Title: An Introduction to Protein Synthesis
1An Introduction to Protein Synthesis
Biology 12 Cole Harbour District High
School Wednesday, March 21st, 2007
2George Beadle Edward Tatum
- "one gene, one enzyme hypothesis states that
that a single gene controls the production,
specificity, and activity of each enzyme in a
metabolic pathway. Thus, mutation of such a gene
changes the ability of the cell to carry out a
particular reaction and disrupts the entire
pathway.
3Revised
- "one gene one polypeptide hypothesis"Â Â A revision
of the one gene, one enzyme hypothesis. Some
proteins are composed of different polypeptide
chains encoded by separate genes, so the
hypothesis now holds that mutation in a gene
encoding a specific polypeptide can alter the
ability of the encoded protein to function and
thus produce an altered phenotype.
4RNA Production
- RNA occurs in the nucleus as well as in the
cytoplasm (also remember that it occurs as part
of the ribosomes that line the rough endoplasmic
reticulum). - Scientists for some time had suspected such a
link between DNA and proteins.
5Protein Synthesis at a glance
This is what we did in the DNA lab!
6Differences between DNA and RNA
7The Delivery Route
- Messenger RNA (mRNA) is the blueprint for
construction of a protein. - Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) is the construction site
where the protein is made. - Transfer RNA (tRNA) is the truck delivering the
proper amino acid to the site at the right time.
tRNA
8Starting Protein Synthesis
- DNA controls all the cell activities largely by
controlling the production of thousands of
proteins many of which are specific to each
cell. - Protein synthesis begins when the DNA unzips
nucleotides of mRNA (messenger RNA) find their
complementary base and join into a chain. A pairs
with U and G pairs with C
9TRANSCRIPTION
- Once the chain is fused, the mRNA moves away from
the parent DNA strand which then rejoins. - This completes the process of transcription (the
message of the DNA has been TRANSCRIBED into the
mRNA. - The mRNA now leaves the nucleus and goes out to a
ribosome.
10Word Bird
- Transcription to transcribe means to translate
or to copy. - When DNA directs the duplication of another
nucleic acid called RNA, the process is called
transcription. Transcription is making an RNA
copy of a DNA sequence. It is the first stage in
Protein Synthesis! (Thanks
Webster's!)
TRANSCRIPTION
11The Language of Genetics
- Nucleotides are arranged in a linear sequence,
some are several thousands long. - A single base dose not contain a code.
- Westandonguardforthee
12Reading the DNA code
- Rather three bases or TRIPLETS carry the code.
Like a book that contains only three nucleotides
(triplets). - From the 4 bases (A, U, C, G) there are 64
possibilities for triplet formation. - These three letter codes determine the exact
order in which amino acids will be arranged in a
specific protein molecule.
Books containing Triplets!
13UNZIPPING DNA
- RNA polymerase (an enzyme) opens the part of the
DNA to be transcribed. - Only one strand of DNA (called the template
strand) is transcribed. - RNA nucleotides are available in the region of
the chromatin and are linked together similar to
the DNA process.
14Unzipping DNA
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17Codons
- After RNA is transcribed it detaches itself and
may be stored for a short time in the nucleolus
or move immediately through the nuclear pores
into the cytoplasm. - The RNA has the code for specific amino acids.
- This type of RNA is called mRNA.
- Like DNA there are 64 combinations of codons in
mRNA.
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19mRNA in the Cytoplasm
- mRNA acts as the template for the assembly of
amino acids and the production of protein
molecules. - mRNA gt amino acid combinations gt Translation.
20Word Bird
- Translation To change from one language to
another. - So here we have mRNA being read and patterned
into amino acid sequences which combine together
to make new proteins. - Ribosomes help read the mRNA to determine which
amino acids are selected. - (Thanks again Webster's!)
TRANSLATION!
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22Amino Acid trains
- Throughout the cytoplasm we find amino acids.
- The sequence which they join together during
synthesis is determined by the mRNA codons. - The amino acids are picked up and brought to the
template using tRNA.
23Anticodon
- The tRNA carries the amino acids to the mRNA
using coding that is the exact opposite of the
code found on the mRNA known as an anticodon. - The anticodon tells the specific amino acid to
come to the mRNA. - After the tRNA delivers the amino acid it moves
to the cytoplasm.
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25- Upon completion of the chain, the protein is
released and passes into the cytoplasm where it
is used.
26Protein Synthesis Summary
27Seat Work Due at the Start of the next class.
READINGS page 636-639 Questions 2-7 page 639