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Bioinformatics Why Can’t It Tell Us Everything?. Bioinformatics What are our Data Sets? Interested in information flow with cells Currently, the key information.

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Presentation on theme: "Bioinformatics Why Can’t It Tell Us Everything?. Bioinformatics What are our Data Sets? Interested in information flow with cells Currently, the key information."— Presentation transcript:

1 Bioinformatics Why Can’t It Tell Us Everything?

2 Bioinformatics What are our Data Sets? Interested in information flow with cells Currently, the key information is mostly a matter of biological macromolecules Eventually, information of interest will also include flow of nutrients, energy, and impact of small molecules on macromolecular function

3 Bioinformatics What are our Questions? What is in there? What does it do? How similar is it to something else? How does it fold? Where does it go in a cell? What does it interact with? How it is regulated? Level of confidence?

4 * Function of organism is determined by function of its cells * Function of cells determined by chemical reactions that take place within them * Chemical reactions occur or not according to presence and activity of enzymes * Enzymes are proteins * Proteins are determined by genes * Therefore, genes determine organismal function Bioinformatics Logical Reasoning Behind Data Sets

5 Genomics Proteomics

6 Central Dogma Flow of Information

7 Central Dogma DNA as the Blueprint for Life?

8

9 Central Dogma DNARNAProtein Genes & proteins are different molecular languages, but they are colinear

10 DNA Basic Unit (alphabet): Nucleotide (base) Only 4: A, T, G, and C Double-stranded: A<>T and G<>C 5’..AGCTGCATGCTAGCTGACGTCA….3’ 3’..TCGACGTACGATCGACTGCAGT….5’ “Words” (genes) to encode proteins, RNA Double helical

11 DNA Tower in Perth, AUS DNA Structure Connected to Information

12 DNA Replication & Transcription as Algorithms With rare exceptions, all DNA is replicated Crucial tool is ability to go from one strand to another Transcription uses same base-pairing rules with U instead of T, but occurs in packets

13 Transcription = DNA to RNA Where to Start is a Big Question

14 Protein Alphabet: amino acids There are 20 amino acids MetCysSerLeuAla Val

15 Proteins Number of Possible 100-mer Peptides? 20 possible residues at each position For 2-mers, 20 possible at position 1 and 20 possible at position 2, so 20 x 20 = 20 2 = 400 Same logic for 100-mers, 20 100 = 2 100 x 10 100 = (2 10 ) 10 x 10 100 = ~ (10 3 ) 10 x 10 100 = 10 130

16 beta-pleated sheet Proteins Folding Starts Local alpha-helix

17 Proteins Folding Goes Global

18 Proteins Predictive Protein Folding as Holy Grail

19 Protein Alphabet: amino acids There are 20 amino acids Encoded by codons (triplets of nucleotides) MetCys ATGTGCAGCCTAGCTGCCGTC Ser CTAGCTGCCGTC LeuAla Val

20 Genetic Code Found on Earth: How Does It Work? 5’-UCGACCAUGGUUGACCAUUGAUUACCACG-3’

21 Genetic Code Triplet Nonoverlapping Comma-less Redundant

22 Bioinformatics: Mining a Mountain of Data Where are the putative genes?


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