Title: Chapter 25 Using the Genetic Code
1Chapter 25Using the Genetic Code
225.2 Related Codons Represent Chemically Similar
Amino Acids
- Sixty-one of the sixty-four possible triplets
code for twenty amino acids. - Three codons (stop codons) do not represent amino
acids and cause termination.
FIGURE 01 The genetic code is triplet
325.2 Related Codons Represent Chemically Similar
Amino Acids
- The genetic code was frozen at an early stage of
evolution and is universal. - Most amino acids are represented by more than one
codon.
FIGURE 02 Amino acids have 1-6 codons each
425.2 Related Codons Represent Chemically Similar
Amino Acids
- The multiple codons for an amino acid are
synonymous and usually related. - third-base degeneracy The lesser effect on
codon meaning of the nucleotide present in the
third (3') codon position. - Chemically similar amino acids often have related
codons, minimizing the effects of mutation.
525.3 CodonAnticodon Recognition Involves
Wobbling
- Multiple codons that represent the same amino
acid most often differ at the third base position
(the wobble hypothesis).
FIGURE 03 Third bases have the least influence
on codon meanings
625.3 CodonAnticodon Recognition Involves
Wobbling
- The wobble in pairing between the first base of
the anticodon and the third base of the codon
results from looser monitoring of the pairing by
rRNA nucleotides in the ribosomal A site.
FIGURE 04 Wobble in base pairing allows G-U
pairs to form
7FIGURE 05 Codonanticodon pairing involves
wobbling at the third position
825.4 tRNAs Are Processed from Longer Precursors
- A mature tRNA is generated by processing a
precursor. - The 5' end is generated by cleavage by the
endonuclease RNAase P. - The 3' end is generated by multiple
endonucleolytic and exonucleolytic cleavages,
followed by addition of the common terminal
trinucleotide CCA.
FIGURE 06 Both ends of tRNA are generated by
processing
925.5 tRNA Contains Modified Bases
- tRNAs contain over 90 modified bases.
- Modification usually involves direct alteration
of the primary bases in tRNA, but there are some
exceptions in which a base is removed and
replaced by another base.
FIGURE 07 Base modifications in tRNA vary in
complexity.
1025.5 tRNA Contains Modified Bases
- Known functions of modified bases are to confer
increased stability to tRNAs, and to modulate
their recognition by proteins and other RNAs in
the translational apparatus.
1125.6 Modified Bases Affect AnticodonCodon
Pairing
- Modifications in the anticodon affect the pattern
of wobble pairing and therefore are important in
determining tRNA specificity.
FIGURE 09 Modification to 2-thiouridine
restricts pairing to A
FIGURE 08 Inosine pairs with three bases
1225.7 There Are Sporadic Alterations of the
Universal Code
- Changes in the universal genetic code have
occurred in some species. - These changes are more common in mitochondrial
genomes, where a phylogenetic tree can be
constructed for the changes.
FIGURE 11 Changes in the genetic code in
mitochondria can be traced in phylogeny
1325.7 There Are Sporadic Alterations of the
Universal Code
- In nuclear genomes, the changes usually affect
only termination codons.
FIGURE 10 Changes in the genetic code usually
involve Stop/None signals
1425.8 Novel Amino Acids Can Be Inserted at
Certain Stop Codons
- The insertion of selenocysteine at some UGA
codons requires the action of an unusual tRNA in
combination with several proteins. - The unusual amino acid pyrrolysine can be
inserted at certain UAG codons. - The UGA codon specifies both selenocysteine and
cysteine in the ciliate Euplotes crassus.
FIGURE 12 SelB is specific for Seleno-Cys-tRNA
1525.9 tRNAs Are Selectively Paired with Amino
Acids by Aminoacyl-tRNA Synthetases
- Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases are a family of
enzymes that attach amino acid to tRNA,
generating aminoacyl-tRNA in a two-step reaction
that uses energy from ATP. - Each tRNA synthetase aminoacylates all the tRNAs
in an isoaccepting (or cognate) group,
representing a particular amino acid.
1625.9 tRNAs Are Selectively Paired with Amino
Acids by Aminoacyl-tRNA Synthetases
- Recognition of tRNA by tRNA synthetases is based
on a particular set of nucleotides, the tRNA
identity set, that often are concentrated in
the acceptor stem and anticodon loop regions of
the molecule.
FIGURE 13 An aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase charges
tRNA with an amino acid
1725.10 Aminoacyl-tRNA Synthetases Fall into Two
Families
- Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases are divided into class
I and class II families based on mutually
exclusive sets of sequence motifs and structural
domains.
FIGURE 16 Class I (Glu-tRNA synthetