Title: Making Proteins
1 2Central Dogma of Genetics
3The Genetic Code
- The nucleotide sequence of DNA is a code DNA is
an information-storage molecule without enzymatic
capabilities(F. Crick). - The information in DNA is copied into RNA, which
is used to make proteins (mRNA messenger RNA). - Hypothesis each of the 20 amino acids in
proteins is specified by one or more 3 base
codons (Gamow).
4How does the genetic code work?
There are 4 RNA bases (U, C, A, G) and they must
specify 20 amino acids.
How many bases specify a single amino acid?
G
G
A
U
C
C
G
A
A
U
G
C
C
G
G
U
C
A
A
U
mRNA
G
A
A
U
U
C
C
G
A
A
A
A
U
U
G
A
C
C
C
C
C
G
G
C
U
C
C
C
3 Bases?
1 Base?
2 Bases?
4 Bases?...
A doublet code could specify a maximum of 4 x 4
or 16 amino acids.
A triplet code could specify a maximum of 4 x 4 x
4, or 64 amino acids.
U
U
U
U
U
C
A
G
U
U
U
U
U
U
U
U
U
C
A
G
G
C
A
U
2
2
3
4
1
1
3
4
1
2
3
4
C
C
C
C
C
C
C
C
U
C
A
G
U
C
A
G
C
C
C
C
4 lt 20 Not enough
5
6
7
8
6
5
7
8
A
A
A
A
A
U
C
A
G
A
A
A
A
A
U
C
A
G
A
A
Since there are only 4 bases, a singlet
code could onlyspecify 4 amino acids.
9
9
10
11
12
10
11
12
G
G
C
A
G
G
G
U
G
G
G
U
C
A
G
G
G
etc...
14
14
13
15
16
13
15
16 lt 20 Not enough
64 gt 20 More than enough
5Figure 17.4 The dictionary of the genetic code
6One gene-one polypeptide hypothesisA gene is a
length of a DNA molecule that contains the
information to produce one polypeptide chain
7Figure 17.2 Overview the roles of transcription
and translation in the flow of genetic
information (Layer 1)
8Figure 17.2 Overview the roles of transcription
and translation in the flow of genetic
information (Layer 2)
9Figure 17.2 Overview the roles of transcription
and translation in the flow of genetic
information (Layer 3)
10Figure 17.2 Overview the roles of transcription
and translation in the flow of genetic
information (Layer 4)
11Figure 17.2 Overview the roles of transcription
and translation in the flow of genetic
information (Layer 5)
12Transcription produces an RNA molecule
complementary to a DNA template
DNA
5
RNA
3
3
5
Template strand
5
3
3
5
P
OH
P
OH
P
O
G
OH
P
P
P
5
OH
3
P
RNA
OH
O
O
O
HO
OH
A
U
C
A
T
C
G
DNA
O
O
O
O
P
P
P
P
5
3
13RNA transcription is catalyzed by RNA polymerase
RNA polymerase
DNA
14Protein Synthesis Begins with the Process ofGene
Transcription
- Steps of Transcription
- RNA polymerase binds to the promoter region of
the DNA - RNA polymerase unwinds the DNA.
- RNA polymerase reads DNA 3' to 5' and synthesizes
complementary RNA 5' to 3'.
15Figure 17.6 The stages of transcription
initiation, elongation, and termination (Layer 1)
16Figure 17.6 The stages of transcription
initiation, elongation, and termination (Layer 2)
17Figure 17.6 The stages of transcription
initiation, elongation, and termination (Layer 3)
18Figure 17.6 The stages of transcription
initiation, elongation, and termination (Layer 4)
19Close up of transcription
20In eukaryotes proteins called transcription
factors bind to the promoter first, then RNA
polymerase binds to start transcription
21After Transcription
- Transcription in Prokaryotes
- The RNA produced is ready to be translated mRNA
- Transcription in Eukaryotes
- The RNA produced must be modified before
translation 1 transcript--gt mRNA - Eukaryotic mRNAs are processed in the nucleus by
additionof a 5' cap and 3' poly A tail - Eukaryotic genes have introns non-coding regions
thatmust be removed from the primary mRNA to
make an intact uninterrupted message.
22RNA processing in Eukaryotes
23Molecules called small nuclear ribonucleoproteins
(snRNPs) combine to splice introns from mRNA
24Figure 17.11 Correspondence between exons and
protein domains
25After transcription, the next step is translation
- Translation Converts the Nucleotide Sequence of
mRNA into the Amino Acid Sequence of a Protein - Translation occurs on ribosomes either in the
cytoplasm or on the endoplasmic reticulum
26Structure of a ribosome
Large subunit
Small subunit
P site
E site
Proteins
A site
Active site (contains only rRNA)
rRNAs ribosomal RNA
27The adaptor molecule between mRNA and protein is
tRNA (transfer RNA)
Stems are created by hydrogen bonding between
complementary base pairs
Loops consist of unpaired bases
28Figure 17.13b The structure of transfer RNA
(tRNA)
29An aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase joins a specific
amino acid to a tRNA
30Early model of tRNA function
Amino acid
Ser
3
A
C
Binding site for amino acid
C
5
Binding site for mRNA codon
Serine anticodon
A
U
G
5
3
U
C
A
mRNA
Serine codon
31Figure 17.15 The anatomy of a functioning
ribosome
32Translation Converts the Nucleotide Sequence of
mRNA into the Amino Acid Sequence of a Protein
- Translation occurs in three steps
- Initiation the ribosome 30S subunit binds mRNA
and movesto the AUG codon, which is the
translation start site. - The initiator methionine tRNA binds to the AUG
start codon. - The ribosome 50S subunit assembles so that the
initiator tRNA and the AUG codon are in the P
site.
