Title: RNA Maturation and Processing
1RNA Maturation and Processing Stryer Chapter 29,
Lodish Chapter 4.2, 8.2
2Gene organization, transcription, and translation
in prokaryotes
3Gene organization, transcription, and translation
in eukaryotes
4Bacterial operons produce polycistronic mRNAs
while most eukaryotic mRNAs are monocistronic and
contain introns
5Capping enzyme adds a 5 cap and creates a 5 to
5 linkage
6All mRNA precursors are polyadenylated (only
exception histones)
7Simple and complex transcription units are found
in eukaryotic genomes
alternative splicing
8(No Transcript)
9Alternative splicing in different cell types
domains that bind to proteins in fibroblast
plasma membrane
10(No Transcript)
11Molecular definition of a gene
- A gene is the entire nucleic acid sequence that
is necessary for the synthesis of a functional
polypeptide - DNA regions that code for RNA molecules such as
tRNA and rRNA may also be considered genes - In eukaryotes, genes lie amidst a large expanse
of nonfunctional, noncoding DNA and genes may
also contain regions of noncoding DNA
rRNA gene cluster in E. coli
12Exon-intron structure in eukaryotic genomes
Exon
Yeast 6,000 genes Humans 25,000 genes
(1.5 encode for proteins, 1.5 encode for RNAs.
Rest is junk DNA (97 of our genome)
Intron
13Signal sequences for splicing
14Point mutations can affect exon-intron boundaries
in-frame STOP codon in intron
Mutation creates new 5 splice site
message is spliced incorrectly (STOP codon
becomes part of coding sequence)
low hemoglobin-beta production resulting in anemia
15RNA splicing
In ciliate rRNA
In humans
16Spliceosome mediated intron removal
17Catalysis is driven by small nuclear RNAs, not
primarily by proteins
18RNA editing
19LDL Low density lipoprotein
20- What you need to know
- Pre m-RNA is processed by
- adding a cap to the 5 end (only known 5 to 5
link in nucleic acid) - the cap is important for translation initiation
- 2) polyadenylation, which is thought to
increase mRNA half-life - splicing (group I, II self-splicing, or
spliceosome-assisted. - Spliceosome composed of snRNPs, which
contain snRNAs) - snRNAs drive the reaction, not the proteins.
Different steps can be - carried out in the test tube and do not require
protein to be present. - alternative splicing provides tissue-specific
protein variants - Introns are encoded in the DNA. In the mRNA
transcript, they can be - recognized as 5splice site, branch point and
3splice site. The intron - begins with GU and ends with AG. The branch
point is usually an A. - mRNA can be edited by cytosine deaminase
(introduces new stop codon - CAA to UAA) to generate tissue-specific protein
variants