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Transcription and Translation

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First step in converting genetic information into proteins. ... Sigma is the factor responsible for identifying the start site of a gene ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Transcription and Translation


1
Transcription and Translation
  • Chapter 16

2
Information Flow in the Cell
3
Transcription
  • The stages of transcription are
  • Initiation
  • Elongation
  • Termination

4
Transcription in Bacteria
5
Transcription
  • First step in converting genetic information into
    proteins.
  • Copying DNA to make an RNA messenger
  • DNA-directed synthesis of RNA
  • Catalyzed by RNA polymerase
  • Follows the same base-pairing rules as DNA,
    except that in RNA, uracil substitutes for thymine

6
Transcription
7
RNA Polymerase
  • Pries the DNA strands apart and hooks together
    the RNA nucleotides
  • Synthesizes the RNA strand in the 5' ? 3'
    direction
  • RNA strand is complementary to the DNA template
    strand.
  • Provides single-stranded RNA copy of the DNA
  • This strand is the template strand, the other the
    non-template strand.

8
Bacterial RNA Polymerase
  • Globular enzyme with several channels and a
    magnesium atom in its active site
  • Holoenzyme made up of the core enzyme, which has
    the ability to synthesize RNA
  • And a regulatory sigma protein, which is required
    for initiation of transcription
  • Which is a co-enzyme

9
Bacterial RNA Polymerase
10
Sigma Factors
  • Binds to the core enzyme, enabling RNA polymerase
    to recognize and bind to specific sites on DNA,
    called promoters.
  • Sigma is the factor responsible for identifying
    the start site of a gene
  • Different sigma factors are activated in response
    to different environmental conditions

11
Promoters
  • Two key regions
  • The 10 box has the sequence 5'-TATAAT-3
  • located 10 bases upstream of the transcription
    start site
  • The 35 box has the sequence 5'-TTGACA-3
  • located 35 bases upstream of the transcription
    start site
  • Sigma identifies the 10 and 35 promoter sites,
    properly orienting the RNA polymerase core
    complex for transcription at the gene start site

12
How Transcription Begins
13
How Transcription Begins
14
How Transcription Begins
15
Elongation and Termination
  • Sigma dissociates from the core enzyme once the
    initiation phase of transcription is completed
  • RNA polymerase moves along the DNA template in
    the 3' ? 5' direction
  • Synthesizes RNA in the 5' ? 3' direction
  • RNA polymerase encounters a transcription
    termination signal
  • Causes the RNA to form a hairpin structure

16
Transcription in Eukaryotes
17
Eukaryotic Polymerases
  • Contains many polymerases depending on gene type

18
Initiation of Translation
  • Promoter- specific sequence of DNA where
    polymerase attaches and transcription begins
  • Upstream of the gene
  • Promoters signal the initiation of RNA synthesis
  • Transcription factors
  • Help eukaryotic RNA polymerase recognize promoter
    sequences

19
Initiation of Transcription
  1. Promoter (TATA box)
  2. Several transcription factors bind to DNA before
    polymerase
  3. Polymerase binds to transcription factors
  4. Transcription starts

20
Elongation
  • As RNA polymerase moves along the DNA
  • It continues to untwist the double helix,
    exposing about 10 to 20 DNA bases at a time for
    pairing with RNA nucleotides
  • Enzyme adds at 3 end
  • Many polymerases can work on the same strand to
    produce many copies

21
Termination
  • Differs in prokaryotes and eukaryotes
  • Prokaryotes- terminator sequence causes
    polymerase to detach and mRNA to detach
  • Eukaryotes- polymerases keep on adding
    nucleotides but proteins associated with the mRNA
    cut it free from the growing strand

22
Alteration of mRNA
  • Cap and Tail
  • The 5? end receives a modified nucleotide cap
  • For recognition
  • The 3? end gets a poly-A tail
  • Protects RNA from Degradation

A modified guanine nucleotide added to the 5? end
50 to 250 adenine nucleotides added to the 3? end
Polyadenylation signal
Protein-coding segment
5?
3?
AAAAAA
G
P
P
AAUAAA
P
Stop codon
Start codon
Poly-A tail
5? Cap
3? UTR
5? UTR
23
Alteration of mRNA
  • RNA splicing- Removes introns and joins exons

24
Introns
  • The presence off introns
  • Allows for alternative RNA splicing
  • Regulatory function
  • May be the reason humans have so few genes
  • Proteins often have a modular architecture
    consisting of discrete structural and functional
    regions called domains
  • Different exons can code for the different
    domains in a protein

