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Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation
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Page 1: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Chapter 4

Transcription and Translation

Page 2: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

The Central Dogma

Page 3: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Overview of transcription

Figure 4-10

Page 4: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Overview of transcription

Figure 4-10

Page 5: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Types of RNAs transcribed

Page 6: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Transcription of a bacterial gene

Page 7: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Starting and stopping transcription of a bacterial gene

Page 8: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Overview of RNA processing in eukaryotes

Figure 4-13/14

Page 9: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Intron Splicing

Page 10: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Different proteins are produced from the same gene by alternative RNA splicing

Figure 4-15

Page 11: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Figure 4-12

Page 12: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Repressors and Activators

Page 13: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Transcription in Eukaryotes

Page 14: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Gene regulatory proteins can bind to distant gene regulatory sequences and regulate transcription.

Page 15: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

The three roles of RNA in protein synthesis

Three types of RNA molecules perform different but complementary roles in protein synthesis (translation)

Messenger RNA (mRNA) carries information copied from DNA in the form of a series of three base “words” termed codons

Transfer RNA (tRNA) deciphers the code and delivers the specified amino acid

Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) associates with a set of proteins to form ribosomes, structures that function as protein-synthesizing machines

Page 16: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

The roles of RNA in protein synthesis

Figure 4-19

Page 17: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

The genetic code is a triplet code

Page 18: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

The genetic code can be read in different frames

Figure 4-20

Page 19: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Translation is a two-step decoding process

Figure 4-21

Page 20: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

The structure of tRNA specifies its decoding function

Figure 4-22

Page 21: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Nonstandard base pairing often occurs between codons and anticodons

Figure 4-23

Page 22: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Ribosome structure in prokaryotes & eukaryotes

Figure 4-24

Page 23: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Image reconstruction of an E. coli ribosome

Figure 4-27

Page 24: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Stepwise formation of proteins on ribosomes

Translation occurs in three stages: initiation, elongation, and termination

Page 25: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Initiation

Figure 4-25

Page 26: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Initiation continued

Figure 4-25

Page 27: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

During elongation each incoming aminoacyl-tRNA moves through three ribosomal sites

Figure 4-26

Page 28: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

During elongation each incoming aminoacyl-tRNA moves through three ribosomal sites

Figure 4-26

Page 29: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Protein synthesis is terminated by release factors when a stop codon is reached

Figure 4-29

Page 30: Chapter 4 Transcription and Translation. The Central Dogma.

Simultaneous translation by multiple ribosomes and their rapid recycling increases the efficiency of protein synthesis

Figure 4-31