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The human genome of is found where in the human body? A. B. C. D. Nucleus Ribosome Smooth ER Cell membrane The cellular structure where proteins are made is called the A. B. C. D. Nucleus Smooth ER Ribosome Cell membrane DNA and Biotechnology Announcements • • • • • • Ch 21- today Ch 21, 17- Wednesday Bone & muscle labs- Due Wednesday Ch 21, 17 online quizzes- Due Friday Quiz 10- Friday (chs 21, 17) Lab today- pGLO (DNA transformation) Lecture Outline • DNA- Structure, function, and importance • How DNA works – The central dogma – Transcription and Translation – The DNA code – DNA replication The importance of DNA The DNA double helix is the code of life • The blueprint for all structures in your body which are made of protein • DNA is comprised of nucleotides Nulceotides are the monomers of nucleic acid polymers • Consist of a sugar, a phosphate, and a nitrogen-containing base • Sugar can be deoxygenated • Bases contain the genetic information There are 4 kinds of DNA bases Adenine always matches with Thymine, Cytosine always matches with GuanineHydrogen bonds hold bases together Living things are extremely complex • Cellular machinery is sophisticated and required for life • Cellular machinery is made largely of proteins • Blueprints for all cellular machinery are contained in genes • Genes are inherited from parents • Humans have ~30,000 genes Proteins give living things the variety of their structures Protein variety is generated by 1o structure- the sequence of amino acids which make the protein Amino Acids • Proteins consist of subunits called amino acids Figure 2.12 How DNA works • Replication • Transcription • Translation The sequence of DNA bases is the code for the primary structure of proteins All cells require a copy of the genome • • • • Genome- all the genes of the cell Human genome is made of DNA DNA is similar in all cells Gene- 1 DNA Molecule (+ proteins the genetic information to produce a single product (protein) • DNA replication copies all cellular DNA Replication of DNA Figure 21.2 In vivo, enzymes such as DNA polymerase make DNA replication happen The DNA code Computers use binary digital code 01000011 01101000 01100001 = A 01100101 01100101 01100010 =B 01110011 01100101 01000011 =c 01100010 01110101 01110010 01100111 00100111 = apostrophe 01100101 01110010 Etc. 00100000 01000100 01100101 01101100 • http://www.geek01110101 01111000 notes.com/tools/17/tex 01100101 = t-to-binary-translator/ cheeseburger deluxe • • • • • How does the DNA code work? • atggcttcctccgaagacgttatcaaagagttcatgcgtttcaaa gttcgtatggaaggttccgttaacggtcacgagttcgaaatcga aggtgaaggtgaaggtcgtccgtacgaaggtacccagaccgct aaactgaaagttaccaaaggtggtccgctgccgttcgcttggga catcctgtccccgcagttccagtacggttccaaagcttacgttaa acacccggctgacatcccggactacctgaaactgtccttcccgg aaggtttcaaatgggaacgtgttatgaacttcgaagacggtggt gttgttaccgttacccaggactcctccctgcaagacggtgagttc =GFP The DNA code is (nearly) universal It uses groups of 3 bases (codon) 3 bases = 1 codon = 1 amino acid And what are these U’s for? RNA is ribonucleic acid • Ribose sugar is not deoxygenated • RNA is singlestranded • RNA has Uracil, not Thymine • There are many kinds: mRNA, rRNA, tRNA, siRNA, etc. RNA can fold back on itself • Single strand offers greater flexibility Kinds of RNA mRNA tRNA The Central Dogma of Molecular Biology • DNA RNA Protein • DNARNA : Transcription • RNA Protein: Translation When one DNA molecule is copied to make two DNA molecules, the new DNA contains 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. A) 25% of the parent DNA. B) 50% of the parent DNA. C) 75% of the parent DNA. D) 100% of the parent DNA. E) none of the parent DNA. DNA RNA Protein Trait The Universality of the DNA code makes this possible Firefly gene (Luciferase) in a tobacco plant Transcription and Translation Transcription: DNA RNA DNA Codes for RNA, Which Codes for Protein Figure 21.3 DNA information is transcribed into mRNA Note in DNA: sense strand vs. antisense strand Translation: RNA Protein tRNA’s carry an amino acid at one end, and have an anticodon at the other Amino acid attachment site: Binds to a specific amino acid. Amino acid (phenylalanine) Anticodon: Binds to codon on mRNA, following complementary base-pairing rules. Anticodon mRNA Figure 21.6 The ribosome matches tRNA’s to the mRNA, thereby linking amino acids in sequence tRNA’s add amino acids one by one according to mRNA instructions until the protein is complete We would expect that a 15-nucleotide mRNA sequence will direct the production of a polypeptide that consists of 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. A) 2 amino acids. B) 3 amino acids. C) 5 amino acids. D) 7 amino acids. E) 15 amino acids. Viruses exploit the universality of the DNA code to take control of cells • • • • Basic life cycle of Viruses Viruses are obligate intracellular parasites They inject their genetic material into their host Host machinery is commandeered to massproduce virus Viruses burst host cell to infect other cells Virus Structure • Many viruses contain only: – Protein capsid – Genome (DNA or RNA) • Some viruses have a phosopholipid bilayer envelope Bacteria are infected by viruses, too Bacteriophages attacking bacterial cell The lytic bacterial life cycle Bacteriophages • Infect bacteria • Cause formation of plaques on a lawn of agar in bacteria Bacteria use restriction enzymes to defend against viral DNA Restriction enzymes cut very specific sequences of DNA • Hundreds of different restriction enzymes have been found • Named after bacteria in which they are found Viruses such as T4 fight back with DNA ligase • Ligase glues DNA back together • Viral countermeasures against bacterial cell defenses Scientists commandeer these enzymes to