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Midterm Final Review Part II Somatic Cells Gametes • Body cells • Diploid (2n): 2 of each type of chromosome • Divide by mitosis • Sex cells (sperm/egg) • Haploid (n): 1 of each type of chromosome • Divide by meiosis • Humans: 2n = 46 • Humans: n = 23 Phases of the Cell Cycle Phases of the Cell Cycle The mitotic phase alternates with interphase: G1 S G2 mitosis cytokinesis Interphase (90% of cell cycle) G1 Phase: cell grows and carries out normal functions S Phase: duplicates chromosomes G2 Phase: prepares for cell division M Phase (mitotic) Mitosis: nucleus divides Cytokinesis: cytoplasm divides Mitosis: Prophase Metaphase Anaphase Telophase Cell Cycle Control System • Checkpoint = control point where stop/go signals regulate the cell cycle Major Checkpoints 1. G1 checkpoint (Most important!) – – – Controlled by cell size, growth factors, environment “Go” completes whole cell cycle “Stop” cell enters nondividing state (G0 Phase) • Nerve, muscle cells stay at G0; liver cells called back from G0 2. G2 checkpoint • Controlled by DNA replication completion, DNA mutations, cell size 3. M-spindle (Metaphase) checkpoint – Check spindle fiber (microtubule) attachment to chromosomes at kinetochores (anchor sites) Internal Regulatory Molecules • Kinases (cyclin-dependent kinase, Cdk): protein enzyme controls cell cycle; active when connected to cyclin • Cyclins: proteins which attach to kinases to activate them; levels fluctuate in the cell cycle Internal Regulatory Molecules MPF = maturation-promoting factor • specific cyclin-Cdk complex which allows cells to pass G2 and go to M phase External Regulatory Factors • • • Growth Factor: proteins released by other cells to stimulate cell division Density-Dependent Inhibition: crowded cells normally stop dividing; cell-surface protein binds to adjoining cell to inhibit growth Anchorage Dependence: cells must be attached to another cell or ECM (extracellular matrix) to divide Cancer Cells Cancer: disorder in which cells lose the ability to control growth by not responding to regulation. • multistep process of about 5-7 genetic changes (for a human) for a cell to transform • loses anchorage dependency and densitydependency regulation Normal Cells Cancer Cells Cancer cells • Some have abnormal #’s of chromosomes Karyotype of Metastatic Melanoma Types of Reproduction ASEXUAL • Produces clones (genetically identical) • Single parent • Little variation in population - only through mutations • Fast and energy efficient • Eg. budding, binary fission SEXUAL • Meiosis produces gametes (sex cells) • 2 parents: male/female • Lots of variation/diversity • Slower and energy consumptive • Eg. humans, trees Homologous Chromosomes in a Somatic Cell Meiosis = reduction division • Cells divide twice • Result: 4 daughter cells, each with half as many chromosomes as parent cell Events Unique to Meiosis I (not in mitosis) 1. Prophase I: Synapsis and crossing over 2. Metaphase I: pairs of homologous chromosomes line up on metaphase plate 3. Anaphase I: homologous pairs separate sister chromatids still attached at centromere Sources of Genetic Variation: 1. Crossing Over – Exchange genetic material – Recombinant chromosomes Sources of Genetic Variation: 2.Independent Assortment of Chromosomes – Random orientation of homologous pairs in Metaphase I Sources of Genetic Variation: 3. Random Fertilization – Any sperm + Any egg – 8 million X 8 million = 64 trillion combinations! Mitosis Meiosis Both are divisions of cell nucleus • • • • • • • Somatic cells 1 division 2 diploid daughter cells Clones From zygote to death Purpose: growth and repair No synapsis, crossing over • Gametes • 2 divisions • 4 haploid daughter cells • Genetically different-less than 1 in 8 million alike • Females before birth follicles are formed. Mature ova released beginning puberty • Purpose: Reproduction MENDEL’S PRINCIPLES 1. Alternate version of genes (alleles) cause variations in inherited characteristics among offspring. 2. For each character, every organism inherits one allele from each parent. 3. If 2 alleles are different, the dominant allele will be fully expressed; the recessive allele will have no noticeable effect on offspring’s appearance. 