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Chapter 14.  Ricin (found in castor-oil plant used in plastics, paints, cosmetics) is toxic because it inactivates ribosomes, the organelles which assemble.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 14.  Ricin (found in castor-oil plant used in plastics, paints, cosmetics) is toxic because it inactivates ribosomes, the organelles which assemble."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 14

2  Ricin (found in castor-oil plant used in plastics, paints, cosmetics) is toxic because it inactivates ribosomes, the organelles which assemble amino acids into proteins, critical to life processes

3  Each strand of DNA consists of a chain of four kinds of nucleotides: A, T, G and C  The sequence of the four bases in the strand is the genetic information

4  Sugar = Deoxyribose  Double stranded  Bases  Cytosine  Guanine  Adenine  Thymine  Sugar = Ribose  Single Stranded  Bases  Cytosine  Guanine  Adenine  URACIL (U) DNARNA These chemical differences make it easy for the enzymes in the cell to tell DNA and RNA apart

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7  Messenger RNA (mRNA)  Carry a copy of the instructions from the nucleus to other parts of the cell  Ribosomal RNA (rRNA)  Makes up the structure of ribosomes  Transfer RNA (tRNA)  Transfers amino acids (proteins) to the ribosomes to be assembled

8  A cell’s DNA sequence (genes) contains all the information needed to make the molecules of life  Gene expression  A multistep process including transcription and translation, by which genetic information encoded by a gene is converted into a structural or functional part of a cell or body

9  In transcription, a strand of mRNA is assembled on a DNA template using RNA nucleotides  Uracil (U) nucleotides pair with A nucleotides  RNA polymerase adds nucleotides to the transcript

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11  RNA polymerase and regulatory proteins attach to a promoter (a specific binding site in DNA close to the start of a gene)  RNA polymerase moves over the gene in a 5' to 3' direction, unwinds the DNA helix, reads the base sequence, and joins free RNA nucleotides into a complementary strand of mRNA  TranscriptionTranscription

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13 Fig. 14-5b, p. 219

14  Many RNA polymerases can transcribe a gene at the same time

15  In eukaryotes, RNA is modified before it leaves the nucleus as a mature mRNA  Introns = Nucleotide sequences that are removed from a new RNA  Exons = Sequences that stay in the RNA

16  Alternative splicing  Allows one gene to encode different proteins  Some exons are removed from RNA and others are spliced together in various combinations  After splicing, transcripts are finished with a modified guanine “cap” at the 5' end and a poly-A tail at the 3' end

17  mRNA carries protein-building information to ribosomes and tRNA for translation  Codon  A sequence of three mRNA nucleotides that codes for a specific amino acid  The order of codons in mRNA determines the order of amino acids in a polypeptide chain

18  Genetic code  Consists of 64 mRNA codons (triplets)  Some amino acids can be coded by more than one codon  Some codons signal the start or end of a gene  AUG (methionine) is a start codon  UAA, UAG, and UGA are stop codons

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20  tRNAs deliver amino acids to ribosomes  tRNA has an anticodon complementary to an mRNA codon, and a binding site for the amino acid specified by that codon  Ribosomes, which link amino acids into polypeptide chains, consist of two subunits of rRNA and proteins

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22  Translation = mRNA to protein  Occurs in the cytoplasm on the ribosomes  Translation occurs in three stages  Initiation  Elongation  Termination  TranslationTranslation

23  An initiation complex is formed  A small ribosomal subunit binds to mRNA  The anticodon of initiator tRNA base-pairs with the start codon (AUG) of mRNA  A large ribosomal subunit joins the small ribosomal subunit

24  The ribosome assembles a polypeptide chain as it moves along the mRNA  Initiator tRNA carries methionine, the first amino acid of the chain  The ribosome joins each amino acid to the polypeptide chain with a peptide bond

25 Fig. 14-12d, p. 223

26  When the ribosome encounters a stop codon, polypeptide synthesis ends  Release factors bind to the ribosome  Enzymes detach the mRNA and polypeptide chain from the ribosome

27  Many ribosomes may simultaneously translate the same mRNA, forming polysomes

28  If the nucleotide sequence of a gene changes, it may result in an altered gene product, with harmful effects  Mutations  Small-scale changes in the nucleotide sequence of a cell’s DNA that alter the genetic code  Tay Sachs – One wrong letter - from PBS Cracking the Code of Life – 9:38 and 57:00 Tay Sachs – One wrong letter Cracking the Code of Life

29  Base-pair-substitution  May result in a premature stop codon or a different amino acid in a protein product  Example: sickle-cell anemia  Deletion or insertion (frame shift)  Can cause the reading frame of mRNA codons to shift, changing the genetic message  Example: Huntington’s disease

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31  Transposable elements  Segments of DNA that can insert themselves anywhere in a chromosomes  Spontaneous mutations  Uncorrected errors in DNA replication  Harmful environmental agents  Ionizing radiation, UV radiation, chemicals

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33  Ionizing radiation damages chromosomes, nonionizing (UV) radiation forms thymine dimers

34  Mutations in somatic cells (the cells that are not sperm or eggs) of sexually reproducing species are not inherited  Mutations in a germ cell or gamete may be inherited, with evolutionary consequences

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