Happy New Year -Grab a big whiteboard and a markers for your table.

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Happy New Year

-Grab a big whiteboard and a markers for your table

Today

• Review– DNA/RNA Structure– DNA Replication– Protein Synthesis• Transcription• mRNA processing• Translation

– Mutations

Schedule for the week

• Tuesday – Review• Wednesday – Review for test and midterm• Thursday – Test (50 questions), review for

midterm• Friday – Review for midterm• Monday – Review for midterm• Tuesday – Friday - Midterms

Whiteboard activity

• 1st activity– Draw a DNA molecule (3 base pairs)• Label: phosphate, deoxyribose sugar, what bases it has,

how many H bonds in between bases, 5’, 3’, purines, pyrimidines,• # the carbons of 1 sugar

– Draw a RNA molecule (3 nucleotides)• Label everything applicable

RNA

Whiteboard activity

• 2nd activity–Draw a replication fork• Label: helicase, SSBP’s,

toposisomerase, 5’, 3’, DNA poly III, leading strand, lagging strand, primase, primer, ligase, Okazaki fragments

Raven - Johnson - Biology: 6th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies

3 options

Question?

• After 20 rounds of DNA replication (cell division), how many cells will have parent DNA in them?

Supercoiling

• Topoisomerases – prevent supercoiling from unraveling of DNA helix

Telomerase – elongates

end of 5’ end of DNA to

prevent loss (end is called a telomere (TTAGGG repeat)

Small strand of RNA

DNA Repair

• Mismatch repair: DNA polymerase

• Excision repair:Nuclease

• Telomere ends:telomerase

(may play a part in cancer treatment)

Whiteboard activity• 3rd activity

– Protein synthesis– Write this DNA sequence3’ – TACG-CGCA-GAACC-TATGC-CCAA-GAC-TTAAA – 5’- Write the complementary mRNA- Process the mRNA

- Black segments – exons Red – introns- Put on methylated 5’ cap- Put on poly A tail

- Write the mature mRNA transcript at the bottom of the whiteboard

- Translate the mRNA by drawing the tRNA’s bonded to the mRNA and writing the corresponding amino acid it brings

Whiteboard activity• 4th activity–Mutations

2007-2008

From Gene to Protein

How Genes Work

What do genes code for?

proteins cells bodies

How does DNA code for cells & bodies? how are cells and bodies made from the

instructions in DNA

DNA

Protein Structure

The “Central Dogma”• Flow of genetic information in a cell– How do we move information from DNA to proteins?

transcriptiontranslation

replication

protein

RNA

DNA

trait

DNA gets all the glory, but proteins do all the work!

GENES

Protein Synthesis

AA AA AAAA

TRANSCRIPTION TRANSLATION

DNA mRNA PROTEIN

“WRITE THEMESSAGE”

“DECODE THEMESSAGE”

• Inheritance of metabolic diseases– suggested that genes coded for enzymes– each disease (phenotype) is caused by non-

functional gene product • lack of an enzyme• Tay sachs• PKU (phenylketonuria)• albinism

Am I just the sum of my proteins?

Metabolism taught us about genes

A B C D Edisease disease disease disease

enzyme 1 enzyme 2 enzyme 3 enzyme 4

metabolic pathway

Beadle & Tatum 1941 | 1958

George Beadle

Edward Tatum

"for their discovery that genes act by regulating definite chemical events"

one gene : one enzyme hypothesis

Wild-typeNeurospora

Minimalmedium

Select one ofthe spores

Grow oncomplete medium

Minimalcontrol

Nucleicacid

CholinePyridoxine Riboflavin Arginine

Minimal media supplemented only with…

ThiamineFolicacid

NiacinInositolp-Aminobenzoic acid

Test on minimalmedium to confirmpresence of mutation

Growth oncompletemedium

X rays or ultraviolet light

asexualspores

spores

Beadle & Tatumcreate mutations

positive control

negative control

experimentals mutation

identified

amino acidsupplements

mRNA

From gene to protein

DNAtranscription

nucleus cytoplasm

aa

aa

aaaa

aa

aaaa

aa

aa

aaaa

proteintranslation

ribosome

trait

2007-2008

Transcriptionfrom

DNA nucleic acid languageto

RNA nucleic acid language

RNA• ribose sugar • N-bases– uracil instead of thymine– U : A– C : G

• single stranded• lots of RNAs– mRNA, tRNA, rRNA, siRNA…

RNADNAtranscription

Transcription• Making mRNA– transcribed DNA strand = template strand– untranscribed DNA strand = coding strand

