Title: DNA, RNA and Protein Synthesis
1DNA, RNA and Protein Synthesis
2I. DNA discovery
- A. Franklin Wilkins- used X-ray diffraction,
discovered DNA shape double helix like twisted
ladder
Franklin
Wilkins
3I.
B. Watson Crick- Nobel prize, first
structural model of DNA
1953
4I.
- C. Chargaff- discovered amounts of
- Thymine Adenine,
- Cytosine Guanine,
- Nitrogen base-pairing rule
5I.
Double Helix
6II. DNADeoxyribonucleic acid
II.
DEOXYRIBOSE SUGAR (5C)
PHOSPHATE
NITROGEN BASE
- Monomer nucleotide
- 1. 5 C deoxyribose sugar
- 2. Phosphate group
- 3. Nitrogen base
7- B. Shape
- Ladders sides, also called backbone of
alternating - Deoxyribose sugars phosphates
- 2. Rungs nitrogen bases
- a. Bonded to each other by
- weak hydrogen bonds
- b. The nitrogen bases
- are bonded to the
- sugars of the ladder,
- NOT the phosphates
II.
D P D
D P D
A-T
G-C
P D P
P D P
C-G
T-A
D P D
D P D
G-C
8 DNA Double Helix
C. Base pairing rule Adenine to Thymine
A-T Cytosine to Guanine G-C
II.
A
T
A
T
C
G
A
T
C
G
91. Example Base Pairing
II.
- DNA Strand
- A T T C G G T A G
- T A A G C C A T C
- Complimentary DNA Strand
10II.
- D. DNA- forms chromosomes in nucleus and is found
in mitochondria and chloroplasts
X
X
Chromosomes
111. Stores genetic info Ex eye color 2. Tells
ribosomes which proteins to make
Eye color
12II.
3. DNA replication - DNA must make EXACT copy
of itself before cellular division enables new
cell to have SAME genetic info as dividing cell-
13III. DNA Replication-occurs in the nucleus BEFORE
cell division
- A. DNA unzips totally
- 1. ATP energy DNA helicase enzymes break the
weak hydrogen bond between nitrogen
basesseparates the 2 strands of DNA
14III.
- 2. Each parent strand of DNA is a template
(pattern) for a new complementary strand
additional proteins hold strands apart - 3. DNA Polymerase enzymes add new nucleotides
according to base pairing rule 2 new helices
formed
15III.
- 4. Replication produces 2 DNA molecules each
composed of a - new original strand
- 5. Exact 2 copies of DNA that make up each
chromosome are called chromatids - 6. Two chromatids attached at centromere
16IV. RNARibonucleic Acid
- Monomer Nucleotides
- 5 C ribose sugar
- Phosphate group
- Nitrogen base
- Cytosine to Guanine
- Adenine to URACIL (replaces thymine)
- Shape single stranded
17V. Transcription- RNA synthesis (building RNA)
- A. DNA is copied into a complementary single
strand of RNA occurs in nucleus b/c DNA never
leaves nucleus - B. mRNA- RNA that carries genetic message from
DNA to the ribosomes in the cytoplasm (ribosomes
make proteins)
18V. Transcription (cont.)
- C. Making RNA from DNA
- 1. RNA polymerase (enzyme)- unzips a short
section of DNA - 2.RNA polymerase adds, then links complementary
RNA nucleotides as it reads the gene on the
unzipped DNA
19V. Transcription (cont.)
- 3.Base pairing C to G/ A to U NO THYMINE in RNA
- 4. The 2 DNA strands close up by forming hydrogen
bonds between complementary DNA bases, reforming
the double helix.
20Example RNA Base Pairing
- DNA template strand
- A T G C G A T T A
- U A C G C U A A U
- RNA complementary strand
21V. Transcription (cont.)
- 5. In eukaryotic cells RNA goes through RNA
splicing - a. DNA contains regions that will not code for
proteins - b. Non-coding regions introns
- c. Coding regionsexons
- d. Spliceosomes- complex assemblies of proteins
RNA, cut out introns and splice(put together)
exons to form a smaller mRNA that will leave the
nucleus through the nuclear pore.
22VI. Protein Synthesis
- A. Monomer- amino acids
- B. 20 different amino acids form all proteins
- C. DNA bases are arranged in triplets producing
64 different 3 letter code words ex ATC, CAG
23VI. Protein Synthesis
- D. RNA bases written in 3 nucleotide sequences on
the mRNA, called codons - E. Each codon corresponds to an amino acid or a
start or stop codon for translation into a
protein - AUG the start codon the amino acid methionine
- UAA, UAG, UGA stop codons, do not code for amino
acid, protein stops here
24VI. Protein Synthesis
- F. mRNA leaves nucleus, attaches to ribosome in
cytoplasm where protein synthesis will take place - G. rRNA ribosomal RNA- most abundant RNA, rRNA
and proteins form ribosomes
25 26IIV. Translation- RNA to Protein
- A. tRNA- single strand of RNA that temporarily
carries a SPECIFIC amino acid - B. tRNA is folded into a compact shape with an
anticodon (a 3 nucleotide sequence on one end
that it complementary to a codon on mRNA)
27IV. Translation (cont.)
- 1.Translation begins on the ribosome
- 2. A tRNA carrying amino acid, methionine, finds
the mRNAs start codon AUG - 3. tRNAs anticodon will pair with their
complementary bases of the codon on the mRNA
strand decoding the mRNA message into a specific
protein
28IV. Translation (cont.)
- 4. Peptide bonds form between each amino acid as
the protein chain grows C-N - 5. The amino acid chain will grow until the tRNA
reaches a stop codon on the mRNA UAA, UGA OR UAG - 6. The ribosome complex falls apart and the newly
made protein is released
29How do we know what Amino Acid to add?
USE THE mRNA CODE TO TRANSLATEINTO AMINO ACIDS
mRNA 1) CCC 2) CGG 3) ACU 4) UGA
30PRACTICE
- DNA T A C G A C G T A A A A A C T
- mRNA
31- DNA T A C - G A C - G T A - A A A - A C T
- mRNA A U G - C U G - C A U - U U U - U G A
- tRNA
32- DNA T A C - G A C - G T A - A A A - A C T
- mRNA A U G - C U G - C A U - U U U - U G A
- tRNA U A C - G A C - G U A - A A A - A C U
- AA Seq
33- DNA T A C - G A C - G T A - A A A - A C T
- mRNA A U G - C U G - C A U - U U U - U G A
- tRNA U A C - G A C - G U A - A A A - A C U
- AA Seq MET - LEU - HIS - PHE
34V. Mutations pg. 307-308
- A. Mutation- any change in the DNAs sequence of
a gene or chromosome of a cell a mistake - 1.Causes
- a. Radiation x-rays, cosmic rays, UV light
nuclear radiation - b. Chemicals dioxins, asbestos, benzene
formaldehyde
35V. Mutation (cont.)
- B .Gene- section of DNA on a chromosome that
directs the making of a protein or trait - 1. A change in gene or chromosome a change in
trait - 2. Some mutations harmful
36V. Mutation (cont.)
- 3. Harmful mutations prevent the survival of an
organism - 4. Some mutations add genetic variety to a
species
37V. Mutation (cont.)
- C. Gene Mutations
- 1. Point Mutation- a change in a single base pair
of DNA which affects ONE codon can affect a
single amino acid in a protein
Ex A T T G A A A C G U A A C C U U G C
38V. Mutation (cont.)
- a. Point mutation examples
- Sickle cell anemia GAA Glu, GUAVal causes a
sickle shaped red blood cell these cells cannot
deliver enough oxygen, causes tissue damage, clog
capillaries
39V. Mutation (cont.)
- b. Cystic Fibrosis mutation produces thick mucus
in lungs, liver and pancreas prevents oxygen
intake in lungs prevents enzymes from reaching
food in the digestive tract
40V. Mutation (cont.)
- 2. Frameshift Mutation- addition or deletion of a
base
- Ex
- THE CAT ATE THE RAT
- THE ATA TET HER AT Deletion of base
- THE CAT ATE THE RAT
- THE CCA TAT ETH ERA T Addition of base
41V. Mutations (cont.)
- D. Chromosomal Mutations- occur when chromosomes
break and rejoin incorrectly causing severe harm - 1. Deletion part of a chromosome is left out
- Ex ABCDEFG- deletion- ABCEFG
42Chromosomal Mutations (cont)
- 2. Insertion part of chromosome breaks off and
attaches to its sister chromatid, causing a
duplication of genes on the same chromosome
(duplication) - Ex ABCDEFG-insertion-ABCBCDEF
43Chromosomal Mutations (cont)
- 3. Inversion part of a chromosome breaks off and
reattaches backwards - Ex ABCDEFG-inversion-ADCBEFG
44Chromosomal Mutations (cont)
- 4. Translocation part of one chromosome breaks
off and is added to a different chromosome,
results in too many genes on one chromosome and
not enough on the other - Ex ABCDEF- translocation- WXABCDEF
- WXYZ YZ
45 46The end of this unit!
STUDY!