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Chapter 17: From Gene to Protein. Important Point:. If you are having trouble understanding lecture material: Try reading your text before attending lectures. And take the time to read it well!. DNA DNA = Replication DNA RNA = Transcription RNA Protein = Translation
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Important Point: If you are having trouble understanding lecture material: Try reading your text before attending lectures. And take the time to read it well!
DNA DNA = Replication • DNA RNA = Transcription • RNA Protein = Translation • RNA DNA = Reverse Transcription • Protein RNA or DNA: DOES NOT HAPPEN! • Nucleic acid sequence is most readily translated into protein sequence • But protein sequence cannot be translated into nucleic acid sequence • In other words, information flows from Nucleic Acid Sequence to Protein Sequence • Information flows from Genotype to Phenotype • Mutation and Natural Selection supplies the means by which protein sequence can influence nucleic-acid sequence Flow of Information
Flow of Information “The DNA inherited by an organism leads to specific traits by dictating the synthesis of certain proteins. Proteins are the links between genotype and phenotype.”
A codon is a sequence of three nucleotides • mRNA is the molecule that presents codons to ribosomes • DNA serves as a codon-storage molecule • DNA serves as a template for RNA synthesis • Ribosomes translate codons, in sequence, into chains of amino-acids (polypeptides) • These amino-acid (and RNA) sequences are precisely controlled • Precision is both costly and requires complex machinery to achieve • Once translated, proteins also are often post-translationally modified • Proteins consist of one or more polypeptide Roles of Central Players
61 sense codons for 20 amino acids Genetic Code Note the degeneracy of the triplet code But also note the lack of ambiguity
mRNAs consist of a sequence of nucleotide triplets—codons—that code for amino acids and which together are described as “The Genetic Code” Genetic Code Note 3 stop codons = nonsense codons Note AUG, the start codon, codes for Methionine (Met)
Codons don’t overlap, there is no punctuation, each codon codes for at most only one amino acid (lack of ambiguity in the code), many amino acids are coded by more than one codon (= degeneracy in the code) • The cell would need tRNAs with 61 different anticodons to complement the available 61 codons • However, due to the Degeneracy of the genetic code, the third base is less discriminatory for the amino acid than the other two bases • This third position in the codon is referred to as the Wobble Position (and cells get by with ~45 tRNAs) • Us and Cs may be read by a G in the anticodon & As and Gs may be read by a U or y (pseudouridine) • If a tRNA contains an inosine (I) in the anticodon at the wobble position, then this tRNA may read codons having As, Us or Cs in the third position Wobble
Wobble – one-codon A.A.s All wobble discussion from http://www.nobel.se/medicine/educational/dna/a/translation/trna_wobble.html
RNA Diversity • Transcription makes various kinds of RNAs • For example: • Messenger RNA (mRNA) • Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) • Transfer RNA (tRNA) • Other (e.g., snRNA) • RNAs may be matured in various ways (we will concentrate on mRNA maturation) • Translation employs rRNAs and tRNAs to “translate” mRNA nucleotide/codon sequence into amino-acid sequence About 60% of the mass of ribosomes is rRNA
RNA Polymerase Note 5’ to 3’ direction
Transcription Note that only one strand is serving as template for transcription
mRNA Processing Note: Eucaryotes
mRNA Splicing Note: Eucaryotes
Remember that the primary goal of translation is the synthesis of a polypeptide from mRNA-coded information Translation Overview
tRNA 2D Structure Note that the anticodon is more or less complementary to the mRNA codon in terms of base-pairing
tRNA 3D Structure No, you don’t have to memorize this structure
Aminoacyl tRNA Synthetases Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases are responsible for tRNA’s ability to precisely translate codon-based code into amino-acid sequence
Ribosome (in 3D) You don’t have to memorize structural detail (e.g., the various bumps)
Protein Targeting to ER Polypeptides are subjected to a number of post-translational modifications whether or not they end up in the ER
Works this way in bacteria Translation-Transcription Coupling
Mutation Mutations are alterations in DNA sequence that result either in modified transcription (since smaller target means less likely) or in modified translation (which we shall dwell upon)
Some mutations can be beneficial! Ultimate Source of Variation Some mutations are “silent”, not changing a.a. sequence Mutations are typically detrimental, but not always
Understand the concept, don’t memorize the sequences!!! Mutation: BP Substitution Point mutations Specifically, a missense mutation
Understand the concept, don’t memorize the sequences!!! Insertion / Deletion Reading frames start with AUG, have numerous sense codons, and end with a stop codon