

70 Termination u Triggered by stop codons. u Release factor binds in the A-site instead of a tRNA. u H 2 O is added instead of AA, freeing the polypeptide. u Ribosome separates.

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72 Polyribosomes u Cluster of ribosomes all reading the same mRNA. u Another way to make multiple copies of a protein.

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74 Comment u Polypeptide usually needs to be modified before it becomes functional.

75 Examples u Sugars, lipids, phosphate groups added. u Some AAs removed. u Protein may be cleaved. u Join polypeptides together (Quaternary Structure).

76 End of Part 1

77 Mutations u Changes in the genetic makeup of a cell. u May be at chromosome (review chapter 15) or DNA level

78 DNA or Point Mutations u Changes in one or a few nucleotides in the genetic code. u Effects - none to fatal.

79 Types of Point Mutations 1. Base-Pair Substitutions 2. Insertions 3. Deletions

80 Base-Pair Substitution u The replacement of 1 pair of nucleotides by another pair.

81 Sickle Cell Anemia

82 Types of Substitutions 1. Missense - altered codons, still code for AAs but not the right ones 2. Nonsense - changed codon becomes a stop codon.

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85 Missense Effect u Can be none to fatal depending on where the AA was in the protein. u Ex: if in an active site - major effect. If in another part of the enzyme - no effect.

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87 Nonsense Effect u Stops protein synthesis. u Leads to nonfunctional proteins unless the mutation was near the very end of the polypeptide.

88 Sense Mutations u The changing of a stop codon to a reading codon. u Result - longer polypeptides which may not be functional.

89 Insertions & Deletions u The addition or loss of a base in the DNA. u Cause frame shifts and extensive missense, nonsense or sense mutations.

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91 Question? u Loss of 3 nucleotides is often not a problem. u Why? u Because the loss of a 3 bases or one codon restores the reading frame and the protein may still be able to function.

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93 Mutagenesis u Process of causing mutations or changes in the DNA.

94 Mutagens u Materials that cause DNA changes. 1. Radiation ex: UV light, X-rays 2. Chemicals ex: 5-bromouracil

95 Spontaneous Mutations u Random errors during DNA replication.

96 Comment u Any material that can chemically bond to DNA, or is chemically similar to the nitrogen bases, will often be a very strong mutagen.

97 What is a gene? u A gene is a region of DNA that can be expressed to produce a final functional product. u The product can be a protein or a RNA molecule

98 Protein vs RNA u Protein – usually structure or enzyme for phenotype u RNA – often a regulatory molecule which will be discussed in future chapters.


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