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A Molecular Biology primer….. Genetic information is carried on nucleic acids - DNA &RNA
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The five bases are: adenine, guanine = purines
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A Molecular Biology primer….. Genetic information is carried on nucleic acids - DNA &RNA The five bases are: adenine, guanine = purines and... thymine, cytosine, uracil = pyrimidines
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A = T (or A = U) C G
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Bases: adenine, guanine, cytosine, uracil, thymine Nucleosides: = base + sugar –on RNA sugar is ribose –adenosine, guanosine, cytidine, uridine, thymidine
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on DNA sugar is deoxyribose deoxyadenosine, deoxyguanosine etc...
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Nucleotides: base + sugar + phosphate RNA: adenylate, guanylate, cytidylate, uridylate
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Nucleosides: base + sugar + phosphate RNA: adenylate, guanylate, cytidylate, uridylate DNA: deoxyadenylate, deoxyguanylate etc...
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By convention, nucleic acid sequence refers to bases not nucleotides.
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By convention, nuceic acid sequence refers to bases not nucleotides. Sequence is always written 5’ 3
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Native DNA is normally double stranded
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…the bases project inwards and are attracted by H-bonding.
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Native DNA is normally double stranded …the bases project inwards and are attracted by H-bonding. RNA is normally single stranded.
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At a particular temperature (T m ) H-bonds are broken and structure comes apart.
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… = “melting” (or denaturation)
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Cooling will lead to renaturation of structure.
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Cooling will lead to renaturation of structure … = annealing.
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Cooling will lead to renaturation of structure … = annealing. = basis in vitro of:hybridisation; PCR
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Information flow is in one direction only: DNARNAProtein transcriptiontranslation
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Information flow is in one direction only: DNARNAProtein transcriptiontranslation retroviruses
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Information flow is in one direction only: DNARNAProtein transcriptiontranslation retroviruses Enzyme activity
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Modifications: Cleavage: +
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Modifications: Cleavage: + Ligation: +
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Modifications: Cleavage: + (exo / endonucleases) Ligation: + (ligases) Splicing: +
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DNA – two major functions:- Replication and transcription
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DNA – two major functions:- Replication and transcription …in each case a template strand is needed.
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In replication, the duplex splits locally and each strand acts as a template for synthesis of a new strand.
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In transcription, the anti-sense strand acts as a template.
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Therefore the RNA sequence is identical to the coding strand
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RNA produced is the primary transcript. 1. 5’ capping with 7-methyl guanosine
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RNA produced is the primary transcript. 1. 5’ capping with 7-methyl guanosine 2. 3’ cleavage to “poly A site”
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RNA produced is the primary transcript. 1. 5’ capping with 7-methyl guanosine 2. 3’ cleavage to “poly A site” 3. polyadenylation (~250 A)
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RNA produced is the primary transcript. 1. 5’ capping with 7-methyl guanosine 2. 3’ cleavage to “poly A site” 3. polyadenylation (~250 A) 4.Splicing of exons by excision of introns.
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RNA produced is the primary transcript. 1. 5’ capping with 7-methyl guanosine 2. 3’ cleavage to “poly A site” 3. polyadenylation (~250 A) 4.Splicing of exons by excision of introns. 5.… = mRNA
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RNA produced is the primary transcript. 1. 5’ capping with 7-methyl guanosine 2. 3’ cleavage to “poly A site” 3. polyadenylation (~250 A) 4.Splicing of exons by excision of introns. 5.… = mRNA = pre-mRNA Or heterogeneous nuclear RNAs (hnRNA)
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Note that mRNA and pre-mRNA contain untranslated regions –3’ UTRs –5’ UTRs
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Note that mRNA and pre-mRNA contain untranslated regions –3’ UTRs –5’ UTRs …these are “outside” the exon sequences.
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Splicing is a variable process Dogma: 1 gene 1 polypeptide
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Splicing is a variable process Dogma: 1 gene 1 polypeptide In fact: many products can be produced from each gene.
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Splice variants: removal of selected exons.
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Another reason….
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Post-translational modification:
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–Proteins –Glycoproteins –Phosphoproteins –lipoproteins
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Post-translational modification: –Proteins –Glycoproteins –Phosphoproteins –Lipoproteins –The proteome is much more descriptive than the genome.
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Translation There are 20 amino acids used in protein synthesis, but only 4 different bases.
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Translation There are 20 amino acids used in protein synthesis, but only 4 different bases. …. So how does base sequence code for the amino acid sequence?
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Each amino acid is coded for by 3 bases = a codon (a triplet of bases)
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Each amino acid is coded for by 3 bases = a codon (a triplet of bases) Translation is co-linear
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Each amino acid is coded for by 3 bases = a codon (a triplet of bases) Translation is co-linear … i.e. codon sequence matches the final sequence.
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–CACAACCAAUUU –his asn gln phe
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–CACAACCAAUUU –his asn gln phe –“Start” and “stop” codons define the reading frame (coding region)
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–CACAACCAAUUU –his asn gln phe –“Start” and “stop” codons define the reading frame (coding region) …. Which can be shifted - physiologically - by deletion / insertion mutations
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ORF = open reading frame
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= a suspected coding region once start / stop codons identified.
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