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Transcript
Overview: The Flow of Genetic Information
• The information content of DNA is in the form of
specific sequences of nucleotides
• The DNA inherited by an organism leads to
specific traits by dictating the synthesis of proteins
• Proteins are the links between genotype and
phenotype
• RNA is the manager
• Gene expression, the process by which DNA
directs RNA and protein synthesis, includes two
stages: transcription(RNA) and translation(protein)
Evidence from the Study of Metabolic
Defects
• In 1902, British physician Archibald Garrod first
suggested that genes dictate phenotypes through
enzymes that catalyze specific chemical reactions
• He thought symptoms of an inherited disease
reflect an inability to synthesize a certain enzyme
• Linking genes to enzymes required understanding
that cells synthesize and degrade molecules in a
series of steps, a metabolic pathway
Nutritional Mutants in Neurospora:
• George Beadle and Edward Tatum exposed bread
mold to X-rays, creating mutants that were unable
to survive on minimal media
• Using crosses, they and their coworkers identified
three classes of arginine-deficient mutants, each
lacking a different enzyme necessary for
synthesizing arginine
• They developed a “one gene–one enzyme”
hypothesis, which states that each gene dictates
production of a specific enzyme
Lactose Operon of E. coli:
• In the 1950s, Jacob and Monod worked with
bacterial mutants to dissect gene control circuits
• They and others developed evidence of a shortlived intermediate between a gene and the protein
that it coded for
• This intermediate was required for protein
synthesis
• Shown to be an RNA molecule-was named
messenger RNA
Basic Principles of Transcription and
Translation
• RNA is the bridge and the gatekeeper between
genes and the proteins for which they code
• Transcription is the synthesis of RNA using coded
information in DNA
• Transcription produces many classes of RNA
• Translation is the synthesis of a polypeptide,
using information in one class: messenger RNA
• Ribosomes are the sites of translation
• The “Central Dogma” is the old-fashioned
concept that cells are governed by a cellular
chain of command: DNA RNA protein
• Idea developed in 1960s
• It is far more complicated than this in real life
Figure 17.3
Overview-steps in gene
Expression in
Prokaryotes and
Eukaryotes
mRNA = messenger RNA
Nuclear
envelope
TRANSCRIPTION
RNA PROCESSING
DNA
Pre-mRNA
mRNA
TRANSCRIPTION
DNA
mRNA
Ribosome
TRANSLATION
Ribosome
TRANSLATION
Polypeptide
(a) Bacterial cell
Polypeptide
(b) Eukaryotic cell
Figure 17.4
DNA
template
strand
5
3
A C C
A A
A C
T
T
T
G G
T
C G A G
G G C
T
T
C A
3
5
DNA
molecule
Gene 1
TRANSCRIPTION
Gene 2
U G G
+mRNA
U U
U G G C U
C A
5
3
Codon
TRANSLATION
Protein
Trp
Phe
Gly
Ser
Gene 3
Amino acid
Codons in an mRNA molecule are read by translation
machinery in the 5 to 3 direction
The Genetic Code is a triplet code
• How are the instructions for assembling amino
acids into proteins encoded into DNA?
• There are 20 amino acids, but there are only four
nucleotide bases in DNA
• Three nucleotides correspond to an amino acid?
• codon
The Genetic Code is Universal
(a) Tobacco plant expressing
a firefly gene
(b) Pig expressing a jellyfish
gene
Second mRNA base
UUU
U
UUC
First mRNA base (5 end of codon)
UUA
C
Phe
Leu
UAU
UCC
UAC
UCA
Ser
Tyr
UGU
UGC
Cys
U
C
UAA Stop UGA Stop A
UCG
UAG Stop UGG Trp G
CUU
CCU
CAU
CUC
CCC
CAC
Leu
CCA
Pro
CAA
CUG
CCG
CAG
AUU
ACU
AAU
ACC
AAC
AUC
Ile
AUA
AUG
G
UCU
G
UUG
CUA
A
A
C
ACA
Met or
start
Thr
AAA
His
Gln
Asn
Lys
CGU
U
CGC
C
CGA
Arg
CGG
AGU
G
Ser
AGC
AGA
A
Arg
U
C
A
ACG
AAG
AGG
G
GUU
GCU
GAU
GGU
U
GUC
GCC
GAC
GGC
C
GAA
GGA
GUA
GUG
Val
GCA
GCG
Ala
GAG
Asp
Glu
GGG
Gly
A
G
The code is redundant!(>1 codon/aa)
Third mRNA base (3 end of codon)
U
Second mRNA base
UUU
U
UUC
First mRNA base (5 end of codon)
UUA
C
Phe
Leu
UAU
UCC
UAC
UCA
Ser
Tyr
UGU
UGC
Cys
U
C
UAA Stop UGA Stop A
UCG
UAG Stop UGG Trp G
CUU
CCU
CAU
CUC
CCC
CAC
Leu
CCA
Pro
CAA
CUG
CCG
CAG
AUU
ACU
AAU
ACC
AAC
AUC
Ile
AUA
AUG
G
UCU
G
UUG
CUA
A
A
C
ACA
Met or
start
Thr
AAA
His
Gln
Asn
Lys
CGU
U
CGC
C
CGA
Arg
CGG
AGU
G
Ser
AGC
AGA
A
Arg
U
C
A
ACG
AAG
AGG
G
GUU
GCU
GAU
GGU
U
GUC
GCC
GAC
GGC
C
GAA
GGA
GUA
GUG
Val
GCA
GCG
Ala
GAG
Asp
Glu
GGG
Gly
Third mRNA base (3 end of codon)
U
A
G
The code is punctuated (start and stop)
4 Important Characteristics of the Genetic
Code
•
•
•
•
Triplet: 5’ to 3’ in mRNA
Universal
Punctuated
Redundant
Molecular Components of Transcription
• RNA synthesis is catalyzed by RNA polymerase,
which separates the DNA strands apart and links
together the RNA nucleotides (condensation
reaction)
• The RNA is complementary to the DNA template
strand
• RNA synthesis follows the same base-pairing
rules as DNA, except that uracil substitutes for
thymine
Nontemplate
strand of DNA
RNA nucleotides
RNA
polymerase
A
3
T
C
C
A A
5
3 end
C A
U
C
C A
T
A
G
G T
5
5
C
3
T
Direction of transcription
Template
strand of DNA
Newly made
RNA
Figure 17.7-4
Promoter
Transcription unit
5
3
Start point
RNA polymerase
3
5
DNA
1 Initiation
Nontemplate strand of DNA
3
5
5
3
Unwound
DNA
RNA
transcript
Template strand of DNA
2 Elongation
Rewound
DNA
5
3
3
5
3
5
RNA
transcript
3 Termination
3
5
5
3
5
Completed RNA transcript
3
Direction of transcription (“downstream”)
Eukaryotic complexities
• Nucleus has 3 types of RNA polymerase:
(Rpol I, Rpol II, R pol III)
• All 3 need a lot of help to initiate RNA
synthesis
• Eukaryotic control signals are very
complicated
Promoter
Nontemplate strand
DNA
5′
3′
T A T AAAA
AT AT T T T
TATA box
Start point
Transcription
factors
3′
5′
1 A eukaryotic
promoter
3′
5′
2 Several
transcription
factors bind
to DNA.