4. Law of Segregation: the 2 alleles for each character separate during gamete formation. dominant (P), recessive (p) • homozygous = 2 same alleles (PP or pp) • heterozygous = 2 different alleles (Pp) – Phenotype: expressed physical traits – Genotype: genetic make-up – Testcross: determine if dominant trait is homozygous or heterozygous by crossing with recessive (pp) Law of Independent Assortment: • Each pair of alleles segregates (separates) independently during gamete formation • Eg. color is separate from shape Extending Mendelian Genetics The relationship between genotype and phenotype is rarely simple Complete Dominance: heterozygote and homozygote for dominant allele are indistinguishable • Eg. YY or Yy = yellow seed Incomplete Dominance: F1 hybrids have appearance that is between that of 2 parents • Eg. red x white = pink flowers Blood Typing Phenotype (Blood Group) Genotype(s) Type A IAIA or IAi Type B IBIB or IBi Type AB IAIB Type O ii Mendelian Inheritance in Humans Pedigree: diagram that shows the relationship between parents/offspring across 2+ generations Woman = Man = Trait expressed: Sex-linked genes • Sex-linked gene on X or Y • Females (XX), male (XY) – Eggs = X, sperm = X or Y • Fathers pass X-linked genes to daughters, but not sons • Males express recessive trait on the single X (hemizygous) • Females can be affected or carrier X-Inactivation Barr body = inactive X chromosome; regulate gene dosage in females during embryonic development • • Cats: allele for fur color is on X Only female cats can be tortoiseshell or calico. Genetic Recombination: production of offspring with new combo of genes from parents • If offspring look like parents parental types • If different from parents recombinants Linked genes: located on same chromosome and tend to be inherited together during cell division Crossing over: explains why some linked genes get separated during meiosis • the further apart 2 genes on same chromosome, the higher the probability of crossing over and the higher the recombination frequency Calculating recombination frequency Linkage Map: genetic map that is based on % of cross-over events • 1 map unit = 1% recombination frequency • Express relative distances along chromosome • 50% recombination = far apart on same chromosome or on 2 different chromosomes Nondisjunction: chromosomes fail to separate properly in Meiosis I or Meiosis II Nondisjunction • Aneuploidy: incorrect # chromosomes – Monosomy (1 copy) or Trisomy (3 copies) • Polyploidy: 2+ complete sets of chromosomes; 3n or 4n – Rare in animals, frequent in plants A tetraploid mammal. Scientists think this species may have arisen when an ancestor doubled its chromosome # by errors in mitosis or meiosis. Chromosomal Mutations Chromosomal Mutations Exceptions to Mendelian inheritance • Genomic imprinting: phenotypic effect of gene depends on whether from M or F parent • Silence genes by adding methyl groups to DNA (methylation) Exceptions to Mendelian inheritance • Some genes located in organelles – Mitochondria, chloroplasts, plastids – Contain small circular DNA • Mitochondria = maternal inheritance (eggs) Variegated (striped or spotted) leaves result from mutations in pigment genes in plastids, which generally are inherited from the maternal parent. Frederick Griffith (1928) Conclusion: living R bacteria transformed into deadly S bacteria by unknown, heritable substance Avery, McCarty, McLeod (1944) – Tested DNA, RNA, & proteins in heat-killed pathogenic bacteria – Discovered that the transforming agent was DNA Hershey and Chase (1952) • Bacteriophages: virus that infects bacteria; composed of DNA and protein Protein = radiolabel S DNA = radiolabel P Edwin Chargaff (1947) Chargaff’s Rules: • DNA composition varies between species • Ratios: – %A = %T and %G = %C Rosalind Franklin (1950’s) • Worked with Maurice Wilkins • X-ray crystallography = images of DNA • Provided measurements on chemistry of DNA James Watson & Francis Crick (1953) • Discovered the double helix by building models to conform to Franklin’s X-ray data and Chargaff’s Rules. Structure of DNA DNA = double helix – “Backbone” = sugar + phosphate – “Rungs” = nitrogenous bases Structure of DNA Nitrogenous Bases – – – – Adenine (A) Guanine (G) Thymine (T) Cytosine (C) purine pyrimidine • Pairing: – purine + pyrimidine – A=T – GΞC Structure of DNA Hydrogen bonds between base pairs of the two strands hold the molecule together like a zipper. Structure of DNA Antiparallel: one strand (5’ 3’), other strand runs in opposite, upside-down direction (3’ 5’) DNA Comparison Prokaryotic DNA Eukaryotic DNA • • • • • • • • • • • Double-stranded Circular One chromosome In cytoplasm No histones Supercoiled DNA Double-stranded Linear Usually 1+ chromosomes In nucleus DNA wrapped around histones (proteins) • Forms chromatin Replication is semiconservative DNA Replication Leading strand vs. Lagging strand Proofreading and Repair • Mismatch repair: special enzymes fix incorrect pairings Nucleotide Excision Repair • DNA polymerases proofread as bases added • Nucleotide excision repair: – Nucleases cut damaged DNA – DNA poly and ligase fill in gaps Telomeres: repeated units of short nucleotide sequences (TTAGGG) at ends of DNA • Telomeres “cap” ends of DNA to postpone erosion of genes at ends (TTAGGG) • Telomerase: enzyme that adds to telomeres – Eukaryotic germ cells, cancer cells Telomeres stained orange at the ends of mouse chromosomes Telomeres & Telomerase A Summary of Protein Synthesis 1 Gene = 1 polypeptide or RNA molecule 1 gene = 1 polypeptide or 1 RNA molecule DNA • Nucleic acid composed of nucleotides • Double-stranded • Deoxyribose=sugar • Thymine • Template for individual RNA • Nucleic acid composed of nucleotides • Single-stranded • Ribose=sugar • Uracil • Helper in steps from DNA to protein • Types: mRNA, pre-mRNA, tRNA, rRNA, snRNA, srpRNA, siRNA The Genetic Code The Genetic Code 64 different codon combinations Reading frame: groups of 3 must be read in correct groupings This code is universal: all life forms use the same code. 1. Initiation Eukaryotes: TATA box = DNA sequence (TATAAAA) upstream from promoter Transcription factors must recognize TATA box before RNA polymerase can bind to DNA promoter 2. Elongation • RNA polymerase adds RNA nucleotides to the 3’ end of the growing chain (A-U, GC) 3. Termination RNA polymerase transcribes a terminator sequence in DNA, then mRNA and polymerase detach. It is now called pre-mRNA for eukaryotes. Prokaryotes = mRNA ready for use Additions to pre-mRNA: • 5’ cap (modified guanine) and 3’ poly-A tail (50-520 A’s) are added • Help export from nucleus, protect from enzyme degradation, attach to ribosomes RNA Splicing • Pre-mRNA has introns (noncoding sequences) and exons (codes for amino acids) • Splicing = introns cut out, exons joined together RNA Splicing • Spliceosome = snRNP + Proteins • Remove introns and join exons • Ribozyme = RNA acts as enzyme Why have introns? • Some regulate gene activity • Alternative RNA Splicing: produce different combinations of exons – One gene can make more than one polypeptide! – 20,000 genes 100,000 polypeptides Translation: 1. Initiation • Small subunit binds to start codon (AUG) on mRNA • tRNA carrying Met attaches to P site • Large subunit attaches 2. Elongation 3.Termination • Stop codon reached and translation stops • Release factor binds to stop codon; polypeptide is released • Ribosomal subunits dissociate Protein Folding • During synthesis, polypeptide chain coils and folds spontaneously • Chaperonin: protein that helps polypeptide fold correctly Types of Ribosomes • Free ribosomes: synthesize proteins that stay in cytosol and function there • Bound ribosomes (to ER): make proteins of endomembrane system (nuclear envelope, ER, Golgi, lysosomes, vacuoles, plasma membrane) & proteins for secretion – Uses signal peptide to target location Cellular “Zip Codes” • Signal peptide: 20 AA at leading end of polypeptide determines destination • Signal-recognition particle (SRP): brings ribosome to ER The Central Dogma Mutations happen here Effects play out here Mutations = changes in the genetic material of a cell • Large scale mutations: chromosomal; always cause disorders or death – nondisjunction, translocation, inversions, duplications, large deletions • Point mutations: alter 1 base pair of a gene 1. Base-pair substitutions – replace 1 with another • Missense: different amino acid • Nonsense: stop codon, not amino acid 2. Frameshift – mRNA read incorrectly; nonfunctional proteins • Caused by insertions or deletions Sickle-Cell Disease = Point Mutation Prokaryotes vs. Eukaryotes Prokaryotes • Transcription and translation both in cytoplasm • DNA/RNA in cytoplasm • RNA poly binds directly to promoter • Transcription makes mRNA (not processed) • No introns Eukaryotes • Transcription in nucleus; translation in cytoplasm • DNA in nucleus, RNA travels in/out nucleus • RNA poly binds to TATA box & transcription factors • Transcription makes premRNA RNA processing final mRNA • Exons, introns (cut out)