Title: DNA makes ______ makes __________.
1CHAPTER 17 FROM GENE TO PROTEIN
- DNA makes ______ makes __________.
- Proteins are the links between ________
and_________.
- In 1909- Archibald _______ suggested that
- 1. genes dictate phenotype through enzymes that
catalyze specific chemical reactions in the cell. - 2. the symptoms of an inherited disease reflect a
persons inability to synthesize a particular
___________. - Gerrod speculated that alkaptonuria, a hereditary
disease, was caused by the absence of an enzyme
in a pathway
21. The study of metabolic defects provided
evidence that genes specify proteins
- The idea of __________ pathways was suggested
- 1930s- George Beadle and Boris Ephrussi
speculated that each mutation affecting ________
in Drosophila blocks pigment synthesis at a
specific step by preventing production of the
___________ that catalyzes that step.
Actual evidence for metabolic pathways came from
Beadle and Tatum in the 1930s
3Beadle and Tatum Experiment
- Organism used- -bread mold, Neurospora crassa.
Experiment
1. Mutate Neurospora with __________ 2. Screened
the survivors for mutants that differed in their
nutritional needs.
- ____________ Neurospora can grow on a
____________ medium - Minimal medium agar, inorganic salts, glucose,
and the - vitamin biotin.
- Most nutritional mutants can survive on a
complete growth medium which includes all 20
amino acids.
3. If mutant failed to grow on minimal medium,
add amino acid ____________ until growth is
evident
Results
1. Identify a number of mutants that did not grow
on arginine, but would grow if supply arginine
pathways intermediates
4- Their results provided strong evidence for the
onegene - one __________ hypothesis.
Later modified to the one gene-one __________
hypothesis Why? Not all proteins are
_____________
Gene A
Gene B
Gene C
Gene A mutants
Gene B mutants
Gene C mutants
Fig. 17.2
52. Transcription and translation are the two main
processes linking gene to protein
- The bridge between DNA and __________synthesis is
RNA. - RNA differs from DNA
- 1. RNA contains ________ as its sugar (not
deoxyribose) - 2. _________ replaces thymine.
- AGTCAT becomes AGUCAU
- 3. An RNA molecule almost always consists of a
________ strand.
6- In DNA or RNA, only four nucleotides produce
life - The specific _________ of hundreds or thousands
of nucleotides in each gene carries the
information for the primary structure of a
protein, the linear order of the ____ possible
amino acids. - To get from DNA, written in one chemical
language, to protein, written in another,
requires two major stages, ____________
and____________ .
7- ____________ - DNA is the template for RNA,
usually __________ RNA (mRNA).
- ____________________ - the information contained
in the order of nucleotides in mRNA is used to
determine the __________ sequence of a
polypeptide. - -Translation occurs at ____________.
Fig. 17.3a
- The basic mechanics of transcription and
translation are ________ in eukaryotes and
prokaryotes.
8Major differences between prokaryotes and
eukaryotes-
- Transcription and translation are __________in
bacteria (which lack________ ), but occur at
separate locations in eukaryotes. - - In bacteria, ___________attach to the leading
end of a mRNA molecule while transcription is
still in progress. - -In a eukaryotic cells, almost all transcription
occurs in the nucleus and translation occurs
mainly at ribosomes in the cytoplasm.
Protein
RNA
DNA
- 2. Eukaryotes- Before the ________ can leave the
nucleus it is modified in various ways during
__________________ before the finished mRNA is
exported to the cytoplasm.
Fig. 17.3b
93. In the genetic code, nucleotide triplets
specify amino acids
- A single or doublet code can not provide enough
____________ (4 and 16 respectively) to code for
all 20 amino acids. - Triplets of nucleotide bases are the smallest
units of uniform length that can code for all the
amino acids. - In the__________, three consecutive bases specify
an amino acid, creating 43 (64)
possible__________. - The genetic instructions for a polypeptide chain
are written in DNA as a series of three-_________
words.
10- During transcription, one DNA strand,
the_____________, provides a template for
ordering the sequence of nucleotides in an RNA
transcript. - The _____________RNA molecule is synthesized
according to base-pairing rules, except that
_______ is the complementary base to adenine. - During translation, blocks of three nucleotides,
_______, are decoded into a sequence of amino
acids.
