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Molecular Biology and Biological Chemistry The Fundamentals of Bioinformatics Chapter 1
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Introduction The Scale Spectrum The Genetic Material Gene Structure and Information Content Protein Structure and Function The Nature of Chemical Bonds Molecular Biology Tools Genomic Information Content
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The Scale Spectrum Nano –Genes, proteins, genetic networks Micro –Organ physiology, pharmacokinetics Macro –Whole body, multi-organism nanomicromacro
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DNA structure. DNA: Deoxyribose Nucleic Acid History: 1868 Miescher – discovered nuclein 1944 Avery – experimental evidence that DNA is constituent of genes. 1953 Watson&Crick – double helical nature of DNA. We wish to suggest a structure for the salt of deoxyribose nucleic acid (D.N.A.). This structure has novel features which are of considerable biological interest. 1980 X-ray structure of more than a full turn of DNA.
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The Genetic Material Genes: –the basis of inheritance –A specific sequence of nucleotides.(nt) Nucleotide bases –4 types: Guanine(G), Adenine (A), Thymine (T), & Cytosine (C) –Only differ in their Nitrogenous base –Alphabet of the Language of Genes
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Five types of bases.
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Base Pairings DNA is highly redundant –Strands are complementary –Permits replication Base pairings are stable and robust –Only G-C or A-T combinations possible
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Complementarity of nucleotide– bases for double stranded helical structure.
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Double helical structure of DNA.
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Antiparallel Nature of DNA 5end of one strand matches 3 end of other If one strand is 5-GTATCC-3 Then other is 3-CATAGG-5 Most processes go from 5 to 3, so write as: 5-GGATAC-3 Strands are reverse complements 5 is upstream, and 3 is downstream
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The Genome Full complement of Genes Set of chromasomes –DNA chains
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The Central Dogma DNA makes RNA makes Protein –General not universal Enzymes –Proteins that makes things happen, but are not used up –X_ase RNA-polymeraseribosomes
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The Central Dogma (2) Transcription –RNA construction mediated by RNA-polymerase –One-one correspondence with DNA G, C, A, and U (Uracil) Translation –Conversion of nucleotides to amino acids –Ribosomes - complex structure of RNA & protein –Mediates protein synthesis
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The Central Dogma (3)
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Gene Structure and Information Content Information formatting and interpretation is very important –Alphabet and punctuation Same language used for both: –Prokaryotes (bacteria) –Eukaryotes (more complex life forms)
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Promoter Sequences Gene Expression –Process of using information in DNA to make RNA molecule then a corresponding protein Expressing right quantity of protein essential for survival Two crucial distinctions –Which part of genome is start of a gene –Which genes code for proteins needed at a particular time Responsibility falls to RNA-polymerase
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Promoter sequences (2) Cant look for single nucleotide –1 in 4 chance of appearing at random –General probability of a sequence = (1/4) n Prokaryotes: 13 nt promoter sequences –1 in 70 million chance of random appearance –Genome a few million nts long –Datum: 1nt, 6 that are 10 nts upstream & 6 that are 35 nts upstream Eukaryotes are several orders of magnitude bigger
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Promoter Sequences (3) Two types of Genes: 1.Structural Cell structure or metabolism 2.Regulatory Production control Positive regulation Negative regulation
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The Genetic Code Need way to robustly translate from DNA to Protein –4 nt alphabet –20 amino acid (aa) alphabet –Mismatch Codon (triplet code) –1&2 nts give < 20 –Each aa coded by a codon –Degeneracy: more than 1 codon per aa = robustness –Stop codon: full stop
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The Genetic Code
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Open Reading Frames (ORFs) Start codon: AUG (and methinine) Reading frame –Established by start codon –Necessary for accurate translation –Mistakes lead to wrong proteins (& premature stops) Open Reading Frame –Inordinately long reading frame with no stop codon –Proteins 100s of aa long –Random stop: 1 in 20 –Distinguishing feature of prokaryotes and eukaryotes.
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Introns and Exons Messenger RNA - perfect copy of DNA Introns: locally uninformative sequences in mRNA Exons: locally informative sequences in mRNA Splicing: removal of introns, rejoining exons Spliceosomes: enzymes that do splicing –GT-AG rule (potentially too common) –Checks 6 extra nts –Allows subtle nuances
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Introns and Exons (2)
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Protein Structure and Function Proteins are molecular machinery that performs most work in cells Vast array of tasks –Structure, catalysis, transportation, signalling metabolism … Highly complex compounds –Primary, secondary, tertiary, quaternary structure.
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Primary & Secondary Structure Primary structurePrimary structure = the linear sequence of amino acids comprising a protein: AGVGTVPMTAYGNDIQYYGQVT… Secondary structureSecondary structure –Regular patterns of hydrogen bonding in proteins result in two patterns that emerge in nearly every protein structure known: the -helix and the -sheet secondary structure –The location of direction of these periodic, repeating structures is known as the secondary structure of the protein
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Planarity of the peptide bond Phi ( ) – the angle of rotation about the N-C bond. Psi ( ) – the angle of rotation about the C -C bond. The planar bond angles and bond lengths are fixed.
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Phi and psi = = 180° is extended conformation : C to N–H : C=O to C C C=O N–H
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The alpha helix 60°
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Properties of the alpha helix 60° Hydrogen bondsHydrogen bonds between C=O of residue n, and NH of residue n+4 3.6 residues/turn 1.5 Å/residue rise 100°/residue turn
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The beta strand (& sheet) 135° +135°
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Properties of beta sheets Formed of stretches of 5-10 residues in extended conformation Pleated – each C a bit above or below the previous Parallel/aniparallelParallel/aniparallel, contiguous/non-contiguous
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Parallel and anti-parallel -sheets Anti-parallel is slightly energetically favored Anti-parallelParallel
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Molecular Biology Tools Restriction enzyme digests Gel electrophoresis Blotting and hybridization Cloning Polymerase chain reaction DNA sequencing
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Genomic Information Content C-value paradox –No correlation between organism complexity and DNA size Reassociation Kinetics –Denaturing/renaturing –Cot equation: t0.5 –Junk DNA
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… & Finally There are only 10 types of people in the world: those that understand binary and those that do not Pete Smith (or Anon)
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