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From Gene to Protein Campbell and Reece Chapter 17
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Campbell and Reece Chapter 17. process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

Dec 23, 2015

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Dortha Cummings
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Page 1: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

From Gene to Protein

Campbell and ReeceChapter 17

Page 2: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA

synthesis of proteins 1. transcription2. translation

Gene Expression

Page 3: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

Evidence from study of metabolic disorders:

1902: British physician 1st to suggest genes responsible for phenotype thru enzymes that catalyze specific chem rx in the cell

How Gene to Protein Figured Out

Page 4: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

Garrod hypothesized that symptoms of an inherited disease are due to a gene that leads to inability to make a certain enzyme

1 of 1st to realize Mendel’s principle’s of heredity applied to more than pea plants

Inborn Errors of Metabolism

Page 5: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 6: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

Signs & Symptoms: urine turns black when alkapton

(chemical in urine) reacts with air missing enzyme in pathway that

degrades phenylalanine (a.a.)

Alkaptonuria

Page 7: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 8: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 9: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 10: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

worked with a bread mold Neurospora crassa

bombarded it with radiation (already known to cause genetic changes)

then checked for survivors who had different nutritional needs from wild-type mold

Beadle & Tatum Experiment

Page 11: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 12: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

individually put yeast in different mediums (agar with different nutrients)

identified mutants that could not survive on minimal nutrients placed them in complete growth medium (minimal med. + all 20 a.a. + few vitamins & minerals)

Beadle & Tatum Experiment

Page 13: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 14: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

Beadle & Tatum’s results supported their hypothesis

1958: Nobel prize

1-Gene-1-Polypeptide

Page 15: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

revised over time: not all proteins are enzymes some proteins have >1 polypeptide now: 1- gene-1-protein hypothesis not 100%: some eukaryotic genes can

each code for a set of closely related polypeptides via alternative splicing

1-Gene-1-Polypeptide

Page 16: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

the synthesis of RNA using information in DNA

mRNA made using complimentary base pairing

Transcription: short version

Page 17: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

synthesis of a polypeptide using the information in mRNA

“translates” message in mRNA a.a.

Translation: short version

Page 18: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

4 nucleotide bases to code for 20 a.a.

triplet code: 3 consecutive bases code for 1 of the a.a./ stop

The Genetic Code

Page 19: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 20: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

during transcription: DNA helix unwound 1 strand only transcribed (could be

either side depending on the gene)

Template Strand

Page 21: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

uracil added as compliment to adenine

ribose as its 5-carbon sugar single stranded

mRNA

Page 22: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

nucleotide triplets of DNA or mRNA that specifies a particular amino acid or termination signal

basic unit of the genetic code written in 5’ 3’ direction (in DNA 3

bases read in 3’ 5’ direction)

Codons

Page 23: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

Genetic Code

Page 24: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

early 1960’s Nirenberg: synthesized mRNA using

only uracil (UUUUUUU…) added it to test tube with all 20 a.a.,

ribosomes translated into polypeptide made up of

phenyalanine now knew UUU = Phe did same for AAA= Lys, CCC = Pro, GGG

= Gly

Cracking the Code

Page 25: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

all 64 a.a. deciphered by mid-1960’s 3 codons code for “stop” marking

end of translation AUG functions as “start” & Met

Met may or may not be clipped off later

Cracking the Code

Page 26: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

>1 triplet codes for each of the a.a. but any 1 triplet codes for only 1 a.a

redundant triplets usually only differ in the 3rd base

Genetic Code is Redundant

Page 27: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

translating the code in correct groupings

example: Did the red dog eat the bug?

Idt her edd oge att heb ug?

Reading Frame

Page 28: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

Reading Frame

Page 29: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

code is nearly universal: bacteria complex multicellular

organisms CAU = His insert genes into other species & get

same result (human insulin gene in bacteria)

exceptions: certain unicellular eukaryotes & in organelle genes of some species

Evolution of Genetic Code

Page 30: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 31: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

unwinds 2 strands of DNA binds nucleotides together as build

mRNA only in 5’ 3’ direction (like DNA

polymerase)

RNA Polymerase

Page 32: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

1. Initiation2. Elongation3. Termination

3 Stages of Transcription

Page 33: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

After RNA polymerase binds to promoter, ¤ DNA strands unwind polymerase begins RNA synthesis @

start pt. on template strand

Initiation

Page 34: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

promoter: usually includes w/in it the transcription start point (a nucleotide where transcription begins) & extends several dozen or more nucleotide pairs upstream from start pt.

