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Welcome Each of You to My Molecular Biology Class

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Title: Welcome Each of You to My Molecular Biology Class


1
Welcome Each of You to My Molecular Biology Class
2
Molecular Biology of the Gene, 5/E --- Watson et
al. (2004)
Part I Chemistry and Genetics Part II
Maintenance of the Genome Part III Expression
of the Genome Part IV Regulation Part V Methods
3
Part III Expression of the Genome
  • Ch 12 Mechanisms of transcription
  • Ch 13 RNA splicing
  • Ch 14 Translation
  • Ch 15 The genetic code

4
Chapter 12 Mechanisms of Transcription
  • Molecular Biology Course
  • RNA polymerase and transcription cycle
  • The transcription cycle in bacteria
  • Transcription in eukaryotes

5
The Central Dogma
Transcription Translation
DNA RNA PROTEIN
replication
6
Transcription is very similar to DNA replication
but there are some important differences
  • RNA is made of ribonucleotides
  • RNA polymerase catalyzes the reaction
  • The synthesized RNA does not remain base-paired
    to the template DNA strand
  • Less accurate (error rate 10-4)

7
  • Transcription selectively copies only certain
    parts of the genome and makes one to several
    hundred, or even thousand, copies of any given
    section of the genome. (Replication?)

8
Transcription bubble
Fig 12-1 Transcription of DNA into RNA
9
Topic 1 RNA Polymerase and The Transcription
Cycle
CHAPTER12 Mechanisms of Transcription
See the interactive animation
10
RNA polymerases come in different forms, but
share many features
RNA polymerase and the transcription cycle
  • RNA polymerases performs essentially the same
    reaction in all cells
  • Bacteria have only a single RNA polymerases while
    in eukaryotic cells there are three RNA Pol I,
    II and III

11
  • RNA Pol II is the focus of eukaryotic
    transcription, because it is the most studied
    polymerase, and is also responsible for
    transcribing most genes-indeed, essentially all
    protein-encoding genes
  • RNA Pol I transcribe the large ribosomal RNA
    precursor gene
  • RNA Pol II transcribe tRNA gene, some small
    nuclear RNA genes and the 5S rRNA genes

12
Table 12-1 The subunits of RNA polymerases
13
The bacterial RNA polymerase
The core enzyme alone synthesizes RNA
b
a
b
a
w
14
b
Fig 12-2 RNAP Comparison
prokaryotic
a
b
The same color indicate the homologous of the two
enzymes
a
w
eukaryotic
RPB2
RPB3
RPB1
RPB11
RPB6
15
Crab claw shape of RNAP (The shape of DNA pol
is__)
Active center cleft
16
There are various channels allowing DNA, RNA and
ribonucleotides (rNTPs) into and out of the
enzymes active center cleft
17
Transcription by RNA polymerase proceeds in a
series of steps
RNA polymerase and the transcription cycle
  • Initiation
  • Elongation
  • Termination

18
Initiation
  • Promoter the DNA sequence that initially binds
    the RNA polymerase
  • The structure of promoter-polymerase complex
    undergoes structural changes to proceed
    transcription
  • DNA at the transcription site unwinds and a
    bubble forms
  • Direction of RNA synthesis occurs in a 5-3
    direction (3-end growing)

19
Fig 12-3-initiation
Binding (closed complex)
Promoter melting (open complex)
Initial transcription
20
Elongation
  • Once the RNA polymerase has synthesized a short
    stretch of RNA ( 10 nt), transcription shifts
    into the elongation phase.
  • This transition requires further conformational
    change in polymerase that leads it to grip the
    template more firmly.
  • Functions synthesis RNA, unwinds the DNA in
    front, re-anneals it behind, dissociates the
    growing RNA chain

21
Termination
  • After the polymerase transcribes the length of
    the gene (or genes), it will stop and release the
    RNA transcript.
  • In some cells, termination occurs at the specific
    and well-defined DNA sequences called
    terminators. Some cells lack such termination
    sequences.

