Title: Protein synthesis
1Protein synthesis The three roles of RNA in
translation mRNA genetic information tRNA
the key to deciphering the code. rRNA
attracting the mRNA and catalyzing peptide-bond
formation. mRNA carries information from DNA in
a three-letter genetic code Triplet code (4364
codes for 20 amino acids) Start codon
AUG(specifies methionine in all proteins in pro.
and eukarytoes) Stop codons UAA, UGA, and
UAG Structure of tRNA Anticodon loop D
loop T?CG loop
2Wobble pairing G?C or U U?A or G I?U, C, or
A Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases 30 to 40 diffenent
tRNAs in bacteria and About 50 in animal and
plants cells. 20 different aminoacyl-tRNA
synthetases Ribosomes are protein-synthesizing
machines The steps in protein synthesis
Initiation---Elongation---Termination
3AUG is the initiation signal in mRNA 16S rRNA in
bacteria 5' cap Kozak sequence is mRNA
5'-ACCAUGG Ribosomes provide three tRNA-binding
sites during protein elongation A site (for
aminoacyl-tRNA) P site (for peptidyl-tRNA) Prote
in synthesis inhibitors Antibiotics Puromycine St
reptomycin Chloramphenicol Tetracycline Diphtheria
toxin
4- Protein synthesis
- ? The three roles of RNA in translation
- mRNA genetic information
- tRNA the key to deciphering the code.
- rRNA attracting the mRNA and catalyzing
peptide-bond formation. - ? mRNA carries information from DNA in a
three-letter genetic code - Triplet code (4364 codes for 20 amino acids)
- Start codon AUG(specifies methionine in all
proteins in pro. and eukarytoes) - Stop codons UAA, UGA, and UAG
- ? Experiments with synthetic mRNAs and
trinucleotides break the genetic code - When synthetic mRNAs were used to direct in vitro
protein synthesis, polypeptides formed much more
inefficiently than when natural mRNAs were used,
and the lengths of the newly made polypeptide
chains were variable. With the use of real mRNAs,
it was soon discovered that AUG encoded
methionine at the start of almost all proteins
and that three trinucleotides UAA, UGA, and UAG
that did not encode any amino acid were stop
codons
5- ? Folded structure of tRNA is intergral to its
function - All tRNAs have two functions to chemically link
to a particular amino acid and to recognize a
codon in mRNA so that the amino acid can be added
to a growing peptide chain - Each tRNA molecule is recognized by one and only
one of the 20 enzymes called aminoacyl-tRNA
synthetases - Once its correct amino acid is attached, a tRNA
then recognizes a codon in mRNA - 30 to 40 diffenent tRNAs in bacteria and about 50
in animal and plants cells - There is not a unique tRNA for every single codon
- Four stems are short double helices stabilized by
base pairing - Three of the four stems have loops cintaining
seven or eight vases at their ends - Anticodon loop
- D loop
- T?CG loop UUCG The first uridylate is
methylated to become a thymidylate the second is
rearranged into a pseudouridylate, in which the
ribose is attached to carbon 5 instead of to
nitrogen 1 - acceptor arm an amino aicd can be attached to
the unlooped amino acid acceptor stem.
6- Wobble pairing the capability of a single tRNA
anticodon to recognize more than one, but not
every, codon corresponding to a given amino acid.
This broader recongnition can occur because of
so-called wobble pairing between the third base
in a codon and the first base in the
corresponding anticodon - The G-U base pair, which structurally fits almost
as well as the standard G-C pair. Thus a given
anticodon with G in the first (wobble) position
can base-pair with the two corresponding codons
that have either pyrimidine (C or U) in the third
position (UUU and UUC of mRNA - GAA of anticodon) - One of the most unusual wobble-position bases in
plants and animals is inosine, a deaminated
product of adenine, which can base-pair with A,
C, and U. A given tRNA with inosine in the wobble
position thus can recognize the corresponding
mRNA triplets with A, C, or U in the third codon
position. For this reason, inosine-containing
tRNAs are heavily employed in translation fo the
synonymous codons that specify a single amino
acid - ? Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase activate tRNA
- The 20 different aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, each
or which recognizes one amino acid and all its
compatible, or cognate, tRNAs - ARS link an amino acid to the free 2' or 3'
hydroxyl of the ribose of the adenosine at the
3'-terminus of tRNA - This two-step linkage reaction requires the
cleavage of an ATP molecules
7- In the first step, enzyme(aminoacyl-AMP), In the
second step, aminoacyl-tRNA - About half of the ARSs transfer the aminoacyl
group to the 2' hydroxyl of the terminal
adenosine (class I), and about half, to the 3'
hydroxyl (class II) - The resulting aminoacyl-tRNA retains the energy
of the ATP, and the amino acid residue is said to
be activated - ? Each tRNA molecule is recognized by a specific
aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase - How each ARS identifies cognate tRNAs is not yet
understood - One ARS can add the same amino acid to two ( or
more) different tRNAs with different anticodons
encoding the same amino acid - Therefore each of these tRNAs must have a similar
binding site that is recognized by the synthetase - Perhaps the most logical identity site in a tRNA
molecule is the anticodon itself - ? Ribosomes are protein-synthesizing machines
- mRNA and aminoacyl-tRNA are brought together by
their mutual binding to the most abundant
RNA-protein complex in the cell-the ribosome - This two-part machine directs the elongation of a
polypeptide at a rate of three to five amino
acids added per second - Structure of large subunits and small subunits of
ribosome in prokaryotes and eukaryotes
8- ? The steps in protein synthesis
- Initiation---Elongation---Termination.
- ? AUG is the initiation signal in mRNA
- There are at least two types of tRNAiMet that
can initiate protein synthesis, and another that
can incorporaate methionine within the growing
protein chain - The same enzyme, methionyl-tRNA synthetase, can
attach methionine to both tRNAs, but only
methionyl-tRNAiMet can bind to the small
ribosomal subunit to begin the process of protein
synthesis - In bacteria, N-formylmethionyl-tRNAfMet
- In most bacteria, the small ribosomal subunit
identifies initiation sites through the
interaction of short nucleotide sequences in the
small 16S rRNA and the mRNA - On the mRNA this Shine-Dalgarno sequence is near
a prtoen start site and complementary to a
sequence at or very near the 3' end of the
16S-rRNA molecule - Thus bacterial rRNA plays a direct role in
recruiting a ribosome to a protein start site on
the mRNA - In eukaryotic cells the mechanism by which a
small ribosomal subunit finds start sites is not
fully understood
9- The first signal thought to be recognized is the
5' cap present on all eukaryotic mRNAs however,
some viral mRNAs, which are translated by the
host-cell machinery in ingected eukaryotic cells,
lack a 5'cap. In this case recognition occurs
with the aid of additional protein factors - Usually, after cap recognition, the bound
ribosomal subunit then is thought to slide along
the mRNA to locate an AUG - Frequently the first AUG is used, but the
presence of certain nucleotides surrounding the
initiating AUG greatly increases the
effectiveness of initiation. This sequence,
reffered to an a Kozak swquence is mRNA
5'-ACCAUGG- - mRNAs without the 5' cap are translated very
poorly, and mutations introduced into Kozak
sequences greatly decrease initiation frequency - It is generally agreed that initiation of
translation of most eukaryotic mRNAs involves
recognition of the cap followed either by use of
the first downstream AUG or by the locating of a
5'-proximal AUG with a consensus sequence
surrounding the AUG codon
10- ? Initiation factors, tRNA, mRNA, and the small
ribosomal subunit form an initiation complex - Initiation factors help the small ribosomal
subunit find the initiation site - Without these proteins, the complex of mRNA,
Met-tRNAiMet, and the small ribosomal subunit
poised at the AUG initiation codon does not form - In prokaryotes, IF3 is critical in finding the
AUG. In eukaryotes, the large eIF4 complex helps
to ensure that the 5' end of the mRNA is
single-stranded (the factor server both tobind
the cap and to unwind any secondary structure
that may exist) it also ensures that the 5' end
is ready for the small subunit to locate the AUG - GTP hydrolysis provides the energy required for
many of the steps in protein synthesis. For
example, the positioning of the large subunit in
the bacterial initiation complex is aided by IF2.
GTP and requires GTP hydrolysis - ? Ribosomes provide three tRNA-binding sites
during protein elongation - A site (for aminoacyl-tRNA)
- P site (for peptidyl-tRNA)
- E site (transiently occupied by the deacylated
end of the tRNA) - Met-tRNAiMet enters the P position
11- The incoming aminoacyl-tRNA is then bound to the
A site - The hydrolysis furnishes the energy for this
translocation of the peptidyl-tRNA - In bacterial protein synthesis the 23S rRNA in
the large ribosomal subunit itself may carry out
the crucial peptidyltransferase function - The actual peptide-synthesis reaction involves
23S rRNA - Clearly, many of the reactions neccessary for
peptide synthesis are RNA mediated - ? Polypeptide termination requires protein
factors that specifically recognize UAA, UAG and
UGA - The stop codons signal the release of the
peptidyl-tRNA complex when recognized by protein
termination factors - There are at least two such factors in
prokaryotes and probably also in eukaryotes - Almost simultaneously the complex divides into an
uncharged tRNA molecule lacking an attached amino
acid and a newly completed protein chain
12- ? Protein synthesis inhibitors Antibiotics
- Antibiotics are bacterial or fungally produced
substances that inhibit the growth of other
organisms - Puromycin is an aminoacyl-tRNA analog (for
tyrosyl-tRNA) - This substance, which resembles the 3' end
of Tyr-tRNA, causes the premature termination of
polypeptide chain synthesis - Streptomycin
- Chloramphenicol
- Tetracycline
- Diphtheria toxin