1 / 34

Science Humor

Science Humor. THE CENTRAL DOGMA. DNA  RNA. THE CENTRAL DOGMA. Transcription & Translation . TRANSCRIPTION . TRANSLATION. Involves the copying of information from DNA into a special form of RNA called mRNA (messenger RNA) Transcribe = copy from one medium to another. .

dex
Download Presentation

Science Humor

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. Science Humor

  2. THE CENTRAL DOGMA DNA  RNA

  3. THE CENTRAL DOGMA

  4. Transcription & Translation TRANSCRIPTION TRANSLATION • Involves the copying of information from DNA into a special form of RNA called mRNA (messenger RNA) • Transcribe = copy from one medium to another. • Involves ribosomes using the RNA as a blueprint to synthesize a protein composed of amino acids. • Translate = converting from one language to the next

  5. TRANSCRIPTION OCCURS IN THE NUCLEUS!

  6. TRANSLATION DNA  RNA

  7. TRANSCRIPTION • Can be broken down into 3 sequential processes: • 1. INITIATION • 2. ELONGATION • 3. TERMINATION

  8. OVERVIEW OF TRANSCRIPTION

  9. Transcription • Coding Strand • Template Strand • RNA Polymerase • NTPs = Nucleoside Triphosphates • RNA-DNA Hybrid Region

  10. 1. INITIATION • Enzyme RNA polymerase binds to the segment of DNA (upstream of the gene) that is to be transcribed & opens double helix. • Upstream = region of DNA near the start of a gene • This region = THE PROMOTER • Characteristic base-pair pattern: high in As & Ts. • Why?

  11. 2. ELONGATION • RNA Polymerase binds to promoter & opens helix • RNA Polymerase starts building the single-stranded mRNA in the 5’  3’ direction using one strand of DNA as a template (remember RNA has uracil instead of thymine). • Template Strand – DNA parent strand used for transcription. • Coding Strand – DNA parent strand NOT used for transcription • RNA Polymerase doesn’t need a primer to start building the complementary strand. • Elongation start as soon as it binds to the promoter!

  12. 3. TERMINATION • mRNA is synthesized until the end of the gene is reached. • RNA polymerase recognizes the end of the gene when it comes across a terminator sequence. • Newly synthesized mRNA dissociates.

  13. POST-TRANSCRIPTIONAL MODIFICATIONS

  14. POST-TRANSCRIPTIONAL MODIFICIATIONS • In eukaryotic cells, the mRNA is not ready to leave the nucleus directly following transcription. • Modifications need to made to this primary transcript into to create a mature mRNA transcript.

  15. What modifications need to be made? 1. 5’CAP ADDED 2. POLY-A TAIL 3. INTRONS EXCISED.

  16. 1. 5’CAP ADDED • A 5’ cap is added to the start of the primary transcript. • This 5’ cap consists of 7-methyl guanosine, which forms a modified guanine nucleoside triphosphate. • PURPOSE: • Protects mRNA from digestion by nucleases and phosphatases as it exits the nucleus and enters the cytoplasm of the cell.

  17. 2. POLY-A TAIL • A string of about 200 adenine ribonucleotides is added to the 3’ end by the enzyme poly-A polymerase. • “Poly-A Tail”

  18. “CAPPING AND TAILING” • 5’ CAP • 3’ TAIL

  19. 3. INTRONS EXCISED • The DNA of a eukaryotic gene comprises: • CODING REGIONS • EXONS • NONCODING REGIONS • INTRONS.

  20. Question to Class: WHAT WOULD BE THE PROBLEM WITH USING AN mRNA TEMPLATE THAT INCLUDES INTRONS?

  21. Answer… If non-coding regions were translated… • the protein would fold improperly • dysfunctional proteins.

  22. EXONS & INTRONS EXONS INTRONS SPLICEOSOME PRE-mRNA Mature mRNA

  23. INTRONS ARE REMOVED… • BEFORE the primary transcript leaves the nucleus, the introns are removed. • They are removed by SPLICESOMES (particles made up of RNA & proteins).

  24. INTRONS ARE REMOVED… • Splicesomes cut out the introns and joins the remaining exons together so that all the coding regions are now continuous. • MATURE mRNA.

  25. INTRONS ARE DEGRADED… • The MATURE mRNA transcript exits the nucleus • the spliced-out introns stay within the nucleus • they are degraded and their nucleotides are recycled.

  26. What modifications need to be made? 1. 5’CAP ADDED 2. POLY-A TAIL 3. INTRONS EXCISED.

  27. READY! READY! READY! • Once the primary transcript has been modified… • CAPPED • TAILED • INTRONS EXCISED Then… • Then… THE PROCESSED mRNA TRANSCRIPT (MATURE mRNA) IS READY TO BE TRANSLATED BY RIBOSOME INTO A PROTEIN!

  28. NO QUALITY CONTROL ENZYME • Therefore, more errors are made during transcription than during replication. • Errors in transcription are not as detrimental to the cell as those that occur during replication. • Proteins are susceptible to degradation once they are synthesized. • The correct copies of the mRNA transcript will produce adequate amounts of the required protein.

  29. Homework:Finish Package from 5.1 & 5.2READ AHEAD:5.3 - Transcription5.4 – translation Coming Up!

More Related