Top Banner
Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim
32

Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

Jan 11, 2016

Download

Documents

Prosper Sutton
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

Protein Translation

From Gene to ProteinHonors Biology

Ms. Kim

Page 2: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

Central Dogma

DNA RNA Protein• Protein synthesis consists of 2 mains parts:– Transcription – DNA is copied in the nucleus, the

result is the formation of mRNA– Translation – mRNA travels to the cytoplasm and

attaches to rRNA and with the help of tRNA a protein is made

Page 3: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

Translation

• mRNA polypeptide (protein)• Converting mRNA code (from DNA) to protein!– Protein = polypeptide

How is mRNA used to make protein? The genetic code is read 3 letters (nucleotides) at a

time 3 nucleotides= codon

One codon codes for an amino acid

Page 4: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

tRNA

• A cell translates mRNA message into protein with help from transfer RNA (tRNA)–Type of RNA –~80 nucleotides–“t” shape–Carries amino acids–Matches codons to anticodons

Page 5: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

Transfer RNATransfer RNA (tRNA)

Reads the mRNA codeCarries the amino acid that will be added to the growing protein chain

Notice the 3 bases at the bottom of the tRNA make up the anticodon

The anticodon base pairs with the mRNA codon to make sure that each AA is delivered to the correct place on mRNA

At the top of tRNA is an amino acid

Page 6: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

tRNA

• Molecules of tRNA are not all identical–Each carries a specific amino acid–Each has an specific anticodon on the

other end

Page 7: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

Ribosomes• Help bind tRNA anticodons with mRNA codons during

translation

• Found on ROUGH Endoplasmic Reticulum RER (“bound”) or in cytoplasm (“free”)

Anticodon (tRNA) = codon (mRNA)

Page 8: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

tRNA(with

anticodons)

mRNA(with

codons)

Page 9: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

Ribosomes• There are 2 ribosomal subunits

• Constructed of proteins and ribosomal RNA or rRNA

Page 10: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

Ribosomal RNA Ribosomal RNA (rRNA)

Ribosome attaches to mRNAContains the enzymes necessary for protein synthesis

E P A

Ribosome: 3 tRNA binding spots:

E – exitP – current amino acidA – on deck amino acid

Has a large & small subunit

Page 11: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

Binding Sites in a Ribosome

• The ribosome has three binding sites for tRNA– The P site– The A site– The E site

E P A

P site (Peptide Bond-tRNAbinding site)

E site (Exit site)

mRNAbinding site

A site (Amino acid-tRNA binding site)

Largesubunit

Smallsubunit

Page 12: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

\

Amino acid Growing polypeptide

Next amino acidto be added topolypeptide chain

tRNA

mRNA

Codons

3

5

Page 13: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

What is Translation?

• Process of building a protein chain by reading the mRNA code

• Occurs in ribosomes• Uses codons

Page 14: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

Building a Polypeptide

• Translation can be divided into 3 phases–Initiation–Elongation–Termination

Page 15: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

Initiation of Translation

• initiation stage:1. mRNA binds to small subunit of

ribosome2. tRNA bearing 1st amino acid (“start”)

called MET (codon AUG) comes3. tRNA binds to start codon (AUG)

anticodon (UAC)4. Large ribosomal subunit binds working

ribosome5. Initiator tRNA fits into the P site and

holds the growing protein6. The A site is empty and ready for the

next A.A1. 2 subunits of a ribosome come

together

Page 16: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

Every codon has a complementary anticodon which pairs with it AUG of mRNA pairs with UAC

of tRNA

Page 17: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

Translation: Initiation• mRNA is organized into a reading frame • The reading frame is made of codons that specify

specific amino acids– Every 3 bases (triplet) make up a codon– Codons are arranged following the initiation codon AUG

Page 18: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

Large ribosomal subunit

Initiator tRNA

mRNA

mRNA binding site Smallribosomalsubunit

Translation initiation complex

P site

GDPGTP

Start codon

MetMet

U A C

A U G

E A

3

5

5

3

35 35

mRNA codons are what create the amino acids (aka – use the chart) NOT tRNA

Page 19: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

Elongation

• Amino acids are added one by one to the preceding amino acid

• Peptide bonds are formed

Amino acid

Page 20: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

ElongationAfter initiation, A.A. are added to the first A.A…•3 step process:• 1) Incoming tRNA anticodon pairs with mRNA codon• 2) A new polypeptide bond is formed• 3) tRNA shift (P leaves, A moves to the P spot)

Page 21: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.
Page 22: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.
Page 23: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

Translation: Elongation

• A chain of amino acids is called a polypeptide chain

• This chain continues to form as long as tRNA is added to the mRNA strand

Page 24: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

Termination of Translation

• When the ribosome reaches a stop codon on the mRNA–There are 3 stop codons•UAA, UAG, and UGA

• Release factor (protein) binds to stop codon in A site (NOT tRNA) polypeptide (protein) released

At this point the amino acid or polypeptide will fold into a specific structure forming a working protein

Page 25: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

Termination of Translation

Release factor

Freepolypeptide

Stop codon(UAG, UAA, or UGA)

5

3 35

35

Page 26: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

Figure 17.13

TRANSCRIPTION

TRANSLATION

DNA

mRNA

Ribosome

Polypeptide

Polypeptide

Aminoacids

tRNA with amino acid attachedRibosome

tRNA

Anticodon

mRNA

Trp

Phe Gly

A G C

A A A

C C G

U G G U U U G G C

Codons5 3

“EMPTY”tRNA

Page 28: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

Summary of Protein Synthesis

• Replication → DNA to DNA, occurs in nucleus• Transcription → DNA to RNA, occurs in

nucleus• Translation → RNA to Protein, occurs in

ribosome DNA RNA PROTEIN!

Page 29: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.
Page 30: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.

Example• DNA sequence (template): 3’ TACGCTAGTACGATG 5’

• mRNA sequence: 5’ AUGCGAUCAUGCUAC 3’

• Codons: AUG CGA UCA UGC UAC

• Amino Acids: met (start)-arg-ser-cys-tyr

• Codons determine which of the 20 possible amino acids is needed

Page 31: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.
Page 32: Protein Translation From Gene to Protein Honors Biology Ms. Kim.