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. Class 1: Introduction
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The Tree of Life Source: Alberts et al
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The Cell
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Example: Tissues in Stomach
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DNA Components Four nucleotide types: u Adenine u Guanine u Cytosine u Thymine Hydrogen bonds: u A-T u C-G
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The Double Helix Source: Alberts et al
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DNA Duplication Source: Mathews & van Holde
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DNA Organization Source: Alberts et al
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Genome Sizes u E.Coli (bacteria)4.6 x 10 6 bases u Yeast (simple fungi) 15 x 10 6 bases u Smallest human chromosome 50 x 10 6 bases u Entire human genome 3 x 10 9 bases
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Genes The DNA strings include: u Coding regions (“genes”) l E. coli has ~4,000 genes l Yeast has ~6,000 genes l C. Elegans has ~13,000 genes l Humans have ~32,000 genes u Control regions l These typically are adjacent to the genes l They determine when a gene should be expressed u “Junk” DNA (unknown function)
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Transcription u Coding sequences can be transcribed to RNA u RNA nucleotides: l Similar to DNA, slightly different backbone l Uracil (U) instead of Thymine (T) Source: Mathews & van Holde
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RNA Editing
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Source: Mathews & van Holde
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RNA roles u Messenger RNA (mRNA) l Encodes protein sequences u Transfer RNA (tRNA) l Adaptor between mRNA molecules and amino- acids (protein building blocks) u Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) l Part of the ribosome, a machine for translating mRNA to proteins u...
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Transfer RNA Anticodon: u matches a codon (triplet of mRNA nucleotides) Attachment site: u matches a specific amino-acid
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Translation u Translation is mediated by the ribosome u Ribosome is a complex of protein & rRNA molecules u The ribosome attaches to the mRNA at a translation initiation site u Then ribosome moves along the mRNA sequence and in the process constructs a poly-peptide u When the ribosome encounters a stop signal, it releases the mRNA. The construct poly-peptide is released, and folds into a protein.
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Translation
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Source: Alberts et al
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Translation Source: Alberts et al
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Translation Source: Alberts et al
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Translation Source: Alberts et al
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Translation Source: Alberts et al
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Genetic Code
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Protein Structure u Proteins are poly- peptides of 70-3000 amino-acids u This structure is (mostly) determined by the sequence of amino-acids that make up the protein
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Protein Structure
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Evolution u Related organisms have similar DNA l Similarity in sequences of proteins l Similarity in organization of genes along the chromosomes u Evolution plays a major role in biology l Many mechanisms are shared across a wide range of organisms l During the course of evolution existing components are adapted for new functions
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Evolution Evolution of new organisms is driven by u Diversity l Different individuals carry different variants of the same basic blue print u Mutations l The DNA sequence can be changed due to single base changes, deletion/insertion of DNA segments, etc. u Selection bias
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Course Goals u Computational tools in molecular biology u We will cover computational tasks that are posed by modern molecular biology u We will discuss the biological motivation and setup for these tasks u We will understand the the kinds of solutions exist and what principles justify them
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Four Aspects Biological l What is the task? Algorithmic l How to perform the task at hand efficiently? Learning l How to adapt parameters of the task form examples Statistics l How to differentiate true phenomena from artifacts
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Example: Sequence Comparison Biological l Evolution preserves sequences, thus similar genes might have similar function Algorithmic l Consider all ways to “align” one sequence against another Learning l How do we define “similar” sequences? Use examples to define similarity Statistics l When we compare to ~10 6 sequences, what is a random match and what is true one
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Topics I Dealing with DNA/Protein sequences: u Genome projects and how sequences are found u Finding similar sequences u Models of sequences: Hidden Markov Models u Transcription regulation u Protein Families u Gene finding
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Topics II Gene Expression: u Genome-wide expression patterns u Data organization: clustering u Reconstructing transcription regulation u Recognizing and classifying cancers
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Topics III Models of genetic change: u Long term: evolutionary changes among species u Reconstructing evolutionary trees from current day sequences u Short term: genetic variations in a population u Finding genes by linkage and association
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Topics IV Protein World: u How proteins fold - secondary & tertiary structure u How to predict protein folds from sequences data alone u How to analyze proteins changes from raw experimental measurements (MassSpec) u 2D gels
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Class Structure u 2 weekly meeting l Class: Mondays 16-18 l Targil: Tuesday 18-20 Grade: u 60% in five question sets l Each contains theoretical problems & practical computer questions u 40% test u 5% bonus for active participation
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Exercises & Handouts u Check regularly http://www.cs.huji.ac.il/~cbio
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