Title: Chapter 25: Molecular Basis of Inheritance
1Chapter 25 Molecular Basis of Inheritance
2DNA Structure and Replication
- In the mid-1900s, scientists knew that
chromosomes, made up of DNA (deoxyribonucleic
acid) and proteins, contained genetic
information. - However, they did not know whether the DNA or the
proteins was the actual genetic material.
3- Various reseachers showed that DNA was the
genetic material when they performed an
experiment with a T2 virus. - By using different radioactively labeled
components, they demonstrated that only the virus
DNA entered a bacterium to take over the cell and
produce new viruses.
4Viral DNA is labeled
5Viral capsid is labeled
6Structure of DNA
- The structure of DNA was determined by James
Watson and Francis Crick in the early 1950s. - DNA is a polynucleotide nucleotides are composed
of a phosphate, a sugar, and a nitrogen-containing
base. - DNA has the sugar deoxyribose and four different
bases adenine (A), thymine (T), guanine (G), and
cytosine (C).
7One pair of bases
8- Watson and Crick showed that DNA is a double
helix in which A is paired with T and G is paired
with C. - This is called complementary base pairing because
a purine is always paired with a pyrimidine.
9- When the DNA double helix unwinds, it resembles a
ladder. - The sides of the ladder are the sugar-phosphate
backbones, and the rungs of the ladder are the
complementary paired bases. - The two DNA strands are anti-parallel they run
in opposite directions.
10DNA double helix
11Replication of DNA
- DNA replication occurs during chromosome
duplication an exact copy of the DNA is produced
with the aid of DNA polymerase. - Hydrogen bonds between bases break and enzymes
unzip the molecule. - Each old strand of nucleotides serves as a
template for each new strand.
12- New nucleotides move into complementary positions
are joined by DNA polymerase. - The process is semiconservative because each new
double helix is composed of an old strand of
nucleotides from the parent molecule and one
newly-formed strand. - Some cancer treatments are aimed at stopping DNA
replication in rapidly-dividing cancer cells.
13Overview of DNA replication
14Ladder configuration and DNA replication
15Gene Expression
- A gene is a segment of DNA that specifies the
amino acid sequence of a protein. - Gene expression occurs when gene activity leads
to a protein product in the cell. - A gene does not directly control protein
synthesis instead, it passes its genetic
information on to RNA, which is more directly
involved in protein synthesis.
16RNA
- RNA (ribonucleic acid) is a single-stranded
nucleic acid in which A pairs with U (uracil)
while G pairs with C. - Three types of RNA are involved in gene
expression messenger RNA (mRNA) carries genetic
information to the ribosomes, ribosomal RNA
(rRNA) is found in the ribosomes, and transfer
RNA (tRNA) transfers amino acids to the
ribosomes, where the protein product is
synthesized.
17Structure of RNA
18- Two processes are involved in the synthesis of
proteins in the cell - Transcription makes an RNA molecule complementary
to a portion of DNA. - Translation occurs when the sequence of bases of
mRNA directs the sequence of amino acids in a
polypeptide.
19The Genetic Code
- DNA specifies the synthesis of proteins because
it contains a triplet code every three bases
stand for one amino acid. - Each three-letter unit of an mRNA molecule is
called a codon. - Most amino acids have more than one codon there
are 20 amino acids with a possible 64 different
triplets. - The code is nearly universal among living
organisms.
20Messenger RNA codons
21Central Concept
- The central concept of genetics involves the
DNA-to-protein sequence involving transcription
and translation. - DNA has a sequence of bases that is transcribed
into a sequence of bases in mRNA. - Every three bases is a codon that stands for a
particular amino acid.
22Overview of gene expression
23Transcription
- During transcription in the nucleus, a segment
of DNA unwinds and unzips, and the DNA serves as
a template for mRNA formation. - RNA polymerase joins the RNA nucleotides so that
the codons in mRNA are complementary to the
triplet code in DNA.
24Transcription and mRNA synthesis
25Processing of mRNA
- DNA contains exons and introns.
- Before mRNA leaves the nucleus, it is processed
and the introns are excised so that only the
exons are expressed. - The splicing of mRNA is done by ribozymes,
organic catalysts composed of RNA, not protein. - Primary mRNA is processed into mature mRNA.
26Function of introns
27Translation
- Translation is the second step by which gene
expression leads to protein synthesis. - During translation, the sequence of codons in
mRNA specifies the order of amino acids in a
protein. - Translation requires several enzymes and two
other types of RNA transfer RNA and ribosomal
RNA.
28Transfer RNA
- During translation, transfer RNA (tRNA) molecules
attach to their own particular amino acid and
travel to a ribosome. - Through complementary base pairing between
anticodons of tRNA and codons of mRNA, the
sequence of tRNAs and their amino acids form the
sequence of the polypeptide.