Template
strand
5′
3′
RNA polymerase II
Transcription factors
5′
3′
5′
3′
RNA transcript
Transcription initiation complex
3′
5′
3 Transcription
initiation
complex
forms.
Transcription Terminology
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
RNA polymerase
Template/non-template
+/- sense
Initiation, Elongation, Termination
Upstream/downstream
Promoter/terminator
Transcription unit
Rpol II (for messenger RNA)
Transcription factor
TATA box
Eukaryotes modify RNA after transcription
• A newly made RNA is called a primary
transcript
• When a new RNA molecule is first made it is
not RTU
• It has to be changed or modified prior to use
• Enzymes in the eukaryotic nucleus modify
primary transcripts before they are sent to the
cytoplasm (RNA processing aka RNA
modification)
• Pre-RNA, mature RNA
RNA molecules are usually modified after
transcription
• Enzymes catalyze changes to the RNA
molecule before it is ready to be used.
• Changes or modifications can be at the ends
or in the middle.
• Changes or modifications can involve a
single nucleotide at a time or a group.
• Modifications help to control gene expression
Split Genes and RNA Splicing
• Most eukaryotic genes and their RNA transcripts
have long noncoding stretches of nucleotides
that lie between coding regions
• These noncoding regions are called intervening
sequences, or introns
• The other regions are called exons because they
are eventually expressed, usually translated into
amino acid sequences
• RNA splicing removes introns and joins exons,
creating an mRNA molecule with a continuous
coding sequence
Splicing is the most dramatic modification:
Many genes are organized into “expressed”
sections or exons separated by “unexpressed”
sections or introns
5 Exon Intron Exon
Pre-mRNA 5 Cap
Codon
130
31104
numbers
Intron
Exon 3
Poly-A tail
105
146
Introns cut out and
exons spliced together
mRNA 5 Cap
Poly-A tail
1146
5 UTR
Coding
segment
3 UTR
The exons and introns are transcribed into RNA
and then the exons are joined together at the RNA level:
Splicing
Diverse splicing mechanisms exist
• Spliceosomes consist of a variety of proteins
and several small nuclear ribonucleoproteins
(snRNPs) that recognize the splice sites
• The RNAs of the spliceosome also catalyze
the splicing reaction
Small RNAs
Spliceosome
5′
Pre-mRNA
Exon 2
Exon 1
Intron
Spliceosome
components
mRNA
5′
Exon 1
Exon 2
Cut-out
intron
Ribozymes
• Ribozymes are catalytic RNA molecules that
function as enzymes and some can splice
RNA
• The discovery of ribozymes rendered
obsolete the belief that all biological catalysts
were proteins
• Three properties of RNA enable it to function
as a catalyst
• It can form a three-dimensional structure
because of its ability to base-pair with itself
• Some bases in RNA contain functional
groups that may participate in catalysis
• RNA may hydrogen-bond with other nucleic
acid molecules
RNA secondary structure-illustrations
U1 snRNA and snRNP
tRNA
The Functional and Evolutionary
Importance of Introns
• Some introns contain sequences that may
regulate gene expression
• Some genes can encode more than one kind of
polypeptide, depending on which segments are
treated as exons during splicing
• This is called alternative RNA splicing
• Consequently, the number of different proteins
an organism can produce is much greater than
its number of genes
• More then one product from each gene
• Adds flexibility
Gene
DNA
Exon 1 Intron Exon 2 Intron Exon 3
Transcription
RNA processing
Alternate splicing works
Because genes and proteins
are made of modules
Translation
Exons = gene modules
Domains = protein modules
Domain 3
Domain 2
Domain 1
Polypeptide
RNA has more roles and functions
than any other component
•
•
•
•
•
•
Ribsosomal RNA (rRNA)
Messenger RNA (mRNA)
Transfer RNA (tRNA)
Catalytic RNA (ribozymes)
Structural RNA
Regulatory RNA
• The RNA World Hypothesis
– Did the first life forms evolve as RNA-based
systems?
– Did DNA and protein evolve later?
Note Card Question (Review)
Promoter
RNA splicing/alternative splicing
Intron/exon
RNA secondary structure
Ribozyme
Protein domain
RNA World Hypothesis