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Central dogma: from genome to proteins I: Transcription Haixu Tang School of Informatics
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The flow of genetic information
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Transcription: DNA RNA Copy a particular portion of its DNA nucleotide sequence a gene into an RNA nucleotide sequence. The information in RNA, although copied into another chemical form, is still written in essentially the same language as it is in DNA the language of a nucleotide sequence.
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Genes can be expressed with different efficiencies
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The structure of RNA
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RNA (single strand) can fold into specific structure
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DNA transcription produces a single-stranded RNA molecule, complementary to one strand of DNA
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RNA polymerase uses DNA as template
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DNA polymerase vs. RNA polymerase RNA polymerase is more error prone: 10 -4 vs 10 -7 A modest proofreading mechanism RNA stores information only temporarily
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Principal Types of RNAs Produced in Cells Table 6-1. Principal Types of RNAs Produced in Cells mRNAsmessenger RNAs, code for proteins rRNAsribosomal RNAs, form the basic structure of the ribosome and catalyze protein synthesis tRNAstransfer RNAs, central to protein synthesis as adaptors between mRNA and amino acids snRNAssmall nuclear RNAs, function in a variety of nuclear processes, including the splicing of pre-mRNA snoRNAssmall nucleolar RNAs, used to process and chemically modify rRNAs Other noncoding RNAsfunction in diverse cellular processes, including telomere synthesis, X-chromosome inactivation, and the transport of proteins into the ER © 2002 by Bruce Alberts, Alexander Johnson, Julian Lewis, Martin Raff, Keith Roberts, and Peter Walter. TYPE OF RNA FUNCTIO N
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The transcription cycle
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Initiating signal
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Directions of transcription
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Types of RNA polymerases in eukaryotic cells TYPE OF POLYMERASEGENES TRANSCRIBED RNA polymerase I5.8S, 18S, and 28S rRNA genes RNA polymerase IIall protein-coding genes, plus snoRNA genes and some snRNA genes RNA polymerase IIItRNA genes, 5S rRNA genes, some snRNA genes and genes for other small RNAs
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Several important differences between the bacterial and eucaryotic RNA polymerases..While bacterial RNA polymerase (with factor as one of its subunits) is able to initiate transcription on a DNA template in vitro without the help of additional proteins, eucaryotic RNA polymerases cannot. They require the help of a large set of proteins called general transcription factors, which must assemble at the promoter with the polymerase before the polymerase can begin transcription. Eucaryotic transcription initiation must deal with the packing of DNA into nucleosomes and higher order forms of chromatin structure, features absent from bacterial chromosomes.
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Initiation of transcription of a eucaryotic gene by RNA polymerase II
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Consensus sequences found in the vicinity of eucaryotic RNA polymerase II start points
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3D structure of TBP (TATA- binding protein) bound to DNA
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Transcription initiation
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Supercoiling of DNA
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Transcription in Eukaryotic cells
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RNA processing: pre-RNA mature RNA 5’ Cap Poly-A Splicing Editing Coupled with elongation
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5’ Cap of RNA
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Splicing
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Splicing reactions and Lariats
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Splicing signals
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Alternative splicing
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The RNA splicing mechanism
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Variation in intron and exon lengths
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Splicing errors
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Additional factors for correct splicing site recognition RNA factory concept Exon definition hypothesis
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The "RNA factory" concept
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The exon definition hypothesis
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Three major type of splicing mechanism
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Abnormal splicing cause disease
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Self splicing
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PolyA addition
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Exportation of mature RNA
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