Title: Basic%20Molecular%20Biology
1Basic Molecular Biology
Many slides by Omkar Deshpande
2Overview
- Structures of biomolecules
- Central Dogma of Molecular Biology
- Overview of this course
- Computer scientists vs Biologists
3Human Genome Program, U.S. Department of Energy,
Genomics and Its Impact on Medicine and Society
A 2001 Primer, 2001
4(No Transcript)
5Watson and Crick
6(No Transcript)
7Macromolecule (Polymer) Monomer
DNA Deoxyribonucleotides (dNTP)
RNA Ribonucleotides (NTP)
Protein or Polypeptide Amino Acid
8Nucleic acids (DNA and RNA)
- Form the genetic material of all living
organisms. - Found mainly in the nucleus of a cell (hence
nucleic) - Contain phosphoric acid as a component (hence
acid) - They are made up of nucleotides.
9Nucleotides
10DNA
A T G C
11The gene and the genome
- Genome The entire DNA sequence within the
nucleus. - The information in the genome is used for protein
synthesis - A gene is a length of DNA that codes for a
(single) protein.
12How big are genomes?
Organism Genome Size (Bases) Estimated Genes
Human (Homo sapiens) 3 billion 30,000
Laboratory mouse (M. musculus) 2.6 billion 30,000
Mustard weed (A. thaliana) 100 million 25,000
Roundworm (C. elegans) 97 million 19,000
Fruit fly (D. melanogaster) 137 million 13,000
Yeast (S. cerevisiae) 12.1 million 6,000
Bacterium (E. coli) 4.6 million 3,200
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) 9700 9
13Repeats
- The DNA is full of repetitive elements (those
that occur over over over) - There are several type of repeats, including
SINEs LINEs (Short Long Interspersed
Elements) (1 million just ALUs) and low
complexity elements. - Their function is poorly understood, but they
make problems more difficult.
14Central dogma
ZOOM IN
tRNA
transcription
DNA
rRNA
snRNA
translation
POLYPEPTIDE
mRNA
15Transcription
- The DNA is contained in the nucleus of the cell.
- A stretch of it unwinds there, and its message
(or sequence) is copied onto a molecule of mRNA. - The mRNA then exits from the cell nucleus.
16DNA
RNA
A T G C
T ? U
17More complexity
- The RNA message is sometimes edited.
- Exons are nucleotide segments whose codons will
be expressed. - Introns are intervening segments (genetic
gibberish) that are snipped out. - Exons are spliced together to form mRNA.
18Splicing
- frgjjthissentencehjfmkcontainsjunkelm
- thissentencecontainsjunk
19Key player RNA polymerase
- It is the enzyme that brings about transcription
by going down the line, pairing mRNA nucleotides
with their DNA counterparts.
20Promoters
- Promoters are sequences in the DNA just upstream
of transcripts that define the sites of
initiation. - The role of the promoter is to attract RNA
polymerase to the correct start site so
transcription can be initiated.
5
3
Promoter
21Promoters
- Promoters are sequences in the DNA just upstream
of transcripts that define the sites of
initiation. - The role of the promoter is to attract RNA
polymerase to the correct start site so
transcription can be initiated.
5
3
Promoter
22Transcription key steps
DNA
- Initiation
- Elongation
- Termination
DNA
RNA
23Transcription key steps
DNA
- Initiation
- Elongation
- Termination
24Transcription key steps
DNA
- Initiation
- Elongation
- Termination
25Transcription key steps
DNA
- Initiation
- Elongation
- Termination
26Transcription key steps
DNA
- Initiation
- Elongation
- Termination
DNA
RNA
27Genes can be switched on/off
- In an adult multicellular organism, there is a
wide variety of cell types seen in the adult. eg,
muscle, nerve and blood cells. - The different cell types contain the same DNA
though. - This differentiation arises because different
cell types express different genes. - Promoters are one type of gene regulators
28Transcription (recap)
- The DNA is contained in the nucleus of the cell.
- A stretch of it unwinds there, and its message
(or sequence) is copied onto a molecule of mRNA. - The mRNA then exits from the cell nucleus.
- Its destination is a molecular workbench in the
cytoplasm, a structure called a ribosome.
29Translation
- How do I interpret the information carried by
mRNA to the Ribosome? - Think of the sequence as a sequence of
triplets. - Think of AUGCCGGGAGUAUAG as AUG-CCG-GGA-GUA-UAG.
- Each triplet (codon) maps to an amino acid.
30The Genetic Code
- f codon ? amino acid
- 1968 Nobel Prize in medicine Nirenberg and
Khorana - Important The genetic code is universal!
- It is also redundant / degenerate.
31The Genetic Code
32Proteins
- Composed of a chain of amino acids.
- R
-
- H2N--C--COOH
-
- H
20 possible groups
33Proteins
R
R
H2N--C--COOH
H2N--C--COOH
H H
34Dipeptide
This is a peptide bond
R O R
II
H2N--C--C--NH--C--COOH
H H
35Protein structure
- Linear sequence of amino acids folds to form a
complex 3-D structure. - The structure of a protein is intimately
connected to its function. - The 3-D shape of proteins gives them
their working ability the ability to bind
with other molecules.
36Our course (2427)
Part 1, DNA Assembly, Evolution, Alignment
Part 2, Genes Prediction, Regulation
Part 3, Structures Interactions
transcription
DNA
rRNA
snRNA
translation
POLYPEPTIDE
mRNA
37Computer Scientists vs Biologists(courtesy
Steven Skiena, SUNY Stony Brook)
38Computer scientists vs Biologists
- Biologists strive to understand the very
complicated, very messy natural world. - Computer scientists seek to build their own clean
and organized virtual worlds.
39Computer scientists vs Biologists
- Computer scientists get high-paid jobs after
graduation. - Biologists typically have to complete one or more
post-docs...
40Computer scientists vs Biologists
- Nothing is ever completely true or false in
Biology. - Everything is either true or false in computer
science.