Download THE CENTRAL DOGMA

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Microsatellite wikipedia , lookup

DNA polymerase wikipedia , lookup

Helicase wikipedia , lookup

DNA nanotechnology wikipedia , lookup

DNA replication wikipedia , lookup

Helitron (biology) wikipedia , lookup

Replisome wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
THE CENTRAL DOGMA
10-1 DNA
-
Polymer of nucleotides
-
Nucleotide – a 5 carbon sugar (deoxyribose), a phosphate group and a nitrogenous base (adenine,
guanine, thymine, cytosine)
-
C + T = pyrimidines – 1 ring
-
A + G = purines – 2 rings
DOUBLE HELIX
-
DNA = 2 nucleotide chains wrapped in a double spiral (twisted ladder)
-
Structure discovered by Watson and Crick and Wilkins = Nobel prize – Rosalind Franklin died
before
-
Alternating sugar – phosphate – sugar – phosphate …covalently bonded – sides of the ladder (AKA
backbone)
-
Bases are covalently bonded to the sugar; rungs of ladder are made up of bases hydrogen bonded
-
Complementary base pairing – A + T and C + G
DNA REPLICATION
-
Process by which DNA is copied
-
2 nucleotide chains separate -> replication fork
-
Helicase opens chain, breaking H bonds
-
Topoisomerase – allows swiveling by nicking strand
-
Primase ~ 10 nucleotides set down first
-
DNA polymerase binds and adds complementary nucleotides to parent strands – can only add 5’ ->
3’
-
Replication is discontinuous on lagging strand – forming Okazaki fragments – fragments are linked
together by ligase
-
Other strand is leading strand; replication is continuous
-
When replication is completed, 2 new exact copies of original DNA molecule are produced -> cell is
now ready to divide
-
Replication is accurate
-
Change in nucleotide sequence = mutation
-
Repair enzymes fix mutations
10 -2 RNA
-
Polymer (macromolecule) made up of nucleotides
-
Sugar is ribose
-
Uracil replaces thymine
-
3 types:
o mRNA – copies protein recipe (message) from DNA in nucleus, carries it out to cytosol
o tRNA – cloverleaf shaped molecule that transports (tRNAsports) amino acids to ribosome
o rRNA – with protein, makes up ribosomes ( reads and rides down mRNA)
TRANSCRIPTION
-
Describes process by which info from DNA is copied to RNA
-
RNA polymerase – recognizes promoter region (beginning) and binds to it; DNA separates – only
one strand is transcribed – coding (sense) strand
-
Nucleotides complementary to coding strand are added to RNA until termination signal is reached
-
RNA moves through nuclear pores -> into cytosol where it directs synthesis of proteins
10-3 PROTEIN SYNTHESIS
-
Proteins are polymers of one or more polypeptides, each consisting of
a specific sequence of amino acids
-
Sequence determines the 3-d shape of the finished protein
-
Function depends on structure
THE GENETIC CODE
-
Genetic code used to translate mRNA into proteins
-
A codon (sequence of three mRNA nucleotides) codes for a specific amino acid (codon =AKA =
triplet)
-
Each amino acid may be specified by more than one triplet
-
Code is non-overlapping – read in groups of three
-
Code is non-random – similar types of amino acids have similar codons
-
Code is nearly universal
-
Start codon = AUG; methionine
-
Stop codons DO NOT code for amino acids (UAA, UGA, UAG)
TRANSLATION
-
mRNA leaves nucleus through nuclear pores, migrates to a ribosome, where proteins are synthesized
-
Free floating amino acids are transported to the ribosomes by tRNA
-
The loop on the tRNA opposite the amino acid attachment contains the anticodon (complementary to
and paired with the corresponding mRNA codon
-
Ribosomes = rRNA and protein, found free floating in cytosol and attached to the rough ER
-
Ribosomes floating freely make proteins for use in the cell itself; those attached to the ER make
proteins for export
-
Binding sites on ribosomes = P site holds the growing polypeptide chain and the A site is empty for
incoming tRNA with its attached amino acid
-
AUG is start codon – ribosome subunits assemble, methionine is first amino acid in poypeptide
-
As each amino acid is added to the polypeptide chain, ribosome moves down one codon (three
mRNA nucleotides) and next codon is translated
-
Eventually, stop codon is reached and ribosome subunits disassemble, and polypeptide is complete
-
Several ribosomes translate an mRNA sequence
-
Polypeptide chain is the protein primary structure; this folds and coils and assumes its completed
protein structure