• same sequence as RNA

– synthesis of complementary RNA strand• transcription bubble

– enzyme• RNA polymerase

template strand

rewinding

mRNA RNA polymerase

unwinding

coding strand

DNAC C

C

C

C

C

C

C

C CC

G

GG

G

G G

G G

G

G

GAA

AA A

A

A

A

A

A A

A

AT

T T

T

T

T

T

T

T T

T

T

U U

5

35

3

3

5build RNA 53

RNA polymerases• 3 RNA polymerase enzymes– RNA polymerase 1• only transcribes rRNA genes• makes ribosomes

– RNA polymerase 2• transcribes genes into mRNA

– RNA polymerase 3• only transcribes tRNA genes

– each has a specific promoter sequence it recognizes

Which gene is read?• Promoter region– binding site before beginning of gene – TATA box binding site– binding site for RNA polymerase

& transcription factors

• Enhancer region– binding site far

upstream of gene• turns transcription

on HIGH

Transcription Factors• Initiation complex– transcription factors bind to promoter region

• suite of proteins which bind to DNA• hormones?• turn on or off transcription

– trigger the binding of RNA polymerase to DNA

Matching bases of DNA & RNA• Match RNA bases to DNA

bases on one of the DNA strands

U

A G GGGGGT T A C A C T T T T TC C C CA A

U

UU

U

U

G

G

A

A

A C CRNA polymerase

C

C

C

C

C

G

GG

G

A

A

A

AA

5' 3'

Transcription video

• http://vcell.ndsu.nodak.edu/animations/home.htm

Eukaryotic genes have junk!• Eukaryotic genes are not continuous– exons = the real gene• expressed / coding DNA

– introns = the junk• inbetween sequence

eukaryotic DNA

exon = coding (expressed) sequence

intron = noncoding (inbetween) sequence

intronscome out!

mRNA splicing

eukaryotic DNA

exon = coding (expressed) sequence

intron = noncoding (inbetween) sequence

primary mRNA

transcriptmature mRNA

transcript

pre-mRNA

spliced mRNA

• Post-transcriptional processing – eukaryotic mRNA needs work after transcription– primary transcript = pre-mRNA– mRNA splicing• edit out introns

– make mature mRNA transcript

~10,000 bases

~1,000 bases

1977 | 1993

Richard Roberts Philip

SharpCSHL

MITadenovirus

common cold

Discovery of exons/introns

beta-thalassemia

Splicing must be accurate• No room for mistakes!– a single base added or lost throws off the reading

frame

AUG|CGG|UCC|GAU|AAG|GGC|CAU

AUGCGGCTATGGGUCCGAUAAGGGCCAUAUGCGGUCCGAUAAGGGCCAU

AUG|CGG|GUC|CGA|UAA|GGG|CCA|U

AUGCGGCTATGGGUCCGAUAAGGGCCAUAUGCGGGUCCGAUAAGGGCCAU

Met|Arg|Ser|Asp|Lys|Gly|His

Met|Arg|Val|Arg|STOP|

RNA splicing enzymes

snRNPs

exonexon intron

snRNA

5' 3'

spliceosome

exonexcisedintron

5'

5'

3'

3'

3'

lariat

exonmature mRNA

5'

No, not smurfs!“snurps”

• snRNPs– small nuclear RNA– proteins

• Spliceosome– several snRNPs– recognize splice site

sequence• cut & paste gene

Whoa! I think we just brokea biological “rule”!

Alternative splicing• Alternative mRNAs produced from same gene– when is an intron not an intron…– different segments treated as exons

Starting to gethard to define a gene!

A A AA

A3' poly-A tail

mRNA

5'5' cap

3'

G PPP

50-250 A’s

More post-transcriptional processing• Need to protect mRNA on its trip from nucleus

to cytoplasm– enzymes in cytoplasm attack mRNA• protect the ends of the molecule• add 5 GTP cap• add poly-A tail– longer tail, mRNA lasts longer: produces more protein

mRNA processing video

• http://vcell.ndsu.nodak.edu/animations/home.htm

mRNA

From gene to protein

DNAtranscription

nucleus cytoplasm

aa

aa

aaaa

aa

aaaa

aa

aa

aaaa

ribosome

trait

proteintranslation

2007-2008

Translationfrom

nucleic acid languageto

amino acid language

How does mRNA code for proteins?TACGCACATTTACGTACGCGG

DNA

AUGCGUGUAAAUGCAUGCGCC

mRNA

Met Arg Val Asn Ala Cys

Alaprotein

?

How can you code for 20 amino acids with only 4 nucleotide bases (A,U,G,C)?

