Chapter 26 Gene Expression and Protein Synthesis

Similar documents
DNA Replication & Protein Synthesis. This isn t a baaaaaaaddd chapter!!!

Transcription and Translation of DNA

From DNA to Protein. Proteins. Chapter 13. Prokaryotes and Eukaryotes. The Path From Genes to Proteins. All proteins consist of polypeptide chains

Structure and Function of DNA

Molecular Genetics. RNA, Transcription, & Protein Synthesis

Protein Synthesis How Genes Become Constituent Molecules

Coding sequence the sequence of nucleotide bases on the DNA that are transcribed into RNA which are in turn translated into protein

BCH401G Lecture 39 Andres

a. Ribosomal RNA rrna a type ofrna that combines with proteins to form Ribosomes on which polypeptide chains of proteins are assembled

13.2 Ribosomes & Protein Synthesis

Genetic information (DNA) determines structure of proteins DNA RNA proteins cell structure enzymes control cell chemistry ( metabolism )

2. The number of different kinds of nucleotides present in any DNA molecule is A) four B) six C) two D) three

Name Class Date. Figure Which nucleotide in Figure 13 1 indicates the nucleic acid above is RNA? a. uracil c. cytosine b. guanine d.

Specific problems. The genetic code. The genetic code. Adaptor molecules match amino acids to mrna codons

Lecture Series 7. From DNA to Protein. Genotype to Phenotype. Reading Assignments. A. Genes and the Synthesis of Polypeptides

Transcription: RNA Synthesis, Processing & Modification

Translation Study Guide

Module 3 Questions. 7. Chemotaxis is an example of signal transduction. Explain, with the use of diagrams.

RNA & Protein Synthesis

Problem Set 3 KEY

PRACTICE TEST QUESTIONS

Translation. Translation: Assembly of polypeptides on a ribosome

Provincial Exam Questions. 9. Give one role of each of the following nucleic acids in the production of an enzyme.

Chapter 17: From Gene to Protein

From DNA to Protein

Announcements. Chapter 15. Proteins: Function. Proteins: Function. Proteins: Structure. Peptide Bonds. Lab Next Week. Help Session: Monday 6pm LSS 277

Thymine = orange Adenine = dark green Guanine = purple Cytosine = yellow Uracil = brown

Lecture 1 MODULE 3 GENE EXPRESSION AND REGULATION OF GENE EXPRESSION. Professor Bharat Patel Office: Science 2, b.patel@griffith.edu.

Chem 465 Biochemistry II

The Steps. 1. Transcription. 2. Transferal. 3. Translation

CHAPTER 30: PROTEIN SYNTHESIS

AP BIOLOGY 2009 SCORING GUIDELINES

Academic Nucleic Acids and Protein Synthesis Test

Lecture 6. Regulation of Protein Synthesis at the Translational Level

Sample Questions for Exam 3

Name Date Period. 2. When a molecule of double-stranded DNA undergoes replication, it results in

DNA, RNA, Protein synthesis, and Mutations. Chapters

Lecture Transfer of proper aminoacyl-trna from cytoplasm to A-site of ribosome.

Lecture 4. Polypeptide Synthesis Overview

DNA (genetic information in genes) RNA (copies of genes) proteins (functional molecules) directionality along the backbone 5 (phosphate) to 3 (OH)

1 Mutation and Genetic Change

Genetics Module B, Anchor 3

Central Dogma. Lecture 10. Discussing DNA replication. DNA Replication. DNA mutation and repair. Transcription

Basic Principles of Transcription and Translation

The sequence of bases on the mrna is a code that determines the sequence of amino acids in the polypeptide being synthesized:

CCR Biology - Chapter 8 Practice Test - Summer 2012

CHAPTER 40 The Mechanism of Protein Synthesis

TRANSCRIPTION TRANSLATION - GENETIC CODE AND OUTLINE OF PROTEIN SYNTHESIS

AP Biology TEST #5 - Chapters 11-14, 16 - REVIEW SHEET

Ms. Campbell Protein Synthesis Practice Questions Regents L.E.

To be able to describe polypeptide synthesis including transcription and splicing

13.4 Gene Regulation and Expression

RNA and Protein Synthesis

Basic Concepts of DNA, Proteins, Genes and Genomes

CHAPTER 6: RECOMBINANT DNA TECHNOLOGY YEAR III PHARM.D DR. V. CHITRA

Protein Synthesis. Page 41 Page 44 Page 47 Page 42 Page 45 Page 48 Page 43 Page 46 Page 49. Page 41. DNA RNA Protein. Vocabulary

GENE REGULATION. Teacher Packet

4. DNA replication Pages: Difficulty: 2 Ans: C Which one of the following statements about enzymes that interact with DNA is true?