Template strand
mRNA
Protein
Fig. 17.4
11- During translation
- _________ are read in the 5-gt3 direction
- Each codon specifies _____ of the 20 amino acids
- It is a triplet code three bases for one amino
acid - It would take at least ____ nucleotides to code
for a polypeptide that is 100 amino acids long.
Problem We have 64 possible combinations of the
nucleotides
Why 64 possibilities? How many ways can you
arrange 4 bases in sets of three? Answer
_____ ________________
Thus, predict that _______________ combination
must specify a given amino acid
12- 1960s-Marshall Nirenberg determined the first
match, that UUU coded for the amino acid
_______________. - Experiment - Add poly-U (uracil-only) RNA _______
- plus amino acids, ribosomes, other components.
- Result- This poly(U translated into a long chain
of phenyalanine. - Other more elaborate techniques were required to
decode mixed triplets such a AUA and CGA. - By the mid-1960s the entire code was
_________________.
PhePhePhePhe
UUUUUUUUUUUUUUU
13The genetic code
Know how to read this chart!!
- 1. ___ of 64 triplets code for amino acids.
- AUG codes for the methionine and _______ of
translation.
- Three codons UAA, UAG and ______ do not code
amino acids but signal the termination of
translation.
- 2. The genetic code is ___________ but
not______________ . - Typically several different codons specify a
given amino acid - Any one codon indicates ___________ amino acid.
Fig. 17.5
- If you know a specific codon, you know the amino
acid - If you know only the amino acid, there may be
several possible codons - Example- Both GAA and GAG specify glutamate, but
no other amino acid.
14The genetic code (cont.)
Fig. 17.5
- Codons synonymous for the same amino acid often
differ only in the _______ codon position.
Example
GUU, GUC, GUA and GUG all encode ________
A ________________ is established at the
translation start
3
RNA
5
UUACGAUGGAUUCAAACGUCAGGGCCUAAGGCUAG
Asp
Met
Asn
Ser
Arg
Val
Ala
Stop codon
Start codon
Summary- The genetic code uses____________________
______, or codons, each of which is translated
into a specific amino acid.
15- The genetic code is nearly__________ , from
bacteria to mammals
Thus, we can synthesize bacterial proteins
in_________
Exceptions do exist- they use slightly altered
genetic codes 1.single-celled eukaryotes like
Paramecium.
2. certain mitochondria and chloroplast_______
164. Transcription is the DNA-directed synthesis of
RNA
- Transcriptioncan beseparatedinto
threestages1. _________2. elongation 3.
__________
Fig. 17.7
17What actually makes the RNA?
- Messenger RNA is transcribed from the template
strand of a gene by _____________________. - ___________________
- separates the DNA strands
- bonds the RNA nucleotides as they base-pair along
the DNA template. - can add nucleotides ______ to the ________ of the
growing polymer. - Genes are read _______ creating a ______RNA
molecule.
RNA
5
3
DNA
3
5
18Compare prok and euk polymerases
- Bacteria -________ type of RNA polymerase that
synthesizes all RNA molecules. - Eukaryotes -_________ RNA polymerases (I, II,
and III) in their _________ . - ___________________ is used for ________synthesis.
What marks the start of transcription??
- Answer- Specific sequences of nucleotides called
the _________ mark where gene transcription begins
- In prokaryotes, RNA polymerase can recognize and
bind __________ to the promotor region.
- In eukaryotes, proteins called ________________
first bind the promotor region, especially
a_________ , then RNA polymerase II binds
191. Initiation
- Eukaryotes- The complex including RNA polymerase
II plus transcription factors is called the - _________________.
Fig. 17.8
202. Elongation
- As RNA polymerase ________ the double helix,10 to
20 bases at time. - The enzyme addsnucleotides to the___ end of
thegrowing strand. - Behind the pointof RNA synthesis,the double
helix_______ and theRNA moleculepeels away.
Fig. 17.7
212. Elongation (cont.)
- A single gene can be transcribed simultaneously
by _____________ RNA polymerases at a time. - A growing strand of RNA trails off from
each______________.
RNA
5
5
DNA
3
TATAA
5
223. Termination
- Prokaryotes- RNA polymerase stops transcription
at the end of the______________ . - Both the RNA and DNA is then released.
- ______________- the polymerase continues for
hundreds of nucleotides past the terminator
sequence,_____________ . - At a point about _____________ nucleotides past
this sequence, the pre-mRNA is cut.
