Proteins, Proteins, Proteins!

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What is the connection between genes (DNA) & phenotype? IOW, how, exactly, do genes determine who we are? Proteins, Proteins, Proteins! Many are structural in nature, but most traits are determined by enzymes (or lack thereof!) Transcription & translation link genes to proteins DNA RNA protein transcription translation

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What is the connection between genes (DNA) & phenotype? IOW, how, exactly, do genes determine who we are?. Proteins, Proteins, Proteins! Many are structural in nature, but most traits are determined by enzymes (or lack thereof!) Transcription & translation link genes to proteins - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Proteins, Proteins, Proteins!

What is the connection between genes (DNA) & phenotype?

IOW, how, exactly, do genes determine who we are?

Proteins, Proteins, Proteins!• Many are structural in nature, but most traits are

determined by enzymes (or lack thereof!)• Transcription & translation link genes to proteins

DNA RNA protein

transcription translation

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One gene, one-enzyme hypothesis

• Proposed by Garod, 1909

• Confirmed by Beadle & Tatum, 1930– Worked w/ neurospora

(bread mold) mutants

– Modified to one gene, one polypeptide

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Overview

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The Triplet Code• 3 bases on DNA specify a particular amino acid

• A gene contains enough triplet codes to specify a particular polypeptide chain,along with regulatory DNA

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The genetic code• Refers specifically to mRNA

codons– Complementary to DNA triplets

• Universal

• Degenerate

• Wobble

DNA- CCA/GGT/TTT/CGA

RNA- GGU/CCA/AAA/GCU

Aminos - gly/pro/lys/ala

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DNA- CCA/GGT/TTT/CGA

m RNA- GGU/CCA/AAA/GCU

tRNA- CCA/GGU/UUU/CGA

Aminos - gly/ pro/ lys/ alaAminos - gly/pro/lys/ala

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Transcription-mRNA synthesis• 3 stages-initiation, elongation, termination• Catalyzed by RNA polymerase(synthesizes 5’ 3’)• DNA is organized into Transcription units (genes)

– Initiation sequence, triplet codes for polypeptide, termination• Per gene, only one strand of DNA is transcribed(template, anti-sense)

– Which strand may vary from gene to gene

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initiation

1. RNA pol binds to promoter

• Promoter includes binding site &

initiation site

2. RNA pol unzips DNA & begins

Putting Complementary bases in place

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elongation

New strand is built in 3’ to 5’ directionUracil instead of thymineUses nucleoside triphosphates

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termination

•Terminator sequence (DNA)Signals end of polypeptide•RNA pol dissociates, DNA zips up, mRNA released

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Eukaryotes vs prokaryotes

• In nucleus

• Promoter includes the TATA box (for transcription factors)

• Transcription units only contain info for1 polypeptide chain

• mRNA must be processed before translation

• In cytoplasm• No TATA box or

transcription factors• Transcription units may

contain info for several different polypeptide chains, but have 1 set of regulators

• No mRNA processing• Translation can take place

simultaneously w/ transcription

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RNA processing

• Methylguanosine “cap” added to 5’end

– Protection,Ribosomal attachment

• Poly-A tail added to 3’ end

– Protection,Transport to cytoplasm

• INTRONS (intervening sequences) cut out

• EXONS left & spliced together

– Spliceosomes-proteins (enzymes) & RNA

• Alternative RNA processing

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RNAi (interference)

• Post-transcriptional gene silencing

• Short Double-stranded RNA (siRNA) triggers degradation of homologous mRNA– May be protective

(proofreading)

• research

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The Anti-Codon

• Complementary to codons

• Found on tRNA– “cloverleaf” shape– Attachment site for

amino acid– Anti codon at opposite

end

• 1 tRNA per amino acid– Aminoacyl tRNA

synthetase– Inosine (U,C, or A)