Genes and Protein Synthesis

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Genes and Protein Synthesis Chapter 7

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Genes and Protein Synthesis. Chapter 7. One Gene-One Polypeptide Hypothesis. DNA contains all of our hereditary information Genes are located in our DNA ~25,000 genes in our DNA (46 chromosomes) Each Gene codes for a specific polypeptide. Main Idea. Central Dogma Francis Crick (1956). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Genes and Protein Synthesis

Page 2: Genes and Protein Synthesis

One Gene-One Polypeptide Hypothesis• DNA contains all of

our hereditary information

• Genes are located in our DNA

• ~25,000 genes in our DNA (46 chromosomes)

• Each Gene codes for a specific polypeptide

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Main Idea• Central Dogma– Francis Crick (1956)

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Overall Process• Transcription – DNA to RNA

• Translation – Assembly of

amino acids into polypeptide

– Using RNA

DNA molecule

Gene 1

Gene 2

Gene 3

DNA strand

TRANSCRIPTION

RNA

Polypeptide

TRANSLATIONCodon

Amino acid

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Key Terms • RNA transcription– Initiation,

Elongation, Termination

• TATA box • Introns, Exons• mRNA, tRNA, rRNA• Translation • Ribosome• Codon• Amino Acids• Polypeptide

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DNA RNA

Double stranded Single stranded

Adenine pairs with Thymine Adenine pairs with Uracil

Guanine pairs with Cytosine Guanine pairs with Cytosine

Deoxyribose sugar Ribose sugar

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DNA to Protein • Protein is

made of amino acid sequences

• 20 amino acids

• How does DNA code for amino acid?

DNA molecule

Gene 1

Gene 2

Gene 3

DNA strand

TRANSCRIPTION

RNA

Polypeptide

TRANSLATIONCodon

Amino acid

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Amino acids • Abbreviated– Three letters

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Transcription • DNA to RNA• Occurs in nucleus • Three process– Initiation – Elongation – Termination

RNA polymerase

DNA of gene

PromoterDNA Terminator

DNAInitiation

Elongation

TerminationGrowingRNA

RNApolymerase

Completed RNA

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Initiation• RNA polymerase binds to DNA• Binds at promoter region

– TATA box• RNA polymerase unwinds DNA• Transcription unit

– Part of gene that is transcribed• Transcription factors bind to

specific regions of promoter • Provide a substrate for RNA

polymerase to bind beginning transcription

• Forms transcription initiation complex

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Elongation • RNA molecule is

built– RNA polymerase

• Primer not needed• 5’ to 3’ direction • Template strand is

copied– 3’ to 5’ DNA

• Coding strand– DNA strand that is

not copied• Produces mRNA

– Messenger RNA • DNA double helix

reforms

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Termination • RNA polymerase recognizes a termination sequence

– AAAAAAA (polyadenylation)• Nuclear proteins bind to string of UUUUUU on RNA• mRNA molecule releases from template strand

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Post-Transcriptional Modifications• Pre-mRNA

undergoes modifications before it leaves the nucleus

• Poly(A) tail– Poly-A polymerase– Protects from RNA

digesting enzymes in cytosol

• 5’ cap– 7 G’s– Initial attachment

site for mRNA’s to ribosomes

• Removal of introns

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Splicing the pre-mRNA• DNA comprised of – Exons • sequence of DNA or

RNA that codes for a gene

– Introns • non-coding

sequence of DNA or RNA

• Spliceosome– Enzyme that

removes introns from mRNA

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Splicing Process• Spliceosome contains a handful of small

ribonucleoproteins– snRNP’s (snurps)

• snRNP’s bind to specific regions on introns

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Alternative Splicing• Increases number and variety of proteins

encoded by a single gene• ~25,000 genes produce ~100,000 proteins

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Translation• mRNA to protein • Ribosomes read

codons • tRNA assists

ribosome to assemble amino acids into polypeptide chain

• Takes place in cytoplasm

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tRNA• Contains – triplet anticodon – amino acid

attachment site • Are there 61

tRNA’s to read 61 codons?

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tRNA: Wobble Hypothesis • First two nucleotides of

codon for a specific AA is always precise

• Flexibility with third nucleotide

• Aminoacylation– process of adding an AA

to a tRNA – Forming aminoacyl-

tRNA molecule – Catalyzed by 20

different aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase enzymes

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Ribosomes• Translate mRNA chains into amino acids• Made up of two different sized parts – Ribosomal subunits (rRNA)

• Ribosomes bring together mRNA with aminoacyl-tRNAs

• Three sites– A site - aminoacyl– P site – peptidyl– E site - exit

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1 Codon recognition

Amino acid

Anticodon

AsiteP site

Polypeptide

2 Peptide bond formation

3 Translocation

Newpeptidebond

mRNAmovement

mRNA

Stopcodon

Translation process • Three stages– Initiation – Elongation – Termination

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Initiation• Ribosomal subunits associate with mRNA • Met-tRNA (methionine)

– Forms complex with ribosomal subunits• Complex binds to 5’cap and scans for start codon (AUG) (scanning)• Large ribosomal subunit binds to complete ribosome • Met-tRNA is in P-site

Reading frame is established to correctly read codons

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Elongation

• Amino acids are added to grow a polypeptide chain

• A, P, and E sites operate

• 4 Steps

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Termination• A site arrives at a stop codon on mRNA – UAA, UAG, UGA

• Protein release factor binds to A site releasing polypeptide chain

• Ribosomal subunits, tRNA release and detach from mRNA

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ba

Red object = ?