5
5
3
AAUAAA
TATAA
10-35 nucleotides
235. Eukaryotic cells modify RNA after transcription
- Modifications include
- 1. A ________at the 5 end of the pre-mRNA
molecule - The cap is a modified form of guanine
- Function a. Protect mRNA from
__________enzymes. - b. Attach here signal for____________
2. _____________50 to 250 adenine nucleotides at
the 3 end Function- a. inhibiting hydrolysis,
b. facilitating ribosome ___________c. facilitate
the export of mRNA from the nucleus.
3 tail
5 cap
Fig. 17.9
- The mRNA molecule also includes
____________leader and trailer segments.
24RNA modification in eukaryotes (cont.)
- 3. ______________ - Most eukaryotic genes and
their RNA transcripts have long ____________
stretches of nucleotides. - The noncoding segments are called ________
- The coding regions (final mRNA transcript) are
called__________
- What is a coding region??
- RNA sequences that are translated into amino
acid sequences
Coding region
Leader
Trailer
3 tail
5 cap
Fig. 17.9
25Fig. 17.10
- RNA splicing removes ______ and joins ______
to create an mRNA molecule with a _____________
coding sequence.
26This splicing is accomplished by
a________________.
- Contains small nuclear ribonucleoproteins
(snRNPs). and small nuclear RNA molecules
(snRNA). Each is about 150 nucleotides long.
Fig. 17.11
Splicing steps
(1) Pre-mRNA combines with _________ and other
proteins to form a spliceosome. (2) Within the
spliceosome, ________ base-pairs with nucleotides
at the ends of the intron. (3) The RNA
transcript is cut to release the________ , and
the exons are spliced together
Here the snRNA acts as a____________ , an RNA
molecule that functions as an enzyme.
27Poly-A tail
Cap
286. Translation is the RNA-directed synthesis of a
polypeptide
How do proteins read the RNA molecule??
Answer-the tRNA molecule
- ______________(tRNA) - transfers amino acids
from the cytoplasms pool to a ______________ . - The ribosome adds each amino acid carried by
tRNA to the growing end of the ______________
chain.
Fig. 17.13
29- A tRNA molecule
- Is about ___ nucleotides long
- Contains attachment site at the 3 end for an
amino acid. - Contains a loop with the ___________
Fig. 17.14
5
3
The anticodon base-pairs with a complementary
codon on mRNA.
If the codon on mRNA is UUU, a tRNA with a
______ anticodon and a tRNA carrying
phenylalanine will bind to it.
- The anticodons of some tRNAs recognize more than
one________. - Why? Because the rules for base pairing between
the third base of the codon and anticodon are
________ (called______________).
30How do we explain this wobble??
- If each anticodon had to be a perfect match to
each codon, we would expect to find ___ types of
tRNA, but the actual number is about____ . - At the wobble position, U on the _____________can
bind with A or G in the third position of a
codon. - Some tRNA anticodons include a modified form of
adenine, inosine, which can hydrogen bond with U,
C, or A on the codon.
31Wobble base pairing
Fig. 17.5
Leu
Wobble
AAU
AAU
UGGCGAUGUUAGUAUUGCAUGAGUUAGGUGACCAAGAU
Start
Leu
Leu
32How the is the tRNA linked to the amino acid??
- Each amino acid is joined to the correct tRNA by
____________________________The 20 different
synthetases match the 20 different________________
. - The synthetase catalyzes a covalent bond between
them, forming _______________ or activated amino
acid.
Fig. 17.15
- ______________ (protein rRNA) facilitate the
specific coupling of the tRNA anticodons with
mRNA codons.
phetRNA
Protein
Ribosomal subunits
1. Large
RNA
2. Small
33- Each ribosome has a binding site for mRNA and
three binding sites for tRNA molecules. - The ________ holds the tRNA carrying the growing
polypeptide chain. - The ______carries the tRNA with the
next__________. - Discharged tRNAs leave the ribosome at
the_________.
Fig. 17.16
34- Translation can be divided into three _________
1. initiation 2.
____________ 3. termination - Both initiation and chain elongation require
energy provided by the hydrolysis of________.
Translation
- 1. Initiation
- Small ribosomal subunit binds mRNA
- Initiator tRNA (with methionine) is attached to
start codon - Initiation factors bring in the large subunit
such that the initiator tRNA occupies the P site.
