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Chapter 4 Nucleic Acids: the flow of genetic information • • • • • Nucleic acids: DNA & RNA DNA to DNA (replication) DNA to RNA: mRNA, tRNA, & rRNA; RNA to Protein: Genetic code (Translation); Introns and exons. Transcription DNA Translation RNA Protein Nucleic acids are linear polymers built up from similar units connected end to end: a sugar, a phosphate, & a base. Each base is one of A, T, G, or C and the sequence of bases along the backbone carries the genetic information. DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) and RNA (ribonucleic acid) differ in the sugar component. The prime next to the number indicates that it is part of the sugar and not the base. Backbones of DNA and RNA Phosphodiester linkage DNA and RNA differ in one of the bases Nucleotides are the monomeric units of nucleic acids A unit consisting of a base bonded to a sugar is called nucleoside. RNA: adenosine, guanosine, cytidine, & uridine; DNA: deoxyadenosine, deoxyguanosine, deoxycytidine, & thymidine. A nucleotide is a nucleoside joined to one or more phosphate groups by an ester linkage ATP: adenosine 5’-triphosphate Deoxyguanosine 3’-monophosphate 3’-dGMP The base sequence is written in the 5’- to 3’ direction pApCpG or pACG DNA is a long polymer In some cases if stretched out it would be a foot long about 1 billion bp/foot The DNA double helix structure James Watson and Francis Crick used Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin’s data to propose a DNA structure: The right handed DNA double helix structure. Important for the replication of genetic information. Minor groove Major groove Properties of the DNA double helix • Two DNA single strands are coiled around common axis in the right handed fashion. The strands run in the opposite directions. • The sugar phosphate backbones are on the outside and, therefore, the purine and pyrimidine bases lie on the inside of the helix. • The diameter of the helix is 20 Å. Continue • The bases are nearly perpendicular to the helix axis, and adjacent bases are separated by 3.4 Å. The helical structure repeats every 34 Å, so there are 10 base pairs per turn of helix. There is a rotation of 36 degree per base. • The double helix is stabilized by hydrogen bonds and hydrophobic interactions or base staking. The Chargaff rule (Erwin Chargaff) A-T and G-C base pairs have essentially the same shape Base stacking Other forms of DNA • • • • A form DNA. B form DNA Z form DNA (left handed DNA). Water activity. Z-DNA Some DNA molecules are circular and supercoiled Single stranded nucleic acids DNA Semiconservative Replication: the Meselson & Stahl Experiment Matthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl carried the following experiment: E. coli grows in a medium containing 15NH4Cl 15N DNA Shift to 14NH4Cl medium Purify DNA Gradient sedimentation The double helix can be reversibly melted DNA is replicated by DNA polymerase that take instruction from templates (DNA)n + dNTP (DNA)n+1 + PPi DNA polymerase requires all 4 dNTPs, a preexisting template, and a primer with a free 3’ OH. Elongation proceeds in the 5’ to 3’ direction. Some polymerases are able to correct mistakes so fidelity is 108 The chain elongation reaction catalyzed by DNA polymerase Is a nucleophilic attack by the 3’-hydroxyl group of the primer ? Retroviruses use RNA to store genetic information and then convert the RNA to DNA using reverse transcriptase Introduction to gene expression Several kinds of RNA play key roles in gene expression • Messenger RNA (mRNA): template for protein synthesis (translation), heterogeneous; • Transfer RNA (tRNA): amino acid carriers for protein synthesis (~ 75 nucleotides); • Ribosomal RNA (rRNA): the major component of ribosomes (the factory to synthesize proteins). mRNA is only a small portion of total RNA Eukaryotic cells contain additional small RNA molecules • Small Nuclear RNA (snRNA), splicing of RNA exons; • Signal recognition particle, protein trafficking • Micro RNA (miRNA) ~21 nucleotides, binds to complementary RNA and inhibits translation • Small interfering RNA (siRNA), binds to mRNA to help degradation • Component of telomerase, maintains teleomers during DNA replication All cellular RNA is synthesized by RNA polymerases • • • • Template: usually double stranded DNA; NTPs: ATP, GTP, UTP, & CTP; Mg2+; RNA polymerase. (RNA)n + NTP • NO primer required (RNA)n+1 RNA polymerases take instruction from DNA templates, synthesis 5’ to 3’: Template strand Coding strand Transcription begins near promoter sites ends at terminator sites Transcription terminator In eukaryotes mRNA is modified after transcription. A cap structure is added at the beginning and poly(A) is added at the end. Introduction to gene expression tRNA is the adaptor molecule in protein synthesis: Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase Amino acids are encoded by groups of three bases starting from a fixed point • The genetic code is the relation between the sequence of bases in DNA or mRNA and the sequence of amino acids in proteins; • Three nucleotides encode an amino acid; • The code is nonoverlapping; • The code has no punctuation; • The code is degenerate: 20 aa vs. 64 codes. All 64 codons have been deciphered Major features of the genetic code • Only Trp and Met are coded by just one triplet; • Other 18 aa are coded by two or more codons (synonyms). Most synonyms differ only on the last base of the triplet (XYU and XYC always encode the same aa); • Degeneracy minimizes the deleterious effects of mutations. Proteins are synthesized on Ribosomes In bacteria the first amino acid is fMet, which is encoded by a specific tRNA AUG or GUG is only part of the initial signal Open reading frame The genetic code is nearly universal Most eukaryotic genes are mosaics of introns and exons • Regions that are removed from the primary transcript are called introns (for intervening sequences), where as those that are retained in the mature RNA are called exons (for expressed regions); • Splicing is a reaction to remove introns, which is carried by spliceosomes; • Introns nearly always begins with GU and end with an AG that is preceded by a pyrimidine-rich tract. This consensus sequence is part of the signal for splicing; • Many exons encode protein domains.