Title: Trends in Biotechnology
1Trends in Biotechnology
- Quick Review of Chapter 2 Cellular Processes
2- Eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells, and the major
organelles of eukaryotic cells.
3Fig. 2.1 Cell structure and organization (a)
Bacteria cell.
4http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cell_28biology29
5Fig. 2.1 (b) Animal cell.
6- Diagram of a typical animal cell. Organelles are
labelled as follows - Nucleolus
- Nucleus
- Ribosome
- Vesicle
- Rough endoplasmic reticulum
- Golgi apparatus (or "Golgi body")
- Cytoskeleton
- Smooth endoplasmic reticulum
- Mitochondrion
- Vacuole
- Cytosol
- Lysosome
- Centriole
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FileBiological_cell.
svg
7Fig. 2.1 (c) Plant cell.
8http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FilePlant_cell_
structure.png
9- Structure of the cells macromolecules, and how
they are constructed Lipids, carbohydrates,
proteins, and nucleic acids.
10- Two different classes of lipids have fatty acids
in their structure.
11Fig. 2.2 Triglycerides have a three-carbon-OH
backbone called glycerol with a fatty acid chain
attached to each carbon.
12Fig. 2.2 (b) Phospholipids are structurally
similar to triglycerides except one fatty acid
chain is replaced by a phosphate.
13Fig. 2.2 (c) Phospholipid bilayer
14- Cell membranes are very complex with a
phospholipid bilayer embedded with proteins,
carbohydrates, and glycoproteins.
http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FileCell_membra
ne_detailed_diagram_en.svg
15Fig. 2.3 Structure of fatty acids showing the
carbon backbone.
16Fig. 2.4 Monosaccharides, (a) glucose and (b)
fructose shown as both straight-chain and ring
forms. (c) The formation of a disaccharide
from two joined monosaccharides.
17Fig. 2.5 Cellulose, a structural polysaccharide
composed of glucose monomers, found in plant cell
walls.
18Cellulose.
http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FileCellulose-3
D-balls.png
19Fig. 2.6 Chitin, a structural polysaccharide
composed of N-acetyl glucosamine, is found in the
exoskeletons of insects.
20Fig. 2.7 The 20 amino acids used in protein
synthesis.
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24- In the above structures, the top circle
represents the amino acid backbone (H2NCHCOOH),
with the R group depicted. - In the case of proline, which is an alpha imino
acid, rather than an amino acid, the circle
represents the CHCOOH group, the imino nitrogen
shown as an element in the proline ring.
25Fig. 2.8 Peptide bond formation between two amino
acids.
26http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FilePeptidforma
tionball.svg
27Fig. 2.9 The four nucleotides of DNA.
28http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FileDNA_chemica
l_structure.svg
29Fig. 2.10 The double-strand structure of DNA
showing the nucleotides, each made of a
deoxyribose sugar, a phosphate, and a
nitrogen-containing base.
30Fig. 2.11 The Watson-Crick model of DNA. Two
strands of a hydrogen bonded DNA double helix
spiraling around a central axis.
31Fig. 2.12 The deoxy-ribonucleotide monomers of
DNA connected by phospho-diester bonds.
32Fig. 2.13 The nucleotide structure of RNA.
33Fig. 2.14 Base pairing, A-T in DNA and A-U in
RNA.
34http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FileDifference_
DNA_RNA-EN.svg
35Fig. 2.15 Transfer RNA showing the anticodon and
3 amino acid binding regions.
36- A different model of transfer RNA.
http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File3d_tRNA.png
37Fig. 2.16 Central dogma of molecular biology.(a)
38Fig. 2.16 Central dogma of molecular biology.(b)
39http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FileRibosome_mR
NA_translation_en.svg
40Fig. 2.17 The stages of nuclear division in a
process called mitosis, and cell division.
41http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FileMitosis.png
42Fig. 2.18 Semiconservative replication of DNA.
43- Semiconservative replication of DNA showing the
direction of replication.
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45- Some proteins involved in DNA replication.
http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FileDNA_replica
tion_en.svg
46- Show video DNA Replication Process - Free Science
Videos and Lectures - http//www.freesciencelectures.com/video/dna-repli
cation-process/ - Show video Mechanism of Replication
- http//www.dnalc.org/resources/3d/04-mechanism-of-
replication-advanced.html
47Fig. 2.19 Bidirectional replication of DNA in
(a) prokaryotes and (b) eukaryotes.
48Fig. 2.20 Replication of DNA at a replication
fork in bacteria.
49Fig. 2.20 Replication of DNA at a replication
fork in bacteria.
50Fig. 2.20 Replication of DNA at a replication
fork in bacteria.