Replication Study Guide

Transcription in prokaryotes. Elongation and termination

Control of Gene Expression

Chapter 6 DNA Replication

Microbial Genetics (Chapter 8) Lecture Materials for Amy Warenda Czura, Ph.D. Suffolk County Community College. Eastern Campus

Cellular Respiration Worksheet What are the 3 phases of the cellular respiration process? Glycolysis, Krebs Cycle, Electron Transport Chain.

Lecture 26: Overview of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and ribonucleic acid (RNA) structure

ISTEP+: Biology I End-of-Course Assessment Released Items and Scoring Notes

Lab # 12: DNA and RNA

DNA Bracelets

NAME. EXAM IV I. / 60 December 7, 1998 Biochemistry I II. / 15 BI/CH421, BI601, BI/CH621 III. / 13 IV. / 12. V. / 10(grads) TOTAL /100 or 110

Control of Gene Expression

Mutation. Mutation provides raw material to evolution. Different kinds of mutations have different effects

MUTATION, DNA REPAIR AND CANCER

Transfection-Transfer of non-viral genetic material into eukaryotic cells. Infection/ Transduction- Transfer of viral genetic material into cells.

Complex multicellular organisms are produced by cells that switch genes on and off during development.

Gene Finding CMSC 423

Activity 7.21 Transcription factors

Gene Models & Bed format: What they represent.

Modeling DNA Replication and Protein Synthesis

Protein Synthesis CHAPTER OUTLINE

Algorithms in Computational Biology (236522) spring 2007 Lecture #1

Chapter 18 Regulation of Gene Expression

Lecture 8. Protein Trafficking/Targeting. Protein targeting is necessary for proteins that are destined to work outside the cytoplasm.

T C T G G C C G A C C T;

NO CALCULATORS OR CELL PHONES ALLOWED

Name: Date: Period: DNA Unit: DNA Webquest

The world of non-coding RNA. Espen Enerly

2. True or False? The sequence of nucleotides in the human genome is 90.9% identical from one person to the next. False (it s 99.

A. A peptide with 12 amino acids has the following amino acid composition: 2 Met, 1 Tyr, 1 Trp, 2 Glu, 1 Lys, 1 Arg, 1 Thr, 1 Asn, 1 Ile, 1 Cys

Bio 102 Practice Problems Recombinant DNA and Biotechnology

Gene Regulation -- The Lac Operon

Page 1. Name:

DNA Replication in Prokaryotes

1.5 page 3 DNA Replication S. Preston 1

Multiple Choice Write the letter that best answers the question or completes the statement on the line provided.

Hiding Data in DNA. 1 Introduction

Lecture 13: DNA Technology. DNA Sequencing. DNA Sequencing Genetic Markers - RFLPs polymerase chain reaction (PCR) products of biotechnology

Biotechnology and Recombinant DNA (Chapter 9) Lecture Materials for Amy Warenda Czura, Ph.D. Suffolk County Community College

Ribosomal Protein Synthesis

2013 W. H. Freeman and Company. 26 RNA Metabolism

Transcription:

Chapter 26 Gene Expression and Protein Synthesis 1

The Central Dogma Figure 26-1 The central dogma of molecular biology: Information contained in DNA molecules is expressed in the structure of proteins. Gene expression is the turning on or activation of a gene. 2

Transcription Transcription: The process in which information encoded in a DNA molecule is copied into an mrna molecule. Transcription takes place in the nucleus. Transcription starts when the DNA double helix begins to unwind near the gene to be transcribed. Only one strand of the DNA is transcribed. Ribonucleotides assemble along the unwound DNA strand in a complementary sequence. Enzymes called polymerases (poly) catalyze transcription: poly I for rrna formation, poly II for mrna formation, and poly III for trna formation. 3

Transcription Figure 26-2 Transcription of a gene. The information in one DNA strand is transcribed to a strand of RNA. The termination site is the locus of termination of transcription. 4

Transcription In eukaryotes. Three kinds of polymerases catalyze transcription. RNA polymerase I (pol I) catalyzes the formation of most of the rrna. Pol II catalyzes mrna formation Pol III catalyzes trna formation as well as one ribosomal subunit. 5

Transcription Figure 26-3 The architecture of yeast RNA polymerase II. Transcription of DNA (helical structure) into RNA (red) is shown. The template strand of DNA (blue) and the coding strand (green) and also shown. 6

Transcription A eukaryotic gene has two parts: A structural gene that is transcribed into RNA; the structural gene is made of exons and introns. A regulatory gene that controls transcription; the regulatory gene is not transcribed but has control elements, one of which is the promoter. A promoter is unique to each gene. There is always a sequence of bases on the DNA strand called an initiation signal. Promoters also contain consensus sequences, such as the TATA box, in which the two nucleotides T and A are repeated many times. 7