29Transfer RNA amino acid carrier
30Ribosomal RNA
- Ribosomal RNA, also called structural RNA, is
made in the nucleolus. - Proteins made in the cytoplasm move into the
nucleus and join with ribosomal RNA to form the
subunits of ribosomes. - A large subunit and small subunit of a ribosome
leave the nucleus and join in the cytoplasm to
form a ribosome just prior to protein synthesis.
31- A ribosome has a binding site for mRNA as well as
binding sites for two tRNA molecules at a time. - As the ribosome moves down the mRNA molecule, new
tRNAs arrive, and a polypeptide forms and grows
longer. - Translation terminates once the polypeptide is
fully formed the ribosome separates into two
subunits and falls off the mRNA. - Several ribosomes may attach and translate the
same mRNA, therefore the name polyribosome.
32Polyribosome structure and function
33Translation Requires Three Steps
- During translation, the codons of an mRNA
base-pair with tRNA anticodons. - Protein translation requires these steps
- Chain initiation
- Chain elongation
- Chain termination.
- Enzymes are required for each step, and the first
two steps require energy.
34Chain Initiation
- During chain initiation, a small ribosomal
subunit, the mRNA, an initiator tRNA, and a large
ribosomal unit bind together. - First, a small ribosomal subunit attaches to the
mRNA near the start codon. - The anticodon of tRNA, called the initiator RNA,
pairs with this codon. - Then the large ribosomal subunit joins.
35Initiation
36Chain Elongation
- During chain elongation, the initiator tRNA
passes its amino acid to a tRNA-amino acid
complex that has come to the second binding site.
- The ribosome moves forward and the tRNA at the
second binding site is now at the first site, a
sequence called translocation. - The previous tRNA leaves the ribosome and picks
up another amino acid before returning.
37Elongation
38Chain Termination
- Chain termination occurs when a stop-codon
sequence is reached. - The polypeptide is enzymatically cleaved from the
last tRNA by a release factor, and the ribosome
falls away from the mRNA molecule. - A newly synthesized polypeptide may function
along or become part of a protein.
39Termination
40Review of Gene Expression
- DNA in the nucleus contains a triplet code each
group of three bases stands for one amino acid. - During transcription, an mRNA copy of the DNA
template is made. - The mRNA is processed before leaving the nucleus.
- The mRNA joins with a ribosome, where tRNA
carries the amino acids into position during
translation.
41Gene expression
42Control of Gene Expression
- The lac operon model explains how one regulator
gene controls the transcription of several
structural genes genes that code for proteins. - The promoter is a short sequence of DNA where RNA
polymerase first attaches when a gene is to be
transcribed.
43- The operator is a short sequence of DNA where the
repressor protein binds to the operator and
prevents RNA polymerase from attaching to another
portion of DNA called the promoter. - Transcription does not occur until lactose binds
to the repressor preventing the repressor from
binding to the operator.
44- Now RNA polymerase binds to the operator and
brings about transcription of the genes that code
for enzymes necessary to lactose metabolism. - Structural genes code for enzymes of a metabolic
pathway that are transcribed as a unit. - A regulator gene codes for a repressor that can
bind to the operator and switch off the operon
therefore, a regulator gene regulates the
activity of structural genes.
45The lac operon
46(No Transcript)
47Control of Gene Expression in Eukaryotes
- In eukaryotes, cells differ in which genes are
being expressed. - Levels of control in eukaryotes include
- transcriptional control,
- posttranscriptional control,
- translational control, and
- posttranslational control.
- The first two methods occur in the nucleus the
second two, in the cytoplasm.
48Eukaryotic control of gene expression
49Transcriptional Control in Eukaryotes
- Rarely are there operons in eukaryotic cells.
- Instead, transcriptional control in eukaryotes
involves - The organization of the chromatin, and
- Regulator proteins called transcription factors.
50Activated Chromatin
- The existence of chromosome puffs in developing
eggs of many vertebrates suggests that DNA must
decondense in order for transcription to occur. - The chromosomes within many vertebrate egg cells
are called lampbrush chromosomes because they
have many decondensed loops here mRNA is
synthesized in great quantity. - This form of transcriptional control is useful
when the gene product is tRNA or rRNA.
51Lampbrush chromosomes
52Transcription Factors
- Transcription factors regulate transcription of
DNA in eukaryotes. - Signals received from inside and outside the cell
turn on particular transcription factors. - Activation probably occurs when the transcription
factors are phosphorylated by a kinase.
53Gene Mutations
- A gene mutation is a change in the sequence of
bases within a gene. - Frameshift Mutations
- Frameshift mutations involve the addition or
removal of a base during the formation of mRNA
these change the genetic message by shifting the
reading frame.
54Point Mutations
- The change of just one nucleotide causing a codon
change can cause the wrong amino acid to be
inserted in a polypeptide this is a point
mutation. - In a silent mutation, the change in the codon
results in the same amino acid.
