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