1 / 40

PROTEIN SYNTHESIS

PROTEIN SYNTHESIS. Used and Modified with permission from Robert Goodman , Biology Department,Citrus Community College. Protein Synthesis. The production (synthesis) of proteins . 3 phases : 1. Transcription 2. RNA processing 3. Translation Remember: DNA  RNA  Protein. Nuclear

Download Presentation

PROTEIN SYNTHESIS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PROTEIN SYNTHESIS Used and Modified with permission from Robert Goodman, Biology Department,Citrus Community College

  2. Protein Synthesis • The production (synthesis) of proteins. • 3 phases: 1. Transcription 2. RNA processing 3. Translation • Remember: DNA  RNA  Protein

  3. Nuclear membrane DNA Transcription Pre-mRNA RNA Processing mRNA Ribosome Translation Protein DNA  RNA Protein Eukaryotic Cell

  4. DNA Transcription mRNA Ribosome Translation Protein DNA  RNA Protein Prokaryotic Cell

  5. Question: How does RNA(ribonucleic acid) differ from DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid)?

  6. RNA differs from DNA 1. RNA has a sugar ribose DNA has a sugar deoxyribose 2. RNA contains uracil (U) DNA has thymine (T) 3. RNA molecule is single-stranded DNA is double-stranded

  7. Nuclear membrane DNA Transcription Pre-mRNA RNA Processing mRNA Ribosome Translation Protein 1. Transcription Eukaryotic Cell

  8. 1. Transcription • The transfer of information in the nucleus from a DNA molecule to an RNA molecule. • Only 1 DNA strand serves as the template • Starts at promoterDNA (TATA box) • Ends at terminatorDNA (stop) • When complete, pre-RNA molecule is released.

  9. Question: • What is the enzyme responsible for the production of the RNA molecule?

  10. Answer: RNA Polymerase • Separates the DNA molecule by breaking the H-bonds between the bases. • Then moves along one of the DNA strands and links RNA nucleotides together.

  11. DNA RNA Polymerase pre-mRNA 1. Transcription

  12. Question: • What would be the complementary RNA strand for the following DNA sequence? • DNA 5’-GCGTATG-3’

  13. Answer: • DNA 5’-GCGTATG-3’ • RNA 3’-CGCAUAC-5’

  14. Nuclear membrane DNA Transcription Pre-mRNA RNA Processing mRNA Ribosome Translation Protein 2. RNA Processing Eukaryotic Cell

  15. 2. RNA Processing • Maturation of pre-RNA molecules. • Also occurs in the nucleus. • Introns spliced out by splicesome-enzyme and exonscome together. • End product is a mature RNA molecule that leaves the nucleus to the cytoplasm.

  16. pre-RNA molecule exon intron exon exon intron intron intron exon exon exon splicesome splicesome exon exon exon Mature RNA molecule 2. RNA Processing

  17. Types of RNA • Three types ofRNA: A. messenger RNA (mRNA) B. transfer RNA (tRNA) C. ribosome RNA (rRNA) • Remember: all produced in thenucleus!

  18. A. Messenger RNA (mRNA) • Carries the information for a specific protein. • Made up of 500 to 1000 nucleotides long. • Made up of codons (sequence of three bases: AUG - methionine). • Each codon, is specific for an amino acid.

  19. start codon A U G G G C U C C A U C G G C G C A U A A mRNA codon 1 codon 2 codon 3 codon 4 codon 5 codon 6 codon 7 stop codon protein methionine glycine serine isoleucine glycine alanine Primary structure of a protein aa2 aa3 aa4 aa5 aa6 aa1 peptide bonds A. Messenger RNA (mRNA)

  20. B. Transfer RNA (tRNA) • Made up of 75 to 80 nucleotides long. • Picks up the appropriate amino acid floating in the cytoplasm (amino acid activating enzyme) • Transports amino acids to the mRNA. • Have anticodons that are complementary to mRNAcodons. • Recognizes the appropriate codons on the mRNA and bonds to them with H-bonds.

  21. amino acid attachment site methionine amino acid U A C anticodon B. Transfer RNA (tRNA)

  22. C. Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) • Made up of rRNA is 100 to 3000 nucleotides long. • Important structural component of a ribosome. • Associates with proteins to form ribosomes.

  23. Ribosomes • Large and small subunits. • Composed of rRNA (40%) and proteins (60%). • Both units come together and help bind the mRNA and tRNA. • Two sites fortRNA a. P site(first and last tRNA will attach) b. A site

  24. mRNA A U G C U A C U U C G Ribosomes Large subunit P Site A Site Small subunit

  25. Nuclear membrane DNA Transcription Pre-mRNA RNA Processing mRNA Ribosome Translation Protein 3. Translation Eukaryotic Cell

  26. 3. Translation • Synthesis of proteins in the cytoplasm • Involves the following: 1. mRNA (codons) 2. tRNA (anticodons) 3. rRNA 4. ribosomes 5. amino acids

  27. 3. Translation • Three parts: 1. initiation: start codon (AUG) 2. elongation: 3. termination: stop codon (UAG) • Let’s make a PROTEIN!!!!.

  28. mRNA A U G C U A C U U C G 3. Translation Large subunit P Site A Site Small subunit

  29. aa2 aa1 2-tRNA 1-tRNA G A U U A C Initiation anticodon A U G C U A C U U C G A hydrogen bonds codon mRNA

  30. aa3 3-tRNA G A A Elongation peptide bond aa1 aa2 1-tRNA 2-tRNA anticodon U A C G A U A U G C U A C U U C G A hydrogen bonds codon mRNA

  31. aa3 3-tRNA G A A aa1 peptide bond aa2 1-tRNA U A C (leaves) 2-tRNA G A U A U G C U A C U U C G A mRNA Ribosomes move over one codon

  32. aa4 4-tRNA G C U peptide bonds aa1 aa2 aa3 2-tRNA 3-tRNA G A U G A A A U G C U A C U U C G A A C U mRNA

  33. aa4 4-tRNA G C U peptide bonds aa1 aa2 aa3 2-tRNA G A U (leaves) 3-tRNA G A A A U G C U A C U U C G A A C U mRNA Ribosomes move over one codon

  34. aa5 5-tRNA U G A peptide bonds aa1 aa2 aa4 aa3 3-tRNA 4-tRNA G A A G C U G C U A C U U C G A A C U mRNA

  35. aa5 5-tRNA U G A peptide bonds aa1 aa2 aa3 aa4 3-tRNA G A A 4-tRNA G C U G C U A C U U C G A A C U mRNA Ribosomes move over one codon

  36. aa5 aa4 Termination aa199 aa200 aa3 primary structure of a protein aa2 aa1 terminator or stop codon 200-tRNA A C U C A U G U U U A G mRNA

  37. aa5 aa4 aa3 aa2 aa199 aa1 aa200 End Product • The end products of protein synthesis is a primary structure of a protein. • A sequence of amino acid bonded together by peptide bonds.

  38. incoming large subunit 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 mRNA incoming small subunit polypeptide Polyribosome • Groups of ribosomes reading same mRNA simultaneously producing many proteins (polypeptides).

  39. Question: • The anticodon UAC belongs to a tRNA that recognizes and binds to a particular amino acid. • What would be the DNA base code for this amino acid?

  40. Answer: • tRNA - UAC (anticodon) • mRNA - AUG (codon) • DNA - TAC

More Related