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Transcription and Translation Required notes (paraphrase!) This presentation is available online (“Transcription and translation”) I assume that you all carefully read 12-3 beforehand. If you didn’t get it all, reread 12-3 and review the presentation at home. Paraphrase these required notes. • Review the Paper Model Activity • Questions 9 and 10? DNA Basics • What does DNA hold the instructions to build? • Proteins • What can proteins do? • Build your traits (eye color, height, blood type, etc.) • Help cells and organisms respond to their environment • Speed up chemical reactions • Move materials in/out of cells • Build muscle/tissue • And everything else (proteins run cells, organisms, and build traits) • How does DNA make proteins? (Two steps) • Transcription and translation... Types of RNA • What are the three types of RNA? • Messenger RNA (mRNA) • Takes info from DNA (nucleus) to ribosomes (cytoplasm) • Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) • Ribosomes are made of rRNA (and proteins) • Transfer RNA (tRNA) • Transfers amino acids to the ribosome • Transcription – how would you define it based on the reading? Transcription - defined • Transcription – what is it? • Process in which the information from a section of double-stranded DNA is converted into complimentary, single-stranded mRNA. • What is “complimentary”? • Opposite base pair. Adenine is complimentary to thymine. Transcription – 1 Process in which the information from a section of double-stranded DNA is converted into complimentary, single-stranded mRNA. DNA ATATTTAATAATATGGCAACCGGG TATAAATTATTATACCGTTGGCCC Promoter (sequence varies) RNA polymerase finds promoter (“start here”) region Separates (“unzips”) two strands. Note – helicase unzips in replication Transcription can then occur on either/both strands. What would be the first base on the mRNA created from the bottom DNA? Transcription - 2 • • • • DNA ATATTTAATAATATGGCAACCGGG DNA TATAAATTATTATACCGTTGGCCC RNA polymerase next finds the “TATA” box. What bases are in TATA boxes? (a region of repeating T’s and A’s in most eukaryotes). Then removes “introns” and transcribes only the “exons” How many bases would be transcribed (only exons)? Transcription - 3 DNA mRNA DNA ATATTTAATAATATGGCAACCGGG AUGACCGGT ACCGGG TATAAATTATTATACCGTTGGCCC • RNA polymerase creates single stranded mRNA using only exons • (exons = “expressed” DNA, introns are “in between,” edited out) • Base pair rules; but “uracil” is in place of thymine. What’s wrong here? • “spell checks” mRNA, sends to ribosome Cytoplasm Transcription - 4 DNA DNA AUGACCGGG TATAAATTATTATACCGTTGGCCC • DNA strands come back together (double-stranded again) • mRNA is single-stranded and goes to ribosomes • ***mRNA never attaches to DNA!*** Stays in nucleus mRNA ATATTTAATAATATGGCAACCGGG Transcription • http://highered.mheducation.com/sites/0072556781/student_view0/c hapter12/animation_quiz_1.html • http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aso/tryit/dna/shockwave.html • http://www.johnkyrk.com/DNAtranscription.html Cool current event note! • New erythropoietin (EPO) test. • EPO boosts production of red blood cells – Lance Armstrong used it. • Concern now that athletes may inject genes to make EPO into their cells • New test can scan for this gene using introns/exons! • A person’s own EPO gene has introns. • An inserted gene would likely lack those introns. So their absence could signal gene doping. Translation- defined • Translation– what is it? Discuss, be ready to share • When mRNA is converted to a chain of amino acids (protein!). • 20 naturally occurring amino acids • Order of these a.a. determines shape & function of protein. • What is the amino acid order called? • Primary structure! (The “spelling” of the protein) Translation – 2 When mRNA is converted to a chain of amino acids (protein!). 20 naturally occurring amino acids Order of these a.a. (primary structure) determines shape & function of protein. RIBOSOME mRNA AUGACCGGG codon (3 bases) ACG anti-codon tRNA (LOTS available in cytoplasm) UAC CCC UGG Translation - 3 RIBOSOME mRNA AUGACCGGG ACG tRNA (attached to amino acids See page 303.) UAC CCC UGG cysteine methionine glycine threonine Translation - 4 RIBOSOME mRNA AUGACCGGG ACG tRNA UAC (randomly moves around; binds with correct codon) methionine CCC UGG cysteine glycine threonine Translation - 5 RIBOSOME mRNA AUGACCGGG ACG Methionine- tRNA (randomly moves around; binds with correct codon) CCC UGG cysteine glycine threonine Translation - 6 RIBOSOME mRNA AUGACCGGG Methionine- threonine tRNA Only correct tRNA molecules are used; unlimited amounts of all types are available. ACG CCC cysteine glycine Translation - 7 RIBOSOME mRNA AUGACCGGG Methionine- threonine- glycine ACG tRNA Only correct tRNA molecules are used; unlimited amounts of all types are available. cysteine Translation - 8 RIBOSOME mRNA AUGACCGGG Methionine- threonine-glycine goes to ER, Golgi, and beyond! • This example protein is three amino acids long; most are hundreds to thousands • Protein is then finished (ER) and packaged up (Golgi) for use… • mRNA is used again • Note: AUG is common “start” codon; can you find a “stop” codon? • http://www.sciencenetlinks.com/interactives/protein.html • http://www.wiley.com/college/test/0471787159/biology_basics/an imations/fromGeneToProtein.swf Practice Transcribe the lower strand of DNA into an amino acid sequence. The bases in red are introns. This sequence of DNA is near the beginning of a gene that codes for a protein. ATGGCCGTCCCCAAAATTGACTTA TATA BOX AND PROMOTER TACCGGCAGGGGTTTTAACTGAAT Key: Methoinine – Serine – Proline – Aspartic acid – Leucine Pass out homework (as always, working together on HW is not ok).