25
Introns
26
Eukaryotic vs. Prokaryotic Transcription
27
Translation
28
Translation
  • RNA-directed synthesis of a polypeptide
  • A cell translates an mRNA message into protein
    with the help of transfer RNA (tRNA)

29
Bacterial Translation
  • Ribosomes catalyze translation of the mRNA
    sequence into protein.
  • In bacteria, ribosomes begin translation of an
    mRNA before RNA polymerase has finished
    transcribing it

30
Eukaryotic Translation
  • In eukaryotes, mRNAs are synthesized and
    processed in the nucleus and transported to the
    cytoplasm for translation by ribosomes

31
Role of Transfer RNA
  • Each tRNA carries a specific amino acid that is
    transferred to protein
  • The addition of amino acids to tRNAs is mediated
    by aminoacyl tRNA synthetase
  • Molecules of tRNA are not all identical
  • Each carries a specific amino acid on one end and
    an anticodon on the other end
  • Consists of a single RNA strand that is only
    about 80 nucleotides long
  • Is roughly L-shaped

32
tRNA
33
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34
Ribosomes
  • Ribosomes can be separated into two subunits, the
    large subunit and the small subunit
  • tRNAs are found on three sites in ribosomes
  • A site is the acceptor site for the
    aminoacyl-tRNA
  • P site holds the growing polypeptide chain
  • E site is where tRNAs no longer bound to an amino
    acid exit the ribosome

35
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36
Ribosomes
  1. A peptide bond forms between the amino acid on
    the aminoacyl-tRNA in the A site and the existing
    polypeptide held on the tRNA in the P site
  2. Polypeptide is transferred to the tRNA in the A
    site.
  3. The ribosome moves forward to the next codon
  4. tRNA in the E site exits the ribosome

37
Ribosomes
  1. The tRNA in the P site moves into the E site
  2. The tRNA with the polypeptide chain moves from
    the A site to the P sit
  3. A new aminoacyl-tRNA enters the A site.

38
Ribosomes
39
Initiation of Translation
  • Translation begins at the AUG start codon
  • Complementary to a section of one rRNA in the
    small ribosomal subunit
  • Once the small ribosomal subunit is bound to the
    mRNA, the aminoacyl initiator tRNA binds to the
    AUG sequence
  • The large subunit binds and completes the
    initiation complex. The initiator tRNA is located
    in the P site of the ribosome

40
Initiation
41
Elongation
  • At the start of elongation, the initiator tRNA is
    in the P site, and the E and A sites are empty
  • An aminoacyl tRNA binds to the codon in the A
    site via complementary base pairing between
    anticodon and codon, and peptide bond formation
    occurs
  • Etc, etc
  • The ribosome translocates down the mRNA by three
    nucleotides, and the tRNA attached to the growing
    protein moves into the P site

42
Polyribosomes
  • Strings of ribosomes, assemble along an mRNA to
    increase the rate of protein production

43
Elongation
  • The three steps in elongation
  • arrival of aminoacyl tRNA
  • peptide bond formation
  • translocationrepeat down the length of the mRNA.

44
Termination
  • When the A site encounters a stop codon, a
    release factor enters the site and catalyzes
    hydrolysis of the bond linking the tRNA in the P
    site with the polypeptide chain

45
Termination
46
Post-Translational Modifications
  • Most proteins go through an extensive series of
    processing steps before they are ready to go to
    work in a cell.
  • Get into proper conformation
  • Molecular chaperones speed folding of the protein
  • Small chemical groups may be added to eukaryotic
    proteins in the rough endoplasmic reticulum

47
Post-Translational Modifications
  • Some proteins receive a sorting signal to ensure
    that the molecule will be carried to the correct
    location in the cell
  • Some proteins are augmented with sugar or lipid
    groups that are critical for normal functioning.
  • Many proteins are altered by enzymes that add or
    remove a phosphate group
  • Switch the protein from an inactive state to an
    active state or vice versa

48
The Molecular Basisof Mutation
49
Mutation
  • Any change in an organisms DNA sequence. DNA
    mutations affect phenotype only when the mutation
    is expressed
  • Resulting protein functions abnormally
  • Not all mutations affect the proteins ability to
    function and thus do not generate a phenotype

50
Point Mutation
  • Change in a single nucleotide
  • Most common
  • Can result from errors in DNA replication or from
    exposure to mutagenic toxins

51
Missense Mutation
  • A point mutation that causes a change in the
    amino acid sequence of the protein
  • Sickle-cell anemia results from a missense
    mutation in the hemoglobin gene

52
Other Mutations
53
Other Mutations
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