4

4

20

ATCG

AUCG

AUGCGUGUAAAUGCAUGCGCC

mRNA

mRNA codes for proteins in triplets

TACGCACATTTACGTACGCGG

DNA

AUGCGUGUAAAUGCAUGCGCC

mRNA

Met Arg Val Asn Ala Cys

Alaprotein

?

codon

Cracking the code 1960 | 1968

• Crick– determined 3-letter (triplet) codon system

Nirenberg & Khorana

WHYDIDTHEREDBATEATTHEFATRATWHYDIDTHEREDBATEATTHEFATRAT

Nirenberg (47) & Khorana (17) determined mRNA–amino acid match added fabricated mRNA to test tube of

ribosomes, tRNA & amino acids created artificial UUUUU… mRNA found that UUU coded for phenylalanine

1960 | 1968Marshall Nirenberg

Har Khorana

The genetic code• Code for ALL life!

– strongest support for a common origin for all life

• Code is redundant– several codons for each

amino acid– 3rd base “wobble”

Start codon AUG methionine

Stop codons UGA, UAA, UAG

Why is thewobble good?

How are the codons matched to amino acids?

TACGCACATTTACGTACGCGGDNA

AUGCGUGUAAAUGCAUGCGCCmRNA

aminoacid

tRNA anti-codon

codon

5 3

3 5

3 5

UAC

MetGCA

ArgCAU

Val

mRNA

From gene to protein

DNAtranscription

nucleus cytoplasm

aa

aa

aaaa

aa

aaaa

aa

aa

aaaa

ribosome

traitaa

proteintranslation

Transfer RNA structure• “Clover leaf” structure– anticodon on “clover leaf” end– amino acid attached on 3 end

Loading tRNA • Aminoacyl tRNA synthetase – enzyme which bonds amino acid to tRNA– bond requires energy

• ATP AMP• bond is unstable• so it can release amino acid at ribosome easily

activatingenzyme

anticodontRNATrp binds to UGG condon of mRNA

Trp Trp Trp

mRNAA C CU G G

C=OOH

OHH2OO

tRNATrp

tryptophan attached to tRNATrp

C=O

O

C=O

Ribosomes

• Facilitate coupling of tRNA anticodon to mRNA codon– organelle or enzyme?

• Structure– ribosomal RNA (rRNA) & proteins– 2 subunits• large• small E P A

Ribosomes

Met

5'

3'

UUA C

A G

APE

• A site (aminoacyl-tRNA site) – holds tRNA carrying next amino acid to be

added to chain • P site (peptidyl-tRNA site) – holds tRNA carrying growing polypeptide chain

• E site (exit site)– empty tRNA

leaves ribosome from exit site

Building a polypeptide• Initiation

– brings together mRNA, ribosome subunits, initiator tRNA

• Elongation– adding amino acids based on codon

sequence

• Termination– end codon 123

Leu

Leu Leu Leu

tRNA

Met MetMet Met

PE AmRNA

5' 5' 5' 5'3' 3' 3' 3'

U UA A AACC

CA U UG G

GUU

A AAAC

CC

A U UG GGU

UA A A

ACC

CA U UG G

GU UA A ACCA U UG G

G A C

Val Ser

Ala Trp

releasefactor

AA A

C CU UG G 3'

Translation video

• http://vcell.ndsu.nodak.edu/animations/home.htm

Protein targeting • Signal peptide– address label

Destinations: secretion nucleus mitochondria chloroplasts cell membrane cytoplasm etc…start of a secretory pathway

Can you tell the story?

DNA

pre-mRNA

ribosome

tRNA

aminoacids

polypeptide

mature mRNA

5' GTP cap

poly-A tail

large ribosomal subunit

small ribosomal subunit

aminoacyl tRNAsynthetase

E P A

5'

3'

RNA polymerase

exon introntRNA

AAAAAAAAGTP

20-30b

3'

promoter transcriptionstop

transcriptionstart

introns

The Transcriptional unit (gene?)

transcriptional unit (gene)TAC ACT

DNA

DNATATA5'RNA

polymerase

pre-mRNA5' 3'

translationstart

translationstop

mature mRNA5' 3'

UTR UTR

exonsenhancer 1000+b

2007-2008

Protein Synthesis in Prokaryotes

Bacterial chromosome

mRNA

Cell wall

Cellmembrane

Transcription

Psssst…no nucleus!

Prokaryote vs. Eukaryote genes• Prokaryotes– DNA in cytoplasm– circular

chromosome– naked DNA – no

proteins– no introns

• Eukaryotes– DNA in nucleus– linear

chromosomes– DNA wound on

histone proteins– introns vs. exons

eukaryoticDNA

exon = coding (expressed) sequence

intron = noncoding (inbetween) sequence

intronscome out!

• Transcription & translation are simultaneous in bacteria – DNA is in

cytoplasm– no mRNA

editing – ribosomes

read mRNA as it is being transcribed

Translation in Prokaryotes

Translation: prokaryotes vs. eukaryotes• Differences between prokaryotes &

eukaryotes– time & physical separation between processes• takes eukaryote ~1 hour

from DNA to protein– no RNA processing

2007-2008

Any Questions??What color would a smurf turnif he held his breath?

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