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Evolution and the Genetic Code RNA World to DNA Code Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Which came first - proteins or DNA? • Ribozymes: both enzyme and genome • RNA world? • Later, RNA's functions were taken by DNA & protein – RNA was left as a go-between in flow of genetic information – Splicing may be example of legacy from an ancient RNA world Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Which came first - proteins or DNA? • Group II introns found in purple bacteria & cyanobacteria – chloroplast-mitochondria ancestors – group II introns may be source of pre-mRNA introns – endosymbiotic organelles carried introns into eukaryotes – introns left organelle DNA & invaded nuclear DNA – this “exodus” occurs at high frequency Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Which came first - proteins or DNA? • Introns may have spread via transposition – some modern introns can still act like mobile genetic elements – self-splicing: excised themselves from 1° transcript – catalytic intron fragments copied to separate genome locations – "new" independent splicing genes – evolved into snRNAs: depend on proteins – snRNP become components of the spliceosome – Internal intron nucleotides lost function – hence, variable length & divergent sequences Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Figure 11.39 Introns: both value and burden • RNA splicing is regulated – Alternative splicing: optional introns and exons – same gene, many proteins • snoRNAs encoded by introns not exons – within genes for ribosomal proteins, translation factors – introns excised, processed into snoRNAs – Several genes have introns & exons “reversed” – introns make snoRNAs, exons degraded (no mRNA) Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Introns: a major impact on biological evolution • Exon shuffling – Many proteins/genes are chimeric – Composites of parts of other genes – Reflects shuffling of genetic modules – Introns act as inert spacer molecules – Allows new sequence at junctions without affecting function Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Introns: a major impact on biological evolution • Easy recombination speeds evolution – Not limited to accumulation of point mutations – Allows “jump forward” evolution – Old parts in new context Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Ribozyme Update • To date, very few activities – Cleavage & ligation of phosphodiester bonds – Mostly RNA – Formation of peptide bonds during protein synthesis • Catalytic RNAs from “scratch” – Let automated DNA-synthesis of random DNA – Transcription of DNAs to RNA population – Select RNAs from population by activity – Molecular evolution in lab (In vitro evolution) Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Ribozyme Update • Selection via affinity chromatography – RNAs that bind ligand stick to column – Cycle between selection and mutation – Increase stringency of selection – Increase binding affinity for ligand – First step to catalysis: binding – Second round of selection for catalysis Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Ribozyme Update • Examples of ribozymes evolved de novo – ATP binding, then kinase (phosphorylation) – RNA polymerase – Aminoacyl-tRNA-synthetase (aa to RNA) Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Ribozyme Update • Selection via affinity chromatography – RNAs that bind ligand stick to column – Cycle between selection and mutation – Increase stringency of selection – Increase binding affinity for ligand – First step to catalysis: binding – Second round of selection for catalysis Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Ribozyme Update • RNA World – Amino acids perhaps only cofactors for ribozymes – Then, ribozymes to make peptides from amino acids – Then, RNA world became RNA-protein world – Later, RNA genome replaced by DNA – DNA evolution might require only 2 types of enzymes • ribonucleotide reductase (make DNA nucleotides) • reverse transcriptase (make DNA copies of RNA) – RNA catalysts not involved in DNA synthesis – RNA catalysts not involved in transcription – Supports idea that DNA was the last to appear – At some point, genetic code evolved Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Genetic Code • Discovery of mRNA led to decoding • George Gamow, physicist – proposed triplet code – 20 aa’s needed at least 3 letter code (64 of them) – Also proposed code was overlapping (wrong) • Code is degenerate – Most aminos coded for by >1 codon – 3 codons are termination codons Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Figure 11.40 Genetic Code • Marshall Nirenberg & Heinrich Matthaei – made artificial genetic messages – determined protein encoded in cell-free protein synthesis – Cell-free protein synthesis system • bacterial extract • 20 amino acids – poly(U) makes polyphenylalanine – di-nucleotide, tri-, tetra, etc. Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Genetic Code • Code essentially universal – exceptions (mostly in mitochondrial mRNAs) – human mitochondria • UGA is tryptophan not stop • AUA is methionine not isoleucine • AGA & AGG are stops not arginine Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Genetic Code • Codon assignments not random; – codons coding for same aa generally similar – mutations in one base often do not change aa – Similar amino acids coded for by similar codons • hydrophobic aa codons similar • conservative substitutions – third nucleotide most variable – glycine has 4 codons, all start with GG Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Figure 11.41 Codons and tRNA’s • Adaptor Molecule Proposed by Crick • tRNA’s discovered soon after – Robert Holley (Cornell, 1965) sequenced yeast alanine-tRNA – Small (73 – 93 bases) – Unusual bases altered posttranscriptionally – Secondary structure – Cloverleaf-like secondary structure (stems & loops) – Amino acid attaches to CAA at 3' end – Unusual bases mostly in loops Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Figure 11.42 Codons and tRNA’s • tRNAs tertiary structure – X-ray diffraction – 2 double helices arranged in shape of an L – invariant bases responsible for universal shape – must also have unique patterns to be charged correctly Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Codons and tRNA’s • Middle tRNA loop has anticodon – H bonds to mRNA codon – Loop has 7 bases (middle 3 anticodon) – opposite end of L has amino acid – third position of codon less important: wobble – 16 codons end in U: change to C gives same amino – third site A to G usually does not change amino acid Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Figure 11.43a Codons and tRNA’s • Rules for wobble – U of anticodon can pair with A or G of mRNA – G of anticodon can pair with U or C of mRNA – I (inosine, similar to guanine) pairs with U, C or A Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Figure 11.44 Matching tRNAs to aa’s • Amino acid activation – Performed by aminoacyl-tRNA sythetases (AAS) – Each amino acid recognized by specific AAS – AASs surprisingly different in sequence/structure – AASs “actuate” the genetic code • AASs carry out two-step reaction: – ATP + amino acid —> aminoacyl-AMP + PPi – aminoacyl-AMP + tRNA —> aminoacyl-tRNA + AMP Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Matching tRNAs to aa’s • AAS 3D structure determination by X-ray crystallography – find AAS sites that contact tRNAs – the acceptor stem & the anticodon most important • targeted mutagenesis – Find what makes tRNA charged by wrong AAS – alanyl-tRNA G-U base pair (3rd G from 5' end) – Insert G-U into acceptor stem of tRNAPhe or tRNACys – Causes alanyl-AAS to add alanine to these tRNA’s Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Matching tRNAs to aa’s • Notes on charging reaction – ATP energy makes aminoacyl-AMP – PPi hydrolyzed to Pi, further driving reaction forward – AAS has one of two proofreading mechanisms • Severs amino acid • Hydrolyzes AMP-aa bond – The leucyl-tRNA synthetase employs both types of proofreading – Valine & leucine differ by single methylene group Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Matching tRNAs to aa’s • AA itself plays no role – Fritz Lipmann et al. – Chemically altered amino acid after charged – Charged cysteine converted to alanine – Alanine inserted in place of cysteine Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Copyright, ©, 2002, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E Figure 11.46