Chapter 17 From Gene to Protein
Central Dogma of Molecular Biology DNA RNA Protein
Metabolic control Gene to protein relationship 1st proposed by Garrod: inherited diseases reflect inability to make a particular enzyme “inborn errors of metabolism”
Beadle & Tatum’s experiment Studying Neurospora (fungus) supported “one gene – one enzyme” & modified to “one gene – one polypeptide” Nucleic acids & proteins are informational polymers assembled from linear sequences of nucleotides & amino acids, respectively
Figure 17.1 Beadle and Tatum’s evidence for the one gene-one enzyme hypothesis
Figure 17.2 Overview: the roles of transcription and translation in the flow of genetic information
Figure 17.3 The triplet code
Transcription (mRNA synthesis) Catalyzed by RNA polymerase (Initiation, Elongation, Termination) DNA portion (one gene in length) unwinds, unzips Free RNA nucleotides pair up on 1 of the DNA strands Promoters signal initiation of transcription until terminator sequence is reached, then it breaks off & DNA rejoins & rewinds Modified, then mRNA travels to cytoplasm
Figure 17.6 The stages of transcription: initiation, elongation, and termination (Layer 1)
Figure 17.6 The stages of transcription: initiation, elongation, and termination
Figure 17.6 The stages of transcription: initiation, elongation, and termination
Figure 17.6 The stages of transcription: initiation, elongation, and termination (Layer 4)
Figure 17.6 The stages of transcription: elongation
Figure 17.7 The initiation of transcription at a eukaryotic promoter
Translation (Protein synthesis) (Initiation, Elongation, Termination) tRNA’s pick up specific AA’s based on anticodon & carry AA’s to mRNA attached to a ribosome ATP driven process catalyzed by many AA activating enzymes P and A sites of ribosome help hold mRNA & tRNA together; peptide bond forms, mRNA moves down the ribosome (made of protein & rRNA)
Figure 17.12 Translation: the basic concept
Figure 17.13a The structure of transfer RNA (tRNA)
Figure 17.13b The structure of transfer RNA (tRNA)
Figure 17.15 The anatomy of a functioning ribosome
Figure 17.17 The initiation of translation
Translation mRNA is freed from ribosome & AA chain Proteins functioning on membranes or exported from cell are synthesized on ribosomes on rough ER
Figure 17.18 The elongation cycle of translation
Figure 17.19 The termination of translation
Figure 17.20 Polyribosomes
Figure 17.21 The signal mechanism for targeting proteins to the ER
Figure 17.22 Coupled transcription and translation in bacteria
The Genetic Code Determined in early 1960’s codon – 3-base unit (triplet) that codes for 1 AA anticodon – 3-base unit on tRNA which is complementary to codon on mRNA All codons don’t code for AA (43 codons) Most genes are interrupted by introns – long noncoding regions
Figure 17.4 The dictionary of the genetic code
Eukaryotic RNA processing Removing (excising) introns & joining exons by RNA splicing triggered by sets of nucleotides at either end of intron Splicing catalyzed by small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNP’s) consisting of small nuclear RNA (snRNA) & proteins operating within larger groups called spliceosomes
Figure 17.8 RNA processing; addition of the 5 cap and poly(A) tail
Figure 17.9 RNA processing: RNA splicing
Figure 17.10 The roles of snRNPs and spliceosomes in mRNA splicing
Eukaryotic RNA processing Eukaryotic mRNA receives a modified GTP cap at the 5’ end and a poly-A tail (stretch of nucleotides) at the 3’ end (protects from degradation & enhance translation) 30 – 200 adenine nucleotides (poly–A)
Figure 17.11 Correspondence between exons and protein domains
Mutations 1) base pair substitutions - point mutations 2) base pair insertions/deletions - frameshift 3) conditional mutations – harmful under certain environmental conditions (high/low temp. if temp. sensitive) 4) spontaneous mutations – may occur during replication or repair
Figure 17.23 The molecular basis of sickle-cell disease: a point mutation
Figure 17.24 Categories and consequences of point mutations: Base-pair substitution
Figure 17.24 Categories and consequences of point mutations: Base-pair insertion or deletion
Figure 17.25 A summary of transcription and translation in a eukaryotic cell