51Fig. 2.21 A DNA replication bubble showing the
direction of replication in the two replication
forks, leading and lagging strand synthesis, and
Okazaki fragments in the lagging strand.
52- After replication the DNA might be coiled in
Eukaryotes - http//www.freesciencelectures.com/video/molecular
-biology-visualization-of-dna/
53Fig. 2.22 The amino acids arranged according to
their degeneracy.
54Fig. 2.23 Codons read in-frame.
55Fig. 2.24 RNA synthesis. (a) Transcription is
started when RNA polymerase binds to the DNA at
the promoter region.
56Fig. 2.24 (b) The double-strand DNA unwinds. (c)
RNA polymerase travels along the DNA template,
nucleotides are added to the growing RNA strand.
57Fig. 2.24 (d) RNA polymerase reaches a
terminator, the RNA transcript is released and
transcription is terminated.
58- Show video TranscriptionAdvancedXvid
- http//vcell.ndsu.nodak.edu/animations/transcripti
on/movie-flash.htm - Show video 13-transcription-advanced
- http//www.dnalc.org/resources/3d/13-transcription
-advanced.html
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60Fig. 2.25 A stem-loop structure in the newly
synthesized RNA is one way that transcription is
terminated.
61Fig. 2.26 Conserved sequences in (a) bacterial
promoters
62Fig. 2.26 (b) Conserved sequences in eukaryotic
promoters.
63Fig. 2.27 Enhancement of transcription by an
enhancer element. (a) Low level of transcription
without the effect of an enhancer.
64Fig. 2.27 (b) An enhancer sequence increases the
level of transcription.
65Fig. 2.28 After transcription and formation of a
pre-mRNA in eukaryotic cells, the transcript is
processed.
66- Fig. 2.28 After transcription and formation of a
pre-mRNA in eukaryotic cells, the transcript is
processed - a nucleotide with functional groups
is added to the 5 end (5 cap) and adenine
nucleotides are added to the 3 end (poly-A tail).
67- Show video mRNAProcessingAdvancedXvid
- http//vcell.ndsu.nodak.edu/animations/mrnaprocess
ing/movie-flash.htm - Show video 24-mrna-splicing http//www.dnalc.org/r
esources/3d/24-mrna-splicing.html - Show video mRNA Splicing
- http//vcell.ndsu.nodak.edu/animations/mrnasplicin
g/movie-flash.htm
68Fig. 2.29 The three types of RNA (rRNA, mRNA,
tRNA) and their role in protein synthesis.
69Fig. 2.30 Ribosome structure.
70http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FileRibosome_mR
NA_translation_en.svg
71Fig. 2.31 a) Translation initiation.
72Fig. 2.31 b) Translation initiation.
73Fig. 2.31 c) Translation initiation.
74Fig. 2.32 a) b) Elongation during translation.
75Fig. 2.32 c) d) Elongation during translation.
76Fig. 2.32 e) Elongation during translation.
77- Show video 16-translation-advanced
- http//www.dnalc.org/resources/3d/16-translation-a
dvanced.html - Show video TranslationAdvancedXvid
- http//vcell.ndsu.nodak.edu/animations/translation
/movie-flash.htm
78- Regulation of Gene Expression.
- The cell only makes what is needed and controls
the production of products. - Both prokaryotes and eukaryotes control the
stopping and starting of transcription. - Prokaryotes can lower the rate of translation.
79- Prokaryotic Gene Expression.
- Bacteria use signals called inducers to turn
genes on or off in response to environmental
changes. - Usually these are in the form of a group of
genes, with a promoter (called an operon). - There are two major operons that are well known
in bacteria. -
80- Operons have several parts
- Promoter.
- Several structural genes, all controlled by the
promoter. - Repressor binding site, called an operator,
which overlaps the promoter. - Repressor genes encode for repressor proteins,
which bind to the operator to block RNA
polymerase.
81Fig. 2.33 A prokaryotic operon.
82- The lac Operon of E. coli
- Contains three operon genes
- lacZthe enzyme beta-galactosidase, which breaks
down lactose. - lacYthe enzyme permease.
- lacAthe enzyme acetylase.
83Fig. 2.34 Regulation of the lac operon. (a) When
the active repressor binds to the operator in the
absence of lactose, RNA polymerase cannot bind to
the promoter and transcription is blocked.
84Fig. 2.34 Regulation of the lac operon in the
presence of lactose. (b) Lactose inactivates the
repressor which releases from the operator, RNA
polymerase binds to the promoter and
transcription starts.