RNAP can assemble nucleotides only in 5’ 3’ direction (just like DNA polymerase)

unlike DNAP, RNAP does not require a primer

Initiation

Page 35: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

nucleotide where RNA synthesis actually begins

RNAP binds in precise location & orientation on the promoter where determines where transcription starts & which of the 2 strands will be transcribed

Start Point

Page 36: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

Bacteria: 1 single RNAP used to make all types

RNA Eukaryotic Cells:

@ least 3 types RNA polymerase II used for RNA synthesis I and III used to transcribe RNA not

used for protein synthesis

RNA Polymerase

Page 37: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

Prokaryotes : RNAP recognizes & binds to the

promoter by itself Eukayotes:

collection of proteins , transcription factors, mediate the binding of RNAP & initiation of transcription

RNA Polymerase

Page 38: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

must 1st attach to promoter b/4 RNAP II can bind to it RNAP II + transcription factors =

Transcription Initiation Complex TATA box: DNA sequence in

eukaryotic promoters crucial in forming the transcription initiation complex

Transcription Factors

Page 39: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 40: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

RNAP moves downstrean, unwinding the DNA & elongating the RNA transcript 5’ 3’

~ 10 – 20 nucleotides exposed in wake of transcription the 2 DNA

strands spontaneously rewind length of DNA transcribed =

transcription unit

Elongation

Page 41: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

Elongation

Page 42: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

mechanism differs between prokaryotes & eukaryotes

Bacteria: transcription proceeds thru terminator sequence in the DNA the transcribed RNA functions as the terminator sequence causing RNAP to detach

prokaryotes have no further modification

Termination

Page 43: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

RNAP II transcribes a portion of DNA called the polyadenylation signal (AAUAAA) in the pre-mRNA

~10 – 35 nucleotides downstream from that sequence proteins ass’c with transcription cut the pre-mRNA free from the polymerase

pre-mRNA then modified

Termination in Eukaryotes

Page 44: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 45: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

in eukaryotes only both ends of primary transcript

altered certain interior sections cut out &

remaining parts spliced back together

RNA Processing

Page 46: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

5’ end receives a 5’cap: modified G is added after ~ 20 – 40 nucleotides in mRNA

3’ end modified: enzyme adds 50 -250 A’s to the AAUAAA forming a poly-A tail

mRNA Ends

Page 47: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

1. facilitate exit of mRNA from nucleus

2. protect mRNA from degradation of hydrolytic enzymes

3. help ribosomes attach to the 5’ end

Functions of Modified Ends of mRNA

Page 48: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 49: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

cut-and-paste job removing segments of RNA that were transcribed

average size transcript: 27,000 nucleotides

average size protein: 1,200 nucleotides (400 a.a.)

RNA Splicing

Page 50: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

noncoding, intervening sequence w/in primary transcript that is removed from the transcript during RNA processing; also refers to the region of DNA from which this sequence was transcribed

Introns

Page 51: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

sequence w/in primary transcript that remains in the RNA after RNA processing; also refers to the region of DNA from which this sequence was transcribed

Exons

Page 52: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

signal: short nucleotide sequence @ each end of an intron

particle called “snurp” recognizes splice sites small nuclear ribonucleoproteins

(snRNP’s) in nucleus made of RNA + protein small nuclear RNA ~150 nucleotides

RNA Splicing

Page 53: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

combination of several different snRNP’s (almost size of ribosome)

interact with certain sites along intron releasing intron rapidly degraded

then joins ends of exons together

Spliceosome

Page 54: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

RNA Splicing

Page 55: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

RNA molecules that function like enzymes in some organisms

intron RNA can act like ribozyme & catalyze its own excision

Ribozymes

Page 56: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

3 properties of RNA enables some RNA molecules to function as enzymes:

1. single-stranded: 1 sequence can interact w/another using base pairing

2. some of bases contain functional groups (like a.a) that could participate in catalysis