22
Fig 12-3-Elongation and termination
Elongation
Termination
23
Transcription initiation involves 3 defined steps
RNA polymerase and the transcription cycle
  • Forming closed complex
  • Forming open complex
  • Promoter escape

24

Closed complex
  • The initial binding of polymerase to a promoter
  • DNA remains double stranded
  • The enzyme is bound to one face of the helix

25
Open complex
  • the DNA strand separate over a distance of 14 bp
    (-11 to 3 ) around the start site (1 site)
  • Replication bubble forms

26
Stable ternary complex
RNA polymerase and the transcription cycle
  • The enzyme escapes from the promoter
  • The transition to the elongation phase
  • Stable ternary complex
  • DNA RNA enzyme

27
Topic 2The transcription cycle in bacteria
CHAPTER12 Mechanisms of Transcription
28
2-1 Bacterial promoters vary in strength and
sequences, but have certain defining features
The transcription cycle in bacteria
29
Figure 12-4
  • Holoenzyme
  • factor core enzyme

In cell, RNA polymerase initiates transcription
only at promoters. Who confers the polymerase
binding specificity?
,
30

Promoters recognized by E. coli s factor
  • The predominant s factor in E. coli is s70.
  • Promoter recognized by s70 contains two conserved
    sequences (-35 and 10 regions/elements)
    separated by a non-specific stretch of 17-19 nt.
  • Position 1 is the transcription start site.

31
Fig 12-5a bacterial promoter
The distance is conserved
  • s70 promoters contain recognizable 35 and 10
    regions, but the sequences are not identical.
  • Comparison of many different promoters derives
    the consensus sequences reflecting preferred 10
    and 35 regions

32
BOX 12-1 Figure 1
Consensus sequence of the -35 and -10 region
33
  • Promoters with sequences closer to the consensus
    are generally stronger than those match less
    well. (What does stronger mean?)
  • The strength of the promoter describes how many
    transcripts it initiates in a given time.

34
Fig 12-5b bacterial promoter
Confers additional specificity
UP-element is an additional DNA elements that
increases polymerase binding by providing the
additional interaction site for RNA polymerase
35
Fig 12-5c bacterial promoter
Another class of s70 promoter lacks a 35 region
and has an extended 10 element compensating
for the absence of 35 region
36
2-2 The s factor mediates binding of polymerase
to the promoter
The transcription cycle in bacteria
  • The s70 factor comprises four regions called s
    region 1 to s region 4.

37
Fig 12-6 regions of s
Region 4 recognizes -35 element Region 2
recognizes -10 element Region 3 recognizes the
extended 10 element
38
Binding of 35 Two helices within region 4 form a
common DNA-binding motif, called a
helix-turn-helix motif
One helix inserts into the DNA major groove
interacting with the bases at the 35 region. The
other helix lies across the top of the groove,
contacting the DNA backbone
Fig 5-20 Helix-turn-helix DNA-binding motif
39
Interaction with 10 is more elaborate (??) and
less understood
  • The -10 region is within DNA melting region
  • The a helix recognizing 10 can interacts with
    bases on the non-template strand to stabilize the
    melted DNA.

40
UP-element is recognized by a carboxyl terminal
domain of the a-subunit (aCTD), but not by s
factor
Fig 12-7 s and a subunits recruit RNA pol core
enzyme to the promoter
41
2-3 Transition to the open complex involves
structural changes in RNA polymerase and in the
promoter DNA
The transcription cycle in bacteria
  • This transition is called Isomerization (???)

42
  • For s70 containing RNA polymerase,
    isomerization is a spontaneous conformational
    change in the DNA-enzyme complex to a more
    energetically favorable form. (No extra energy
    requirement)

43
Change of the promoter DNA
  • the opening of the DNA double helix, called
    melting, at positions -11 and 3.

44
The striking structural change in the polymerase
  • 1. the b and b pincers down tightly on the
    downstream DNA
  • 2. A major shift occurs in the N-terminal region
    of s (region 1.1) shifts. In the closed complex,
    s region 1.1 is in the active center in the open
    complex, the region 1.1 shift to the outside of
    the center, allowing DNA access to the cleft

45
Fig 12-8 channels into and out of the open complex
NTP uptake channel is in the back
DNA entering channel
46
Transcription is initiated by RNA polymerase
without the need for a primer
The transcription cycle in bacteria
  • Initiation requires
  • The initiating NTP (usually an A) is placed in
    the active site
  • The initiating ATP is held tightly in the correct
    orientation by extensive interactions with the
    holoenzyme

47
RNA polymerase synthesizes several short RNAs
before entering the elongation phase
The transcription cycle in bacteria
  • Abortive initiation the enzyme synthesizes and
    releases short RNA molecules less than 10 nt.