85- Without lactose, the lac repressor, encoded by
the lacI gene, binds to the operator, keeping RNA
polymerase from binding to the promoter. - When lactose is present, it attaches to the
repressor which changes its shape and releases
from the promoter. - Ribosomes immediately attach to the mRNA and
start translation. - This is negative control - genes are not
transcribed when the repressor is bound to the
promoter. -
86- Video LacOperonAdvancedXvid http//vcell.ndsu.nod
ak.edu/animations/lacOperon/index.htm - Video Operon Lac
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vaEtuaEe0C-INR1
- (web Animation The lac Operon
- http//bcs.whfreeman.com/thelifewire/content/chp13
/1302001.html )
87- The lac operon can also be regulated to allow for
more transcription - If glucose is absent, the amount of a molecule
called cyclic AMP (cAMP) increases inside the
cell. - cAMP binds to a cAMP binding protein (CAP), which
binds near the promoter region. This increases
lac operon transcription. - cAMP is lower when glucose is present, and CAP is
not active.
88- The trp Operon regulates the production of the
amino acid tryptophan. - It has several parts
- (a) Promoter.
- (b) Operator gene overlapping the promoter
region. - (c) Five genes encoding enzymes that catalyze
the last steps of tryptophan synthesis.
89- The repressor is inactive unless tryptophan binds
to it. The activated repressor attaches to the
operator and blocks transcription. - If there is no tryptophan, the repressor cannot
bind and transcription occurs. - Genes are repressed to avoid too much tryptophan
production.
90Fig. 2.35 The trp operon showing the five
structural genes and the promoter region.
91- Web Video of trp Operon look at
http//bcs.whfreeman.com/thelifewire/content/chp13
/1302002.html
92- Eukaryotic Gene Expression is much more
complicated than in prokaryotes.
93- Eukaryotic cells regulate gene expression by
- Regulating transcription of genes.
- Controlling mRNA processing.
- Controlling transport of mRNA to the cytoplasm.
- Regulating the rate of translation.
- Controlling availability of mRNA.
- Protein processing.
94Fig. 2.36 Transcription and translation in a
eukaryotic cell.
95Fig. 2.37 Summary of some of the multiple levels
of eukaryotic gene regulation.
96- Transcriptional control
- There are more promoters and regulatory sequences
in eukaryotic cells. - Proteins called transcription factors interact
with the promoter and RNA polymerase, forming the
transcription initiation complex. - Gene-specific regulatory proteins bind to special
DNA control sequences that contain regulatory
protein binding sites. - Control sequences can be adjacent to or distant
from structural genes. - Individual or distant genes often must be
regulated in scattered groups or networks,
sometimes on different chromosomes.
97- Video mRNAProcessingAdvanced
- http//vcell.ndsu.nodak.edu/animations/mrnaprocess
ing/index.htm
98- Regulation of RNA processing and transport out of
the nucleus to the cytoplasm - Different cell types may process the same mRNA
differently, by a process called alternative
splicing, to yield different proteins (Figure
2.38) - The pre-mRNA for the hormone calcitonin
(non-processed mRNA) contains five introns
separating six exons. - The transcript can be processed to generate
calcitonin mRNA in thyroid cells or calcitonin
gene-related peptide (CGRP) mRNA in hypothalamus
cells.
99Fig. 2.38 An example of alternative splicing to
yield two different mRNAs, calcitonin mRNA in
thyroid cells and calcitonin gene-related peptide
(CGRP) mRNA in hypothalamus.
100- Video mRNASplicingAdvancedXvid
- http//vcell.ndsu.nodak.edu/animations/mrnasplicin
g/index.htm
101- Translational control
- Influences the final synthesis of a protein
product (translation). - Translation is controlled by protein initiation
factors and proteins that repress (inhibit)
translation. - How quickly mRNA degrades influences when mRNA
can be translated.
102- Posttranslational control is the changing of
protein products after they are made.
103- Methods of changing them include
- Protein folding and assembly with other proteins
after synthesis. - The removal of amino acids.
- Cleavage of the molecule, which is called
proteolysis. - Modification of the protein molecule.
- Addition of a sugar is called glycosylation.
- Addition of a phosphate is called
phosphorylation. - Importing proteins into organelles.
- Protein degradation.
104- Video ProteinModification
- http//vcell.ndsu.nodak.edu/animations/proteinmodi
fication/index.htm - Note this is some of the protein changes in the
Golgi body. There are many more different types
of changes possible in other parts of the cell.
105- Draw and label a diagram of the Central Dogma
of molecular biology. - On the diagram, show the ways that the flow of
information in the cell can be regulated in
eukaryotic cells, beginning at the DNA level and
ending at the protein level.