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Benjamin A. Pierce •GENETICS ESSENTIALS •Concepts and Connections • SECOND EDITION CHAPTER 11 From DNA to Proteins: Translation © 2013 W. H. Freeman and Company CHAPTER 11 OUTLINE • 11.1 The Genetic Code Determines How the Nucleotide Sequence Specifies the Amino Acid Sequence of a Protein, 288 • 11.2 Amino Acids Are Assembled into a Protein Through the Mechanism of Translation, 293 • 11.3 Additional Properties of Translation and Proteins, 299 11.1 THE GENETIC CODE DETERMINES HOW THE NUCLEOTIDE SEQUENCE SPECIFIES THE AMINO ACID SEQUENCE OF A PROTEIN • The One Gene, One Enzyme Hypothesis • Genes function by encoding enzymes, and each gene encodes a separate enzyme. • More specific: one gene, one polypeptide hypothesis 11.1 THE GENETIC CODE DETERMINES HOW THE NUCLEOTIDE SEQUENCE SPECIFIES THE AMINO ACID SEQUENCE OF A PROTEIN • The Structure and Function of Proteins • Proteins are polymers consisting of amino acids linked by peptide bonds. • Amino acid sequence is its primary structure. • This structure folds to create secondary and tertiary structures. • Two or more polypeptide chains associate to form quaternary structure. 11.2 The Genetic Code Determines How the Nucleotide Sequence Specifies the Amino Acid Sequence of a Protein Characteristics of the Genetic Code • The degeneracy of the code • The reading frame and initiation codons • Termination codons • The universality of the code Breaking the Genetic Code • Homopolymers • Random copolymers • Ribosome-bound tRNAs • Codon: a triplet RNA code The Degeneracy of the Code • Degenerate code: Amino acid may be specified by more than one codon. • Synonymous codons: codons that specify the same amino acid. • Isoaccepting tRNAs: different tRNAs that accept the same amino acid but have different anticodons. The Degeneracy of the Code • Codons • Sense codons: encoding amino acid • Initiation codon: AUG • Termination codon: UAA, UAG, UGA • Wobble hypothesis The Degeneracy of the Code • Wobble hypothesis The Reading Frame and Initiation Codons • Reading frame: three ways in which the sequence can be read in groups of three. Each different way of reading encodes a different amino acid sequence. • Non-overlapping: A single nucleotide may not be included in more than one codon. • The universality of the code: near universal, with some exceptions. 11.2 Amino Acid Are Assembled into a Protein Through the Mechanism of Translation • The Binding of Amino Acids to Transfer RNAs • The Initiation of Translation • Elongation • Termination The Binding of Amino Acids to Transfer RNAs • Aminoacyl-tRNA syntheses and tRNA charging • The specificity between an amino acid and its tRNA is determined by each individual aminoacyl-tRNA synthesis. There are exactly 20 different aminoacyl-tRNA syntheses in a cell. The Initiation of Translation • Initiation factors IF-3, initiator tRNA with Nformylmethionine attached to form fmet-tRNA • Energy molecule: GTP The Initiation of Translation • The Shine-Dalgarno consensus sequence in bacterial cells is recognized by the small unit of ribosome. • The Kozak sequence in eukaryotic cells facilitates the identification of the start codon. The Initiation of Translation • The Kozak sequence in eukaryotic cells facilitates the identification of the start codon. Elongation • Aminoacyl site A • Peptidyl site P • Exit site E • Elongation factors: Tu, Ts, and G Termination • Termination codons: UAA, UAG, and UGA • Release factors 11.3 Additional Properties of Translation and Proteins • The three-dimensional structure of the ribosome • Polyribosomes: • An mRNA with several ribosomes attached 11.3 Additional Properties of Translation and Proteins • Post-translational Modifications of Proteins • Chaperons • Translation and Antibiotics