Fig. 17.17
35- 2. Elongation - ________ steps per amino acid
added - a. Codon recognition- an elongation factor
assists hydrogen bonding between the mRNA codon
under the A site with the corresponding anticodon
of tRNA carrying the appropriate amino acid. - This step requires the ____________ of two GTP.
Translation
b. _____________________- a ________ molecule
catalyzes the formation of a peptide bond between
the polypeptide in the P site with the new amino
acid in the A site
c. ____________ - the ribosome moves the tRNA
with the attached polypeptide from the A site to
the P site.
Note mRNA is read 5 -gt 3, codon by codon.
Fig. 17.18
36Translation
- 3. Termination occurs when one of the three
______ codons reaches the ___ site. - A ____________ binds to the stop codon and
hydrolyzes the bond between the polypeptide and
its tRNA in the P site.
Fig. 17.19
Other translation facts
- Multiple ribosomes, polyribosomes, may trail
along the same mRNA. - A ribosome requires less than a minute to
translate an average-sized mRNA into a
polypeptide.
Fig. 17.20
37Post-translational modifications-
- Additions of________ , lipids, or phosphate
groups to amino acids. - Enzymes may remove some amino acids or cleave
whole polypeptide chains. - Two or more ______________ may join to form a
protein.
387. Signal peptides target some eukaryotic
polypeptides to specific destinations in the cell
- Recall that some ribosomes reside in two
locations- - Free ribosomes are suspended in the ________ and
synthesize proteins that reside in the__________
. - __________ ribosomes are attached to the
cytosolic side of the_______________________. - They synthesize proteins of the endomembrane
system as well as proteins secreted from the cell.
39- Translation in all ribosomes begins in the
cytosol - A polypeptide destined for the ________________
system or for export has a specific
________________ (approx 20 amino acids) region
at or near the leading end. - A _________________________(SRP) binds to the
signal peptide and attaches it and its ribosome
to a receptor protein in the ER membrane.
The SRP leaves and protein synthesis resumes with
the growing polypeptide snaking across the
membrane into the cisternal space
Fig. 17.21
408. RNA plays multiple roles in the cell a review
- RNA is versatile
- ________ - carries info for protein production
- _______-transport amino acids in translation
- _______- part of ribosome, has role in
translation - ________ - splicing mRNA
419. Comparing protein synthesis in prokaryotes and
eukaryotes a review
Euks
Proks
DNA polymerase
Requires
Transcription and translation coupled?
RNA processing?
Protein targeting?
4210. Point mutations can affect protein structure
and function
- __________ are changes in the genetic material of
a cell (or virus). - include large-scale mutations in which ______
segments of DNA are affected (translocations,
duplications, and inversions). - A chemical change in just one base pair of a gene
causes a_______________
Fig. 17.23
In sickle cell, a single T to A mutation changes
amino acid from glu to val
- ______________________ - alterations of
nucleotides still indicate the same amino acids
because of redundancy in the genetic code. - Many other mutations cause no effect in function
43- Other base-pair substitutions cause a readily
detectable change in a protein. - ____________mutations are those that still code
for an amino acid but change the indicated amino
acid. - ____________mutations change an amino acid codon
into a _____ codon, nearly always leading to a
nonfunctional protein.
Fig. 17.24
44- Insertions and ____________ are additions or
losses of nucleotide pairs in a gene. - These have a __________ effect on the resulting
protein more often than substitutions do. - Unless these mutations occur in multiples of
three, they cause a ___________ mutation. - All the nucleotides downstream of the deletion or
insertion will be improperly grouped into codons. - The result will be extensive missense, ending
sooner or later in nonsense - premature
termination.
Fig. 17.24
45- ______________ are chemical or physical agents
that interact with DNA to cause mutations. - ___________ agents include high-energy radiation
like X-rays and ultraviolet light. - _________ mutagens may operate in several ways.
- As base ________ ___that may be substituted into
DNA, but that pair incorrectly during DNA
replication. - Interfere with DNA replication by inserting into
DNA and distorting the____________________. - Cause chemical changes in bases that change their
pairing properties.
4611. What is a gene? revisiting the question
- ___________ concept - a discrete unit of
inheritance that affects phenotype. - Morgan and his colleagues assigned genes to
specific loci on chromosomes. - A specific nucleotide sequence along a region of
a DNA molecule. - A DNA sequence that codes for a specific
polypeptide chain. - A region of DNA whose final product is either a
polypeptide or an RNA molecule.
or
or
or
47Fig. 17.26