55- If a codon is changed to a stop codon, the
resulting protein may be too short to function
this is a nonsense mutation. - If a point mutation involves the substitution of
a different amino acid, the result may be a
protein that cannot reach its final shape this
is a missense mutation. - An example is Hbs which causes sickle-cell
disease.
56Sickle-cell disease in humans
57Cause and Repair of Mutations
- Mutations can be spontaneous or caused by
environmental influences called mutagens. - Mutagens include radiation (X-rays, UV
radiation), and organic chemicals (in cigarette
smoke and pesticides). - DNA polymerase proofreads the new strand against
the old strand and detects mismatched pairs,
reducing mistakes to one in a billion nucleotide
pairs replicated.
58Transposons Jumping Genes
- Transposons are specific DNA sequences that move
from place to place within and between
chromosomes. - These so-called jumping genes can cause a
mutation to occur by altering gene expression. - It is likely all organisms, including humans,
have transposons.
59Cancer A Failure of Genetic Control
- Cancer is a genetic disorder resulting in a
tumor, an abnormal mass of cells. - Carcinogenesis, the development of cancer, is a
gradual process. - Cancer cells lack differentiation, form tumors,
undergo angiogenesis and metastasize. - Cancer cells fail to undergo apoptosis, or
programmed cell death.
60Cancer cells
61- Angiogenesis is the formation of new blood
vessels to bring additional nutrients and oxygen
to a tumor cancer cells stimulate angiogenesis. - Metastasis is invasion of other tissues by
establishment of tumors at new sites. - A patients prognosis is dependent on the degree
to which the cancer has progressed early
diagnosis and treatment is critical to survival.
62Origin of Cancer
- Mutations in at least four classes of genes are
associated with the development of cancer. - 1) The nucleus has a DNA repair system but
mutations in genes for repair enzymes can
contribute to cancer. - 2) Mutations in genes that code for proteins
regulating structure of chromatin can promote
cancer.
63- 3) Proto-oncogenes are normal genes that
stimulate the cell cycle and tumor-suppressor
genes inhibit the cell cycle mutations can
prevent normal regulation of the cell cycle. - 4) Telomeres are DNA segments at the ends of
chromosomes that normally get shorter and signal
an end to cell division cancer cells have an
enzyme that keeps telomeres long.
64Regulation of Cell Division
- Proto-oncogenes are part of a stimulatory pathway
that extends from membrane to nucleus. - Tumor-suppressor genes are part of an inhibitory
pathway extending from the plasma membrane to the
nucleus. - The balance between stimulatory signals and
inhibitory signals determines whether
proto-oncogenes or tumor-suppressor genes are
active.
65- Plasma membrane receptors can receive growth
stimulatory factors and growth inhibitory
factors. - Cytoplasmic proteins can therefore be turned on
or off and in turn either stimulate or inhibit
certain genes in the nucleus.
66Oncogenes
- Proto-oncogenes can undergo mutations to become
cancer-causing oncogenes. - An oncogene may code for a faulty receptor in the
stimulatory pathway. - Or an oncogene may produce either an abnormal
protein product or abnormally high levels of a
normal protein product that stimulates the cell
cycle to begin or to go to completion both lead
to uncontrolled growth.
67- About 100 oncogenes have been discovered that
cause increased growth and lead to tumors. - Alteration of a single nucleotide pair can
convert a normal rasK proto-oncogene to an
oncogene implicated in lung, colon, and
pancreatic cancer. - The rasN oncogene is associated with leukemia and
lymphoma.
68Tumor-Suppressor Genes
- Tumor-suppressor genes ordinarily suppress the
cell cycle when they mutate they stop
suppressing the cell cycle and it can occur
nonstop. - RB tumor-suppressor gene malfunctions are
implicated in cancers of the breast, prostate,
bladder, and small-cell lung carcinoma.
69- Another major tumor-suppressor gene is p53, a
gene that is more frequently mutated in human
cancers than any other known gene. - The p53 protein acts as a transcription factor
and as such is involved in turning on the
expression of genes whose products are cell cycle
inhibitors. - P53 can also stimulate apoptosis.
70Causes of cancer
71Chapter Summary
- Since DNA is the genetic material, its structure
and functions constitute the molecular basis of
inheritance. - Because the DNA molecule is able to replicate,
genetic information can be passed from one cell
generation to the next. - DNA codes for the synthesis of proteins this
process also involves RNA.
72- In prokaryotes, regulator genes control the
activity and expression of other genes. - In eukaryotes, the control of gene expression
occurs at all stages, from transcription to the
activity of proteins. - Gene mutations vary some have little effect but
some have a dramatic effect. - Loss of genetic control over genes involved in
cell growth and/or cell division cause cancer.