perform DNA manipulations • Ligase and restriction enzymes allow any sequence of DNA to be cut and pasted at will • Plasmids, small loops of bacterial DNA, can be modified with any DNA • Because the genetic code is universal, DNA will be read in the same way Bacterium Gene inserted into plasmid Plasmid DNA manipulation is at the heart of biotechnology Bacterial chromosome Cell containing gene of interest Plasmid Gene of interest Recombinant DNA (plasmid) DNA of chromosome Plasmid put into bacterial cell Recombinant bacterium Host cell grown in culture to form a clone of cells containing the “cloned” gene of interest Protein expressed by gene of interest Gene of interest Copies of gene Basic research on gene Gene for pest resistance inserted into plants Protein harvested Basic research and various applications Gene used to alter bacteria for cleaning up toxic waste Protein dissolves blood clots in heart attack therapy Basic research on protein Human growth hormone treats stunted growth The pGLO plasmid has • ori- origin of replication 1. GFP- green fluorescent protein 2. bla- beta-lactamase (confers ampicillin resistance) 3. araC- Arabinose regulator protein (regulates GFP expression) 1. GFP: Green Fluorescent Protein • discovered in 1960s by Dr. Frank Johnson and colleagues • closely related to jellyfish aequorin • absorption max = 470nm • emission max = 508nm • 238 amino acids, 27kDa • “beta can” conformation: 11 antiparallel beta sheets, 4 alpha helices, and a centered chromophore • amino acid substitutions result in several variants, including YFP, BFP, and CFP 40 Å 30 Å 2008 Nobel Prize- GFP • GFP mice GFP can be fused to cellular proteins Using GFP as a biological tracer http://www.conncoll.edu/ccacad/zimmer/GFP-ww/prasher.html With permission from Marc Zimmer GFP fusions are useful in Biology and medicine Nervous system of C. elegans worm illuminated by GFP GFP fused to Huntingtin protein in monkey to study Huntington’s disease 2. bla: β-lactamase enzyme can destroy penicillin and other β-lactam antibiotics Antibiotic resistance genes are found commonly on plasmids and can be shared between bacteria by conjugation Bacterial conjugation is sex without reproduction Genes for making a sex pilus also are often found encoded on plasmids 3. araC: araC regulates pGLO expression through the presence of arabinose Arabinose is a 5-carbon sugar, different from ribose Gene Regulation Q: What is “regulation”?* "When I was warning about the danger ahead on Wall Street months ago because of the lack of oversight, Senator McCain was telling the Wall Street Journal -- and I quote -- 'I'm always for less regulation.' " – Sen. Barack Obama “Senator Obama was silent on the regulation of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and his Democratic allies in Congress opposed every effort to rein them in…last year he said that subprime loans had been, quote, “a good idea.””- Sen. John McCain * Slide created, September 2008 Regulation means control Prokaryotic cells require efficiency Eukaryotic cells must differentiate Eukaryotic genes can be turned on and off • Females only use a single X chromosome per cell • Genes from the other chromosome are not used in that cell Random inactivation of one X chromosome creates a tortoiseshell pattern in cat fur Genes are regulated in eukaryotes in more complex ways • Each step in the process of gene expression is a possible point of control • The cell capitalizes on each one The job of master control genes is to turn many genes on or off The gene eyeless turns on many genes involved in formation of eyes When eyeless is mutated, eyes do not form Master control genes control formation of entire organs -Drosophila eyeless gene can be artificially turned on in non-eye cells Prokaryotes must also regulate genes Example: β- Galactosidase can hydrolyze lactose H 2O galactose lactose b-galactosidase (aka lactase in humans) glucose 11 b-galactosidase 10 When lactose is present, transcription is activated In the absence of lactose, the lac operon is repressed by the lac repressor protein araC allows expression of arabinosedigesting genes in the presence of arabinose 5/23/2017 73 In pGLO, arabinose-digesting genes are removed, and araC is fused to GFP • How do you think this fusion was made? • What are the structural sequences? The regulatory sequences? • What happens when we add arabinose sugar to these bacteria? • What do you think is meant by “reporter gene”? On pGLO, the regulatory regions of the Arabinose operon have been glued to the structural sequences for GFP ara GFP Operon ara Operon B ara C A D araC GFP Gene Effector (Arabinose) Effector (Arabinose) Gene Regulation B A D araC araC GFP Gene RNA Polymerase RNA Polymerase araC B A D araC GFP Gene What will happen on the Ara (+) plates? What will happen on the Ara (-) plates? Grow? Glow? Which colonies will glow? Follow protocol On which plates will colonies grow? Which colonies will glow? 5/23/2017 76 Plasmids with novel structural and regulatory genes are now easily manipulated by undergraduates iGEM is an annual undergrad bioengineering contest Engineering bacteria to smell better Which strand carries the DNA's instructions for synthesizing a particular protein from the nucleus to the cytoplasm? • • • • A) Transfer RNA B) Messenger RNA C) RNA transcriptase D) Ribosomal RNA Why are the complementary base pairing rules so important when a cell needs to copy its DNA? • A) The cells need both strands to be accurate because each strand codes for one half of the gene. • B) As long as there is one strand, a copy can be made by following the pairing rules. • C) Unless the bases pair up correctly, the DNA strand can break apart. • D) Transcription cannot proceed unless the pairs are in the proper sequence.