D. RNA – ribonucleic acid

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D. RNA – ribonucleic acid 1. RNA Structure a] ribose sugar + phosphate + nitrogenous base but Uracil replaces Thymine (Almost always) b] single stranded molecule c] much shorter than DNA 5’ P—sugar—P—sugar—P—sugar—P—sugar—P—sugar—3’ l l l l l A C G C U

2. features unlike DNA, RNA can survive in the cytoplasm if properly prepared Consider…..if a student loses their notes, they can always make another copy from the textbook. However, if they lose the textbook……they have problem.

3. types of RNA a. mRNA – messenger RNA - varies in length, but always much shorter than DNA - carries the coded message for protein building from the DNA to the ribosomes

b. tRNA – transfer RNA - very short, 70-90 bases only - acts to transport the amino acids to the mRNA at the ribosomes

c. rRNA – ribosomal RNA - varies in length, but shorter than mRNA - binds the large and small subunits to form a functional ribosome

E. TRANSCRIPTION – the process of copying the information from a piece of DNA to make RNA [usually mRNA] 1. Initiation a. RNA polymerase binds to a specific region of the DNA that is A-T rich and so easy to separate b. the DNA is unwound and the two strands are separated

2. Elongation a. only the 3’ to 5’ strand is used  template strand b. the unused strand [5’ to 3’] is called the coding strand G C C T A A T C G T C A C T G C A A C T 3’—C G C A T T G C G T A A C G—5’ 5’—G C G T A A C G C A T T G C—3’ G A C G G A T T A G C A G T G A C G T T

RNA polymerase Template strand Coding strand 5’ G C G U A A G C GG A U U A G C Template strand G C C T A A T C G T C A C T G C A A C T 3’—C G C A T T G C G T A A C G—5’ 5’—G C G T A A C G C A T T G C—3’ G A C G G A T T A G C A G T G A C G T T Coding strand c. free floating nucleotides A, U, C & G are H—bonded to their complimentary bases by RNA polymerase RNA polymerase moves along the DNA unwinding & separating as it goes while the DNA winds back up behind it e. the mRNA hangs free off the side of the DNA strand   attached only at a few base pairs

3. Termination RNA polymerase encounters a sequence of bases at the end of the gene called a terminator sequence b. this results in RNA polymerase and the primary transcript   being released from the DNA

Note: only a small piece of the total DNA is transcribed

4. Post-transcriptional modifications a. a 5’ CAP is added to the mRNA to protect it from cytoplasmic enzymes CAP INTRON EXON poly-A tail b. a poly-A tail of 200 or so adenines is added by poly-A- polymerase to the 3’ end

d. in prokaryotes, [bacteria] that is all of the processing c. this results in the mRNA transcript being ready for release from the nucleus INTRON EXON CAP poly-A tail d. in prokaryotes, [bacteria] that is all of the processing e. in eukaryotes spliceosomes remove all the non-coding regions [introns] and ligate the coding regions [exons] to form the mature mRNA transcript EXON CAP poly-A tail

mature mRNA transcript INTRON EXON primary transcript INTRON EXON CAP poly-A tail mRNA transcript EXON CAP poly-A tail mature mRNA transcript

5. Comparing DNA replication with RNA transcription category DNA replication RNA transcription direction strands copied amount copied # of enzymes bonds broken bonds formed 3’  5’ 3’  5’ leading & lagging template only all of DNA small piece only total of 6 only one hydrogen bonds hydrogen bonds hydrogen bonds & covalent bond hydrogen bonds & covalent bond

Textbook work to consolidate your knowledge pg 249 Section 5.3 questions # 8, 6, 2, 3, 11