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Published byFrank Spencer Modified over 6 years ago
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From Gene to Protein: Transcription & RNA Processing
Chapter
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Important Terms to Know…
25% of students confuse these terms in FRQs!! Replication Copying of DNA prior to cell division (DNA DNA) Not prior to transcription! Transcription Making mRNA copy from DNA prior to protein synthesis (DNA RNA) Translation Decoding mRNA and making a protein (RNA Protein)
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17.1 Genes specify proteins via transcription and translation
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Understanding Genes Proteins
Scientists connected metabolic disorders to genes Ex: alkaptonuria Urine blackens when exposed to air due to missing enzyme that metabolizes alkapton Beadle & Tatum studied bread mold Introduced mutations and saw that mutating certain genes caused metabolic defects One gene, one enzyme hypothesis Not all proteins are metabolic (ex: keratin), so hypothesis is now one gene, one polypeptide
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Central Dogma of Molecular Genetics: Crick
Information coded in DNA is transcribed into mRNA and then translated into proteins DNA RNA protein Collectively known as gene expression
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DNA vs. RNA Double stranded Single stranded Ribose sugar
Bases: A, U, C, G U pairs with A Found in nucleus or cytoplasm Double stranded Deoxyribose sugar Bases: A, T, C, G Remains in nucleus
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3* Types of RNA mRNA: carries DNA message from nucleus to cytoplasm
tRNA: carries amino acids from cytoplasm to ribosome rRNA: forms part of ribosomes *other types of RNA exist but we will talk about those later
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Steps in Gene Expression
Transcription RNA processing (eukaryotes only) Translation Prokaryote Steps occur simultaneously Eukaryote Steps are separate
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The Genetic Code Made of 3 letter codes: codons (found on mRNA)
It is the same in almost all organisms Redundant: more than one codon for some AA’s NOT ambiguous: each codon codes for 1 amino acid
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Overview of Protein Synthesis
Begins with DNA Transcription: in nucleus, DNA message copied into mRNA mRNA is edited prior to leaving the nucleus (eukaryotes) Translation: mRNA message translated into amino acids at ribosomes
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17.2 Transcription is the DNA-directed synthesis of RNA
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Transcription Components necessary: RNA polymerase enzyme Promoter
Separate DNA strand, add RNA nucleotides 5’3’ Promoter DNA sequence where transcription begins Different in prokaryotes and eukaryotes Terminator DNA sequence where transcription ends Prokaryotes only Transcription unit DNA to be transcribed into mRNA
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Transcription: Initiation
RNA polymerase recognizes and binds to promoter “upstream” of gene to be transcribed RNA polymerase unwinds DNA
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Transcription: Elongation
RNA polymerase moves along template strand of DNA adding complimentary RNA nucleotides Reads in 3’5’ direction This means mRNA is synthesized 5’3’ direction A – U; G – C
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Transcription: Termination
Terminator sequence in DNA is transcribed Signals to polymerase to detach from DNA and release transcript
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17.3 Eukaryotic cells modify RNA after transcription
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RNA processing Eukaryotic mRNA must be modified:
Exons: coding sequences of DNA (“ex”pressed) Introns: non-coding regions, must be cut out by enzymes 5’ cap and poly-A tail added to protect mature mRNA
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