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Basic Molecular Biology for CS374 Scientific Method: The widely held philosophy that a theory can never be proved, only disproved, and that all attempts.

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Presentation on theme: "Basic Molecular Biology for CS374 Scientific Method: The widely held philosophy that a theory can never be proved, only disproved, and that all attempts."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Basic Molecular Biology for CS374 Scientific Method: The widely held philosophy that a theory can never be proved, only disproved, and that all attempts to explain anything are therefore futile.

3 Overview Structures of biomolecules How does DNA function? What is a gene? Computer scientists vs Biologists

4 Bioinformatics schematic of a cell

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6 Macromolecule (Polymer) Monomer DNADeoxyribonucleotides (dNTP) RNARibonucleotides (NTP) Protein or PolypeptideAmino Acid

7 Watson and Crick

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9 Nucleic acids (DNA and RNA) Form the genetic material of all living organisms. Found mainly in the nucleus of a cell (hence “nucleic”) Contain phosphoric acid as a component (hence “acid”) They are made up of nucleotides.

10 Nucleotides A nucleotide has 3 components Sugar (ribose in RNA, deoxyribose in DNA) Phosphoric acid Nitrogen base Adenine (A) Guanine (G) Cytosine (C) Thymine (T) or Uracil (U)

11 Monomers of DNA A deoxyribonucleotide has 3 components Sugar - Deoxyribose Phosphoric acid Nitrogen base Adenine (A) Guanine (G) Cytosine (C) Thymine (T)

12 Monomers of RNA A ribonucleotide has 3 components Sugar - Ribose Phosphoric acid Nitrogen base Adenine (A) Guanine (G) Cytosine (C) Uracil (U)

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15 Nucleotides Phosphate Group Sugar Nitrogenous Base Phosphate Group Sugar Nitrogenous Base

16 T C A C T G G C G A G T C A G C G A G U C A G C DNARNA A = T G = C T  U

17 Composed of a chain of amino acids. R | H 2 N--C--COOH | H Proteins 20 possible groups

18 R R | | H 2 N--C--COOH H 2 N--C--COOH | | H H Proteins

19 Dipeptide R O R | II | H 2 N--C--C--NH--C--COOH | | H H This is a peptide bond

20 Protein structure Linear sequence of amino acids folds to form a complex 3-D structure. The structure of a protein is intimately connected to its function.

21 DNA in action Questions about DNA as the carrier of genetic information: How is the information stored in DNA? How is the stored information used ? Answers: Information is stored as nucleotide sequences... and used in protein synthesis.

22 The need for an intermediary Fact 1 : Ribosomes are the sites of protein synthesis. Fact 2 : Ribosomes are found in the cytoplasm. Question : How does information ‘flow’ from DNA to protein?

23 The Intermediary Ribonucleic acid (RNA) is the “messenger”. The “messenger RNA” (mRNA) can be synthesized on a DNA template. Information is copied (transcribed) from DNA to mRNA. (TRANSCRIPTION)

24 Next question… How do I interpret the information carried by mRNA? Think of the sequence as a sequence of “triplets”. Think of AUGCCGGGAGUAUAG as AUG- CCG-GGA-GUA-UAG. Each triplet (codon) maps to an amino acid.

25 The Genetic Code f : codon  amino acid 1968 Nobel Prize in medicine – Nirenberg and Khorana Important – The genetic code is universal! It is also redundant / degenerate.

26 The Genetic Code

27 Translation The sequence of codons is translated to a sequence of amino acids. Transfer RNA (tRNA) – a different type of RNA. Freely float in the cytoplasm. Every amino acid has its own type of tRNA that binds to it alone. Anti-codon – codon binding crucial. Show animation

28 tRNA

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31 The gene and the genome A sequence of nucleotides on the DNA that encodes a polypeptide is called a gene. Genome = Set of all genes in the organism.

32 More complexity The RNA message is sometimes “edited”. Exons are nucleotide segments whose codons will be expressed. Introns are intervening segments (genetic gibberish) that are snipped out. Exons are spliced together to form mRNA.

33 Splicing frgjjthissentencehjfmkcontainsjunkelm thissentencecontainsjunk

34 Central Dogma of Molecular Biology DNA  RNA  Protein  Phenotype Transcription : DNA  RNA Translation : RNA  Protein

35 Central dogma DNA tRNA rRNA snRNA mRNA transcription translation POLYPEPTIDE ZOOM IN

36 Transcription – key steps Initiation Elongation Termination + DNA RNA DNA

37 Transcription – key steps Initiation Elongation Termination DNA

38 Transcription – key steps Initiation Elongation Termination DNA

39 Transcription – key steps Initiation Elongation Termination DNA

40 Transcription – key steps Initiation Elongation Termination + DNA RNA DNA

41 Promoters Promoters are sequences in the DNA just upstream of transcripts that define the sites of initiation. The role of the promoter is to attract RNA polymerase to the correct start site so transcription can be initiated. 5’ Promoter 3’

42 Promoters Promoters are sequences in the DNA just upstream of transcripts that define the sites of initiation. The role of the promoter is to attract RNA polymerase to the correct start site so transcription can be initiated. 5’ Promoter 3’

43 Computer Scientists vs Biologists (courtesy Steven Skiena, SUNY Stony Brook)

44 Computer scientists vs Biologists (Almost) Nothing is ever completely true or false in Biology. Everything is either true or false in computer science.

45 Computer scientists vs Biologists Biologists strive to understand the very complicated, very messy natural world. Computer scientists seek to build their own clean and organized virtual worlds.

46 Computer scientists vs Biologists Biologists are more data driven. Computer scientists are more algorithm driven. One consequence is CS www pages have fancier graphics while Biology www pages have more content.

47 Computer scientists vs Biologists Biologists are obsessed with being the first to discover something. Computer scientists are obsessed with being the first to invent or prove something.

48 Computer scientists vs Biologists Biologists are comfortable with the idea that all data has errors. Computer scientists are not.

49 Computer scientists vs Biologists Computer scientists get high-paid jobs after graduation. Biologists typically have to complete one or more post-docs...

50 Computer Science is to Biology what Mathematics is to Physics See you next week!


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