3. ability to form H-bonds adds specificity

Ribozymes

Page 57: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

RNA

Page 58: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

still having debate about importance of introns & RNA splicing in evolution

they both have adaptive benefits do not know functions of most

introns

Importance of Introns

Page 59: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

single gene can encode >1 kind of polypeptide

know many genes that make 2 or more different polypeptides depending on what was removed as introns during gene splicing

called: alternative RNA splicing

Importance of Introns

Page 60: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

Drosophila sex differences due to how RNA transcript is spliced

Human Genome Project: 1 of reasons humans get by with same # genes as a nematode

Alternative RNA Splicing

Page 61: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 62: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

tRNA: transfers a.a. from cytoplasmic pool of a.a to ribosome where it’s a.a. is added to polypeptide chain

cell keeps supply of all 20 a.a. on hand degradation of other molecules synthesizes them using building blocks

in cytoplasm

Translation: Closer Look

Page 63: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

brings specific a.a to ribosome 1 end has a.a./ other end has anticodon

which H-bonds with codon on ribosome tRNA translates the codes into the

corresponding a.a. tRNA is transcribed from DNA

templates & used repeatedly tRNA made of ~80 nucleotides long

with some regions folded back on self due to base pairing

tRNA

Page 64: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

tRNA Structure

Page 65: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

3’ end: a.a. attached

opposite end: anticodon

tRNA Structure

Page 66: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

requires 2 instances of molecular recognition:

1. tRNA that binds to particular a.a. correct match made by group enzymes

called aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases: their active site fits only 1 of the 20 a.a.

2. pairing of tRNA anticodon with mRNA codon

Accurate Translation

Page 67: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

~ 45 different ones (not 61 like genetic code would suggest) possible because pairing the 3rd base of

codon & 3rd base of anticodon: relaxed base pair rules

U can pair with A or G in 3’ end of codon (3rd position)

called a “wobble”

tRNA Wobble

Page 68: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 69: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

subunits made in nucleolus rRNA transcribed & added to proteins

imported from cytoplasm ribosomal subunits cytoplasm, join

only when translating mRNA subunits ~1/3 protein & 2/3 rRNA

bacteria: 3 molecules rRNA eukaryotes: 4 molecules rRNA

Ribosomes

Page 70: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

eukaryotic ribosomes slightly larger than prokaryotic ones

pharmaceutical products (antibiotics) designed to inactivate bacterial ribosomes that have no effect on ours Tetracyclines Streptomycin

Ribosome Structure

Page 71: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

4 binding sites: (1st for mRNA, others for tRNA)

1. mRNA binding site2. P site: peptidyl-tRNA holds the

tRNA carrying the growing polypeptide chain

3. A site: aminoacyl-tRNA holds tRNA carrying next a.a to be added

4. E site: exit, where discharged tRNAs leave ribosome

Ribosome Structure

Page 72: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 73: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 74: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 75: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

holds tRNA & mRNA in close proximity & catalyzes the formation of new peptide bond holding the 2 a.a together adding to carboxyl end of last a.a. in growing polypeptide chain

peptide chain passes thru exit tunnel in large subunit as it grows longer

Ribosome

Page 76: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

3 Stages:1. Initiation2. Elongation3. Termination

Translation

Page 77: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

small ribosomal subunit attaches to mRNA

downstream from this attachment is the start codon AUG

tRNA with UAC (Met) binds to it large ribosomal subunit attaches

(1GTP) initiation factors (proteins) required

to bring it all together

Initiation

Page 78: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 79: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

1. Codon recognition anticodon of incoming tRNA w/c’ base 1 GTP increases accuracy & efficiency

2. Peptide bond formation part of rRNA catalyzes reaction amino end of newest a.a + carboxyl end of

peptide chain transferring pep. chain to tRNA @ A site

3. Translocation ribosome moves so tRNA @ A site P site 1 GTP

Elongation

Page 80: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 81: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

1. ribosome reaches stop codon the A site accepts a “release factor” (shaped like tRNA but does not have aminoacyl part)

2. promotes release of bond between P site, mRNA, & last tRNA

3. 2 ribosomal subunits & ass’c proteins come apart

Termination

Page 82: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 85: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