What molecules are present in this photo?

POLYSOME

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Regulating Gene Expression• Proteins are not

required by all cells at all times

• Regulated• Eukaryotes – 4 ways– Transcriptional (as mRNA

is being synthesized)– Post-transcriptional (as

mRNA is being processed)

– Translational (as proteins are made)

– Post-translational (after protein has been made)

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Transcriptional regulation• Most common• DNA wrapped around histones keep gene promoters

inactive• Activator molecule is used (2 ways)– Signals a protein remodelling complex which loosen the

histones exposing promoter– Signals an enzyme that adds an acetyl group to histones

exposing promoter region

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Post transcriptional regulation• Pre-mRNA processing

– Alternative splicing• Rate of mRNA

degradation– Masking proteins used to

degrade mRNA – Translation does not occur

• Embryonic development

• Hormones – Casein – milk protein in

mammary gland– When casein is needed,

prolactin is produced extending lifespan of casein mRNA

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Translational regulation• Occurs during

protein synthesis by a ribosome

• Changes in length of poly(A) tail– Enzymes add or

delete adenines – Increases or

decreases time required to translate mRNA into protein

– Environmental cues

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Post-Translational Regulation• Processing

– Removes sections of protein to make it active

– Cell regulates this process (hormones)

• Chemical modification– Chemical groups are

added or deleted – Puts the protein “on hold”

• Degradation– Proteins tagged with

ubiquitin are degraded – Amino acids are recycled

for protein synthesis

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Cancer• Lack regulatory mechanisms • Mutations in genetic code

(mutagens)– Probability increases over lifetime– Radiation, smoking, chemicals

• Mutations are passed on to daughter cells – Can lead to a mass of

undifferentiated cells (tumor)– Benign and malignant

• Oncogenes– Mutated genes that once served

to stimulate cell growth– Cause undifferentiated cell

division

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Genetic Mutations• Positive and negative – Natural selection –

evolution – Cancer –death

• Small-Scale – single base pair– Point mutations • Substitution,

insertion/deletion, inversion

• Large-Scale – multiple base pairs

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Missense mutation• Change of a single base pair or group of base pairs• Results in the code for a different amino acid • Protein will have different sequence and structure

and may be non-functional or function differently

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Nonsense mutation• Change in single base pair or group of base pairs • Results in premature stop codon • Protein will not be able to function

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Silent Mutation• Change in one or more base pairs• Does not affect functioning of a gene• Mutated DNA sequence codes for same amino acid • Protein is not altered

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Frameshift mutation• One or more nucleotides are inserted/deleted from a DNA

sequence• Reading frame of codons shifts resulting in multiple missense

and/or nonsense effects• Any deletion or insertion of base pairs in multiples of 3 does

not cause frameshift

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Large-scale mutations • Multiple nucleotides,

entire genes, whole regions of chromosomes

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Large-scale mutations • Inversion– Portion of a DNA molecule reverses its direction in the

genome– No direct result but reversal could occur in the middle of

a coding sequence compromising the gene

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Causes of genetic mutations• Spontaneous mutations– Inaccurate DNA replication

• Induced mutations – Caused by environmental agent – mutagen – Directly alter DNA – entering cell nucleus – Chemicals, radiation

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Chemical Mutagens • Modify individual

nucleotides– Nucleotides

resemble other base pairs

– Confuses replication machinery – inaccurate copying • Nitrous acid

• Mimicking DNA nucleotides – Ethidium bromide –

insert itself into DNA

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Radiation - Low energy • UV B rays • Non-homologous end joining– Bonds form between adjacent nucleotides along DNA

strand – Form kinks in backbone – Skin cancer

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Genomes and Gene organization• Components– VNTR’s–variable number tandem repeats (microsatellites)• Sequences of long repeating base pairs• TAGTAGTAGTAGTAG

– LINEs – long interspersed nuclear elements – SINEs – short interspersed nuclear elements – Transposons – small sequences of DNA that move about

the genome and insert themselves into different chromosomes

– Pseudogene – code is similar to gene but is unable to code for protein

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Viruses• Not alive but can replicate themselves• Contain– DNA or RNA– Capsid – protein coat– Envelope – cell membrane

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Virus • 4000 species of virus have been classified

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HIV RNA Replication (Retrovirus) • Reverse

transcriptase to turn RNA into DNA

• Integrase incorporates into our genetic code

• Uses cells parts to make protein parts from mRNA

• genomic RNA

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Influenza A• Viral RNA

replicated and transcribed for protein synthesis