33Figure 17.17 The initiation of translation
34Translation Converts the Nucleotide Sequence of
mRNA into the Amino Acid Sequence of a Protein
- Translation occurs in three steps
- Elongation amino acids are joined together and
the ribosome moves to the next codon. - New tRNAs enters the A site of the ribosome
- A peptide bond forms between the polypeptide on
the tRNA inthe P site and the amino acid in the
A site, which transfers the polypeptide to the A
site tRNA. - The ribosome moves along the mRNA in the 5' to 3'
direction.
35Figure 17.18 The elongation cycle of translation
36Translation Converts the Nucleotide Sequence of
mRNA into the Amino Acid Sequence of a Protein
- Translation occurs in three steps
- Termination when a stop codon on mRNA is
encountered in the A site, the completed
polypeptide is released, and the ribosome
disengages. - Release factors are required.
37Figure 17.19 The termination of translation
38Post-translational events affect the structure,
activity, and destination of the protein
- Proteins must fold into their proper 3D
structure.
Primary structure
Secondary structure
Tertiary structure
Quaternary structure
39The Central Dogma Information Flows from DNA to
RNA to Proteins (F.Crick)
- Viruses that have RNA genomes contradict the
centraldogma, but all cells conform to it.
Virus protein coat
Host cell membrane
Virus RNA
1. Start of infection. Virus RNA enters
host cells.
2. Reverse transcriptase uses Virus RNA as
template to produce virus DNA
4. End of infection. New generation of virus
particles burst from host cell.
3. Virus DNA directs the production of new virus
particles.
40Mutation and DNA Repair Mechanisms
- Mutations are created by chemicals, radiation,
errors in meiosis and mistakes in DNA
replication. - Mutations can be deleterious, beneficial, or
silent. - Mutations in an individual are usually
deleterious, may cause disease and death. - Mutations in a population are a source of genetic
diversity that allows evolution to occur.
41Point mutations are a change in single base pair
of DNA
A
A
C
T
G
G
C
A base-pair substitution
Wild type
T
T
G
A
C
C
G
A
A
C
T
G
G
C
A
A
C
T
A
G
C
MUTANT
3'
5'
T
T
G
A
T
C
G
T
T
G
A
T
C
G
A
A
C
T
G
G
C
DNA replication
DNA replication
T
T
G
A
C
C
G
A
A
C
T
G
G
A
A
C
T
G
G
C
C
5'
3'
Wild type
Parental DNA
T
T
G
A
C
C
G
T
T
G
A
C
C
G
First generation progeny
A
A
C
T
G
G
C
Wild type
T
T
G
A
C
C
G
Second generation progeny
42Figure 17.24 Categories of Base-pair
substitutions
43DNA point mutations can lead to a different amino
acid sequence.
Phenotype
Start of coding sequence
CAC
GTG
GAC
TGA
GGA
CTC
CTC
DNA sequence
GTG
CAC
CTG
ACT
CCT
GAG
GAG
Normal
Amino acid sequence
Normal red blood cells
Histidine
Threonine
Glutamic acid
Glutamic acid
Valine
Leucine
Proline
CAC
GTG
GAC
TGA
GGA
CTC
CAC
DNA sequence
GTG
CAC
CTG
ACT
CCT
GAG
GTG
Mutant
Amino acid sequence
Sickled red blood cells
Threonine
Histidine
Glutamic acid
Leucine
Valine
Valine
Proline
44Insertion or deletion of a single base-pair
causes frameshift mutations
45UV radiation can cause 2 thymines that are next
to each other to bind to each other instead of
the adenines in the other strand
UV-induced thymine dimers caused DNA to kink
H
P
O
Thymine dimer
P
H
N
O
CH2
CH2
O
N
N
O
Thymine
O
N
O
DNA strand with adjacent thymine bases
UV light
H
CH3
H
CH3
P
H
P
O
O
H
Kink
N
N
O
CH2
CH2
O
N
O
O
Thymine
N
H
CH3
H
CH3
P
P
46Mutation and DNA Repair Mechanisms
- DNA Repair Mechanisms
- DNA polymerase proofreads and corrects point
mutations during replication. - Other excision repair systems scan newly formed
DNA and correct remaining mutations. - Repair enzymes identify the correct template
strand by its methyl groups. - Defects in repair system enzymes are implicated
in a variety of cancers.
47DNA polymerase proofreads DNA during replication
3'
5'
A
T
G
T
C
C
T
C
G
C
Mismatched bases.
A
C
A
G
G
G
5'
OH 3'
5'
3'
Polymerase III can repair mismatches.
T
G
T
C
C
A
T
C
G
C
A
C
A
G
G
5'
OH 3'
T
G
OH
48METHYLATION-DIRECTED MISMATCHED BASE REPAIR
1. Where a mismatch occurs, the correct base is
located on the methylated strand the incorrect
base occurs on the unmethylated strand.
Mismatch
2. Enzymes detect mismatch and nick unmethylated
strand.
3. DNA polymerase I excises nucleotides on
unmethylated strand.
4. DNA polymerase I fills in gap in 5' 3'
direction.
5. DNA ligase links new and old nucleotides.
Repaired Mismatch
49Some genetic diseases are associated with
mutations in DNA repair mechanisms
Xeroderma pigmentosum is a defect in ultraviolet
radiation induced DNA repair mechanisms
characterized by severe sensitivity to all
sources of UV radiation (especially sunlight).
Symptoms include blistering or freckling,
premature aging of skin,with increased cancers in
these same areas, blindness resulting from eye
lesions or surgery for skin lesions close to the
eyes