48
Structural barrier for the abortive initiation
  • The 3.2 region of s factor lies in the middle of
    the RNA exit channel in the open complex.
  • Ejection of this region from the channel (1) is
    necessary for further RNA elongation, (2) takes
    the enzyme several attempts

49
Fig 12-8 channels into and out of the open complex
NTP uptake channel is in the back
DNA entering channel
50
The elongating polymerase is a processive machine
that synthesizes and proofreads RNA
The transcription cycle in bacteria
51
Synthesizing by RNA polymerase
  • DNA enters the polymerase between the pincers
  • Strand separation in the catalytic cleft
  • NTP addition
  • RNA product spooling out (Only 8-9 nts of the
    growing RNA remain base-paired with the DNA
    template at any given time)
  • DNA strand annealing in behind

52
Proofreading by RNA polymerase
  • Pyrohosphorolytic (?????)editing the enzyme
    catalyzes the removal of an incorrectly inserted
    ribonucleotide by reincorporation of PPi.
  • Hydrolytic (??)editing the enzyme backtracks by
    one or more nucleotides and removes the
    error-containing sequence. This is stimulated by
    Gre factor, a elongation stimulation factor.

53
Transcription is terminated by signals within the
RNA sequence
The transcription cycle in bacteria
  • Terminators the sequences that trigger the
    elongation polymerase to dissociate from the DNA
  • Rho-dependent (requires Rho protein)
  • Rho-independent, also called intrinsic (??)
    terminator

54
Rho-independent terminator contains a short
inverted repeat (20 bp) and a stretch of 8 AT
base pairs.
Fig 12-9
55
Fig 12-10 transcription termination
Weakest base pairing AU make the dissociation
easier
56
Rho (r) -dependent terminators
  • Have less well-characterized RNA elements, and
    requires Rho protein for termination
  • Rho is a ring-shaped single-stranded RNA binding
    protein, like SSB
  • Rho binding can wrest (??) the RNA from the
    polymerase-template complex using the energy from
    ATP hydrolysis
  • Rho binds to rut (r utilization) RNA sites
  • Rho does not bind the translating RNA

57
Fig 12-11 the r transcription terminator
RNA tread trough the ring
Hexamer, Open ring
58
Topic 3transcription in eukaryotes
CHAPTER12 Mechanisms of Transcription
59
Comparison of eukaryotic and prokaryotic RNA
polymerases
  • Eukaryotes Three polymerase transcribes
    different class of genes Pol I-large rRNA genes
    Pol II-mRNA genes Pol III- tRNA, 5S rRNA and
    small nuclear RNA genes (U6)
  • Prokaryotes one polymerase transcribes all genes

60
Comparison of eukaryotic and prokaryotic promoter
recognition
  • Eukaryotes general transcription factors (GTFs).
    TFI factors for RNAP I, TFII factors for RNAP II
    and TFIII factors for RNAP III
  • Prokaryotes s factors

61
  • In addition to the RNAP and GTFs, in vivo
    transcription also requires
  • Mediator complex
  • DNA-binding regulatory proteins
  • chromatin-modifying enzymes
  • Why??

62
RNA polymerase II core promoters are made up of
combinations of 4 different sequence elements
The transcription in eukaryotes
  • Eukaryotic core promoter (40 nt) the minimal
    set of sequence elements required for accurate
    transcription initiation by the Pol II machinery
    in vitro

63
Fig 12-12 Pol II core promoter
  • TFIIB recognition element (BRE)
  • The TATA element/box
  • Initiator (Inr)
  • The downstream promoter element (DPE)

64
Regulatory sequences
  • The sequence elements other than the core
    promoter that are required to regulate the
    transcription efficiency
  • Those increasing transcription
  • Promoter proximal elements
  • Upstream activator sequences (UASs)
  • Enhancers
  • Those repressing elements silencers, boundary
    elements, insulators (???)

