Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMichael Underwood Modified over 6 years ago
1
Organisms are made up of cells, cells are largely protein and DNA carries the instructions for the synthesis of those proteins
2
DNA is made up of subunit building blocks called nucleotides
3
Nucleotides are joined into chains and two such chains associate with eachother by base pairing
5
The sequence information in DNA is copied into RNA (mRNA) which then directs protein synthesis
7
Amino acid assembly during translation occurs on ribosomes; tRNA serves as the crucial adaptor molecule
8
Proteins are composed of subunits called amino acids; mRNA directs the synthesis of an amino acid polymer
10
Rare mutations in DNA are changes in its nucleotide sequence, leading to an altered mRNA and an altered protein
11
A brief overview of the human genome
Size = 3x109 base pairs (bp), A paired with T and G paired with C, distributed over 23 chromosomes (this is for a haploid, or germ cell; double those numbers for a diploid somatic cell) Nucleotide changes occur in DNA via mutations; the spontaneous mutation rate is approx per germ cell per year Base composition: 40% GC base pairs; less than 2% in the format CpG; this is b/c of mutation at such sites, CpG -> TpG, especially so when C is methylated Genic content of our genome: 3-5% of genome = “genes”; this represents about 1.5x107 bp and includes approx. 40,000 genes What’s in the remaining 95% of the genome? About 40% is retroelements, remnants of retroviruses (much like computer viruses). Retroelements are usually highly methylated at the C in CpG doublets About 30% of the genome = variable, simple repeat sequences in DNA
12
Genes include both coding regions as well as control regions
13
Consensus sequences identify evolutionarily conserved sequences that are likely to be important; eg, the promoter
14
Overview of the Prokaryotic Promoter Region
Met -10 TATAa +1 ATG
15
Eukaryotic Promoter Structure
Met TATAaA A ATG -30 +1 ACCATGG +50 Alternative promoter structures Initiator (Inr) YY A N T/A YYY +1 CpG Islands (CpG)
16
Some general landmarks that characterize transcription and translation
17
Short, conserved sequences delimit exon/intron boundaries
18
Genomic DNA cDNA mRNA aa1-aa2-aa(n)
19
TATAa……..ATG G GU…..AG G Start Intron #1 GU………AGG G UAA UAA……..AAUAAA Intron (n) STOP Poly A tail
20
Repetitive DNA sequences comprise much of the non-coding segment of the genome
30% 1-3%
21
A brief overview of the human genome
Size = 3x109 base pairs (bp), A paired with T and G paired with C, distributed over 23 chromosomes (this is for a haploid, or germ cell; double those numbers for a diploid somatic cell) Nucleotide changes occur in DNA via mutations; the spontaneous mutation rate is approx per germ cell per year Base composition: 40% GC base pairs; less than 2% in the format CpG; this is b/c of mutation at such sites, CpG -> TpG, especially so when C is methylated Genic content of our genome: 3-5% of genome = “genes”; this represents about 1.5x107 bp and includes approx. 40,000 genes What’s in the remaining 95% of the genome? About 40% is retroelements, remnants of retroviruses (much like computer viruses). Retroelements are usually highly methylated at the C in CpG doublets About 30% of the genome = variable, simple repeat sequences in DNA
22
Gene identification can begin with mRNA isolation and formation of copy DNA (cDNA)
23
Large-scale gene analysis can be performed using DNA microarrays, or chips
24
Human CF gene, approx. 250kb 4kb Approx. 1 mutation per 1kb in noncoding regions; if 80% of the genome is noncoding: 3x109bp x 0.8 = 2.4x109 x 1/1,000 = 2.4x106 mut. differing between any two individuals
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.