1 ribosome can make polypeptide of average size: 1 min

typically many ribosomes are translating a single mRNA @ given time

1st ribosome gets far enough past start codon 2nd ribosome can get started

allow cell to make many copies of polypeptide very quickly

Polyribosomes

Page 86: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

Polyribosomes

Page 87: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

as polypeptide chain grows longer from ribosome it will spontaneously start to fold & coil as result of a.a side chain interactions

genes determine 1’ structure which then determines 2’, 3’ and 4’ structures

Primary Structure

Page 88: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

proteins that help with the folding

Chaperonins

Page 89: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

additional steps that may be required b/4 protein can do its job attachment of sugars, lipids, phosphate

groups to a.a enzymatic removal of 1 or more a.a.

from leading end (amino end)

Post-Translational Modifications

Page 90: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

Modification of Insulin

Page 91: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

free ribosomes make proteins used in cytoplasm

bound ribosomes (RER) attached to cytosolic side while polypeptide being released into endomembrane system

both have identical small & large subunits

Targeting Polypeptides Specific Locations in Cell

Page 92: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

Ribosomes

Page 93: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

growing polypeptide cues ribosome to attach to ER

polypeptides of proteins destined for endomembrane system have signal peptide: sequence of ~20 a.a. at or near leading end (N-terminus) is recognized by a protein-RNA complex called signal-recognition particle or SRP

Signal Peptide

Page 94: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

escorts ribosome to receptor protein on ER membrane

receptor part of multiprotein translocation complex

ribosome continues to make polypeptide which enters ER thru protein pore

signal protein usually removed by enzyme

SRP

Page 95: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 96: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

use other signal peptides for protein destined for chloroplast, mitochondria, or interior of nucleus

in these, proteins made in cytosol then to organelle

signal proteins target or “address” proteins for secretion or to cellular locations used by prokaryotes too

Proteins Organelles

Page 97: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 98: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

ultimate source of new genes large scale mutations

chromosomal rearrangements: chap. 15 small scale mutations

1 or a few nucleotide bases changed

Mutations

Page 100: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

changes in single nucleotide pair if occurs in gamete or cell that gamete

will be passed on to offspring if mutation has adverse effect on

phenotype is called a genetic disorder or hereditary disease

if mutation causes organism to die before fully developed it is said to be lethal

if mutation results in no change in phenotype is said to be silent

Point Mutations

Page 101: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 102: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

Sickle Cell Anemia

Page 103: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

point mutation dominant possible cause of

sudden death of young athletes

Familial Cardiomyopathy

Page 104: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

replacement of 1 nucleotide pair by another pair: a few will improve activity of protein it is coding for but most will be detrimental

some silent due to redundancy of genetic code

if changes 1 a.a. for another called missense mutation if substituted a.a. similar to real one no effect some substitutions will have major

consequences

Substitutions

Page 105: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

Nucleotide-Pair Substitutions

Page 106: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

1. Silent2. Missense:

most substitutions in this category

3. Nonsense: substitution changes from 1 a.a. stop codon

resulting polypeptide is shorter nearly all nonfunctional proteins

Nucleotide-Pair Substitution

Page 107: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

(+) or (-) of nucleotide pairs in a gene

disastrous effects may alter reading frame triplet

codon shifts on mRNA called frameshift mutation

whenever insertion or deletion not in a multiple of 3

if not causes major missense

Insertions & Deletions

Page 108: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.
Page 109: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

any chemical or physical agent that interacts with DNA & can cause a mutation

1920’s: Muller used x-rays to make mutant Drosophila & he discovered it does same in humans

mutagenic radiation includes: UV radiation cause thymine dimers in DNA

Mutagens

Page 110: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

Thymine Dimers

Page 111: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

nucleotide analogs similar to normal DNA nucleotides insert self into DNA

Chemical Mutagens

Page 112: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

some cause chemical changes in bases that changes their pairing properties

Chemical Mutagens

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Page 114: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

How Mutagens Determined

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Page 116: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

Gene Expression in 3 Domains

Page 117: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

some in gene expression among eubacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes

if no nucleus: translation can begin b/4 transcription is over

Archaea show similarities to Eubacteria and eukaryotes in processes of gene expression

Differences

Page 118: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.

region of DNA whose final functional product is either a polypeptide or an ENA molecule

What is a Gene?

Page 119: Campbell and Reece Chapter 17.  process by which DNA directs the synthesis of proteins or RNA  synthesis of proteins 1. transcription 2. translation.