65
RNA Pol II forms a pre-initiation complex with
GTFs at the promoter
The transcription in eukaryotes
  • The involved GTFIIs (general transcription factor
    for Pol II)
  • TFIIDTBP (TATA box binding protein) TAFs (TBP
    association factors)
  • TFIIA, B, F, E, H

66
  • TBP in TFIID binds to the TATA box
  • TFIIA and TFIIB are recruited with TFIIB binding
    to the BRE
  • RNA Pol II-TFIIF complex is then recruited
  • TFIIE and TFIIH then bind upstream of Pol II to
    form the pre-initiation complex
  • Promoter melting using energy from ATP hydrolysis
    by TFIIH )
  • Promoter escapes after the phosphorylation of the
    CTD tail

67
Promoter escape
  • Stimulated by phosphorylation of the CTD
    (C-terminal domain) tail of the RNAP II
  • CTD contains the heptapeptide repeat
    Tyr-Ser-Pro-Thr-Ser-Pro-Ser
  • Phosphorylation of the CTD tail is conducted
    by a number of specific kinases including a
    subunit of TFIIH

68
TBP binds to and distorts DNA using a b sheet
inserted into the minor groove
The transcription in eukaryotes
  • Unusual (P367 for the detailed mechanism)
  • The need for that protein to distort the local
    DNA structure

69
  • AT base pairs (TATA box) are favored because
    they are more readily distorted to allow initial
    opening of the minor groove

70
The other GTFs also have specific roles in
initiation
The transcription in eukaryotes
  • 10 TAFs (1) two of them bind DNA elements at
    the promoter (Inr and DPE) (2) several are
    histone-like TAFs and might bind to DNA similar
    to that histone does (3) one regulates the
    binding of TBP to DNA

71
  • TFIIB (1) a single polypeptide chain, (2)
    asymmetric binding to TBP and the promoter DNA
    (BRE), (3)bridging TBP and the polymerase, (4)
    the N-terminal inserting in the RNA exit channel
    resembles the s3.2 .

Fig 12-13 TFIIB-TBP-promoter complex
72
  • TFIIF (1) a two subunit factor, (2) binding of
    Pol II-TFIIF stabilizes the DNA-TBP-TFIIB
    complex, which is required for the followed
    factor binding
  • TFIIE recruits and regulates TFIIH
  • TFIIH (1) controls the ATP-dependent transition
    of the pre-initiation complex to the open
    complex, (2) contains 9 subunits and is the
    largest GTF two functions as ATPase and one is
    protein kinase. (3) important for promoter
    melting and escape. (4) ATPase functions in
    nucleotide mismatch repair, called
    transcription-coupled repair.

73
in vivo, transcription initiation requires
additional proteins
The transcription in eukaryotes
  • The mediator complex
  • Transcriptional regulatory proteins
  • Nucleosome-modifying enzymes
  • To counter the real situation that the DNA
    template in vivo is packed into nucleosome and
    chromatin

74
Fig 12-16 assembly of the pre-initiation complex
in presence of mediator, nucleosome modifiers and
remodelers, and transcriptional activators
75
Mediator consists of many subunits, some
conserved from yeast to human
The transcription in eukaryotes
  • More than 20 subunits
  • 7 subunits show significant sequence homology
    between yeast and human
  • Only subunit Srb4 is essential for transcription
    of essentially all Pol II genes in vivo
  • Organized in modules (??)

76
Fig 12-17 comparison of the yeast and human
mediators
77
Eukaryotic RNA Pol II holoenzyme is a putative
preformed complex Pol II mediator some of
GTFs
Prokaryotic RNA Polymerase holoenzyme core
polymerase s factor
78
A new set of factors stimulate Pol II elongation
and RNA proofreading
The transcription in eukaryotes
79
Transition from the initiation to elongation
involves the Pol II enzyme shedding (??) most of
its initiation factors (GTF and mediators) and
recruiting other factors (1) Elongation
factors factors that stimulate elongation, such
as TFIIS and hSPT5. (2) RNA processing (RNA ??)
factors Recruited to the C-terminal tail of the
CTD of RNAP II to phosphorylate the tail for
elongation stimulation, proofreading, and RNA
processing like splicing and polyadenylation.
80
Fig 12-18 RNA processing enzymes are recruited by
the tail of polymerase
81
Some elongation factors
  • P-TEFb
  • phosphorylates CTD
  • Activates hSPT5
  • Activates TAT-SF1
  • TFIIS
  • Stimulates the overall rate of elongation by
    resolving the polymerase pausing
  • Proofreading