Transcription A TATA box lies approximately 26 base pairs upstream. All three RNA polymerases interact with their promoter regions via transcription factors that are binding proteins. After initiation, RNA polymerase zips up the complementary bases in a process called elongation. Elongation involves formation of phosphate ester bonds between each ribose and the next phosphate group. Elongation is in the 5 > 3 direction. At the end of each gene is a termination sequence. 8

Transcription The RNA products of transcription are not necessarily functional RNAs. They are made functional by post-transcription modification. Transcribed mrna is capped at both ends. The 5 end acquires a methylated guanine (7-mG cap). The 3 end acquires a polya tail that may contain from 100 to 200 adenine residues. Once the two ends are capped, the introns are spliced out. trna is similarly trimmed, capped, and methylated. Functional rrna also undergoes post-transcription methylation. 9

Transcription Figure 26-4 Organization and transcription of a split eukaryote gene. 10

Role of RNA in Translation mrna, rrna, and trna all participate in translation. Protein synthesis takes place on ribosomes. A ribosome dissociates into a larger and a smaller body. In higher organisms, including humans, the larger body is called a 60S ribosome; the smaller body is called a 40S ribosome. The 5 end of the mature mrna is bonded to the 40S ribosome and this unit then joined to the 60S ribosome. Together the 40S and 60S ribosomes form a unit on which mrna is stretched out. Triplets of bases on mrna are called codons. The 20 amino acids are then brought to the mrna-ribosome complex, each amino acid by its own particular trna. 11

trna Each trna is specific for only one amino acid. Each cell carries at least 20 specific enzymes, each specific for one amino acid. Each enzyme recognizes only one trna. The enzyme bonds the activated amino acid to the 3 terminal -OH group of the appropriate trna by an ester bond. At the opposite end of the trna molecule is a codon recognition site. The codon recognition site is a sequence of three bases called an anticodon. This triplet of bases aligns itself in a complementary fashion to the codon triplet on mrna. 12

trna Figure 26-5 The threedimensional structure of trna. 13

The Genetic Code Assignments of triplets is based on several types of experiments. One of these used synthetic mrna. If mrna is polyu, polyphe is formed; the triplet UUU, therefore, must code for Phe. If mrna is poly ---ACACAC---, poly(thr-his) is formed; ACA must code for Thr, and CAC for His. By 1967, the genetic code was broken 14

The Genetic Code 15

Features of the Code All 64 codons have been assigned. 61 code for amino acids. 3 (UAA, UAG, and UGA) serve as termination signals. AUG also serves as an initiation signal. Only Trp and Met have one codon each. More than one triplet can code for the same amino acid; Leu, Ser, and Arg, for example, are each coded for by six triplets. The third base is irrelevant for Leu, Val, Ser, Pro, Thr, Ala, Gly, and Arg. It is said to be continuous and unpunctuated. There are no overlapping codons and no nucleotides interspersed. 16

Features of the Code For the 15 amino acids coded for by 2, 3, or 4 triplets, it is only the third letter of the codon that varies. Gly, for example, is coded for by GGA, GGG, GGC, and GGU. The code is almost universal: it the same in viruses, prokaryotes, and eukaryotes; the only exceptions are some codons in mitochondria 17

Translation How is Protein Synthesized? Activation Initiation Elongation Termination 18

Protein Synthesis Table 26-2 Molecular Components of Reactions at Four Stages of Protein Synthesis: 19

End class 10/26/16 W 20

Amino Acid Activation Requires: amino acids trnas aminoacyl-trna synthetases ATP, Mg 2+ Activation of an amino acid (formation of an amino acidtrna) 21

Amino Acid Activation The activated amino acid is bound to its own particular trna by an ester bond between the carboxyl group of the amino acid and the 3 -OH of the trna. 22

Amino Acid Activation This two-stage reaction allows selectivity at two levels: The amino acid: The amino acid-amp remains bound to the enzyme and binding of the correct amino acid is verified by an editing site on the trna synthetase trna: There are specific binding sites on trnas that are recognized by aminoacyl-trna synthetases. This stage is very important and accuracy is vital. Once the amino acid is on its trna, there is no other opportunity to check for correct pairing. The anticodon of the trna will match up with its correct codon on the mrna regardless of whether it is carrying the correct amino acid. 23

Chain Initiation Figure 26-6 Formation of the 30s Initiation complex. Step 2: The 50S ribosomal subunit is added forming the full complex. 24

Chain Initiation Figure 26-6 cont d Formation of an initiation complex. 25

Chain Elongation Figure 26-7 The steps of chain elongation. 26

Peptide Bond Formation Figure 26-9 Peptide bond formation in protein synthesis. Nucleophilic attack of -NH 2 on the peptidyl carbonyl Followed by collapse to give the new peptide bond. 27

Chain Termination Chain termination requires: Termination codons (UAA, UAG, or UGA) of mrna. Releasing factors that cleave the polypeptide chain from the last trna and release the trna from the ribosome. 28

Gene Regulation Gene regulation: The various methods used by organisms to control which genes will be expressed and when. As the ribosome moves along the mrna, it encounters a stop codon. Release factors and GTP bond to the A-site. The peptide is hydrolyzed from the trna. Finally, the entire complex dissociates, and the ribosome, mrna, and other factors are recycled. Some regulations operate at the transcriptional level (DNA - > RNA) Others operate at the translational level (mrna > protein). 29

Transcriptional Level In eukaryotes, transcription is regulated by three elements: promoters, enhancers, and response elements. Promoters: Located adjacent to the transcription site. Are defined by an initiator and conserved sequences such as TATA or GC boxes. Different transcription factors bind to different modules of the promoter. Transcription factors allow the rate of synthesis of mrna (and from there the target protein) to vary by a factor of up to a million. 30

Promoters Transcription factors find their targeted sites by twisting their protein chains so that a certain amino acid sequence is present at the surface. One such conformational twist is provided by metalbinding fingers (next screen). Two other prominent transcription factor conformations are the helix-turn-helix and the leucine zipper. Transcription factors also possess repressors, which reduce the rate of transcription. 31

Metal-Binding Fingers Figure 26-13 Cys 2 His 2 zinc finger motifs. (a) The coordination between zinc and cysteine and histidine residues. (b) The secondary structure. 32

Promoters Figure 26-14 Zinc finger proteins follow the major groove of DNA. 33

Alternate Splicing Figure 26-15 Alternate splicing. A gene s primary transcript can be edited in several different ways where splicing activity is indicated by dashed lines. 34

Alternate Splicing Figure 26-15 cont d 35

Gene Regulation Control at the translational level to ensure quality control. 1. The specificity of a tnra for its unique amino acid. 2. Recognition of the stop codon. 3. Post-translational control. (a) Removal of methionine. (b) Chaperoning (c) Degradation of misfolded proteins. 36

Mutations and Mutagens Mutation: An error in the copying of a sequence of bases. It is estimated that, on average, there is one copying error for every 10 10 bases. Mutations can occur during replication. Base errors can also occur during transcription in protein synthesis (a nonheritable error). Consider the mrna codons for Val, which are CAT, CAC, CAG, and CAA. If the original codon is CAT, it may be transcribed onto mrna as GUC which codes for Val. Other errors in replication may lead to a change in protein structure and be very harmful. 37

Mutations and Mutagens Mutagen: a chemical that causes a base change or mutation in DNA. Many changes in base sequence caused by radiation and mutagens do not become mutations because cells have repair mechanisms called nucleotide excision repair (NER). NER can prevent mutations by cutting out damaged areas and resynthesizing the proper sequence. Not all mutations are harmful. Certain ones may be beneficial because they enhance the survival rate of the species. 38

Recombinant DNA Recombinant DNA: DNA from two sources that have been combined into one molecule. One example of the technique begins with plasmids found in the cells of Escherichia coli. Plasmid: A small, circular, double-stranded DNA molecule of bacterial origin. A class of enzymes called restriction endonucleases cleave DNA at specific locations. One, for example, may be specific for cleavage of the bond between A-G in the sequence -CTTAAAG-. 39

Recombinant DNA In this example B stands for bacterial gene, and H for human gene. The DNA is now double-stranded with two sticky ends, each with free bases that can pair with a complementary section of DNA. Next, we cut a human gene (H) with the same restriction endonuclease; for example, the gene for human insulin. 40

Recombinant DNA The human gene is now spliced into the plasmid by the enzyme DNA ligase. Splicing takes place at both ends of the human gene and the plasmid is once again circular. The modified plasmid is then put back into the bacterial cell where it replicates naturally every time the cell divides. These cells now manufacture the human protein, in our example human insulin, by transcription and translation. 41

Recombinant DNA Figure 26-17 The recombinant DNA technique used to turn a bacterium into an insulin factory. 42

Recombinant DNA Figure 26-17 Continued 43

Gene Therapy Gene therapy is a technique whereby a missing gene is replaced by a viral vector. In ex vivo gene therapy, cells are removed from a patient, given the missing gene, and then the cells are given back to the patient. In in vivo gene therapy, the patient is given the virus directly. 44

Gene Therapy Figure 26-18 Gene therapy via retroviruses. The Maloney murine leukemia virus (MMLV) is used for ex vivo gene therapy. 45

Gene Therapy Figure 16-18 Cont d Gene therapy via retroviruses. 46

Chapter 26 Gene Expression and Protein Synthesis End Chapter 26 47