82
Elongation polymerase is associated with a new
set of protein factors required for various types
of RNA processing
The transcription in eukaryotes
  • RNA processing
  • Capping of the 5 end of the RNA
  • Splicing of the introns (most complicated)
  • Poly adenylation (?????) of the 3 end

83
Elongation, termination of transcription, and RNA
processing are interconnected/ coupled (???) to
ensure the coordination (???) of these events
  • Evidence this is an overlap in proteins
    involving in those events
  • The elongation factor hSPT5 also recruits and
    stimulates the 5 capping enzyme
  • The elongation factor TAT-SF1 recruits components
    for splicing

84
Function of poly(A) tail
  • Increased mRNA stability
  • Increased translational efficiency
  • Splicing of last intron

AAAAAA
85
Function of 5cap
  • Protection from degradation
  • Increased translational efficiency
  • Transport to cytoplasm
  • Splicing of first intron

86
RNA processing 15 end capping
  • The cap a methylated guanine joined to the RNA
    transcript by a 5-5 linkage
  • The linkage contains 3 phosphates
  • 3 sequential enzymatic reactions
  • Occurs early

87
Splicing joining the protein coding sequences
  • Dephosphorylation of Ser5 within the CTD tail
    leads to dissociation of capping machinery
  • Further phosphorylation of Ser2 recruits the
    splicing machinery

88
3 end polyadenylation
  • Linked with the termination of transcription
  • The CTD tail is involved in recruiting the
    polyadenylation enzymes
  • The transcribed poly-A signal triggers the
    reactions
  • Cleavage of the message
  • Addition of poly-A
  • Termination of transcription

89
1. CPSF (cleavage and polyadenylation specificity
factor) CstF (cleavage stimulation factor) bind
to the poly-A signal, leading to the RNA cleavage
2. Poly-A polymerase (PAP) adds 200 As at the
3 end of the RNA, using ATP as a substrate
Fig 12-20 polyadenylation and termination
90
  • What terminates transcription by polymerase?

91
Models to explain the link between
polyadenylation and termination (see the
animation on your CD)
  • Model 1 The transfer of the 3 processing enzyme
    to RNAP II induces conformational changeRNAP II
    processivity reducesspontaneous termination
  • Model 2 absence of a 5cap on the second RNA
    moleculerecognized by the RNAP II as
    improperterminate transcription

92
RNA Pol I III recognize distinct promoters ,
using distinct sets of transcription factors, but
still require TBP
The transcription in eukaryotes
  • Pol I transcribes rRNA precursor encoding gene
    (multi-copy gene)
  • Pol III transcribes tRNA genes, snRNA genes and
    5S rRNA genes

93
Pol I promoter recognition
Upstream control element
UBF binds to the upstream of UCE, bring SL1 to
the downstream part of UCE. SL1 in turn recruits
RNAP I to the core promoter for transcription
Fig 12-21 Pol I promoter region
94
Pol III promoter recognition1. Different forms,
2. locates downstream of the transcription site
TFIIIC binds to the promoter, recruiting TFIIIB,
which in turn recruits RNAP III
Fig 12-22 Pol III core promoter
95
Key points of the chapter
  • RNA polymerases (RNAP, ????????) and
    transcription cycle (Initiation is more
    complicate, details in bacteria)
  • Transcription cycle in bacteria
  • (1) promoters (elements), s factor (4 domains),
    aCTD, abortive initiation (why?)
  • (2) Structures accounting for formation of the
    closed complex, transitions to open complex and
    then stable ternary complex.
  • (3) Elongation and editing by polymerase (10-4)
  • (4) Termination Rho-independent and
    Rho-dependent mechanism

96
  • Transcription cycle in eukaryotes
  • Promoters (elements), general transcription
    factors (GTF),
  • RNAP II transcription
  • ---the roles of GTFs and the CTD tail of RNAP II
    in promoter recognition, formation of the
    pre-initiation complex, promoter melting,
    promoter escape
  • ---in vivo requires mediator complex, nucleosome
    modifying enzymes and transcription regulatory
    proteins.
  • ---elongation and proofreading involve a new set
    of GTFs (What)
  • ---coupled with RNA processing (How)

97
  • RNAP I and III transcription
  • ---GTFs and promoter recognition, formation of
    the initiation complex

98
Homework
See the animations Complete all the excises on
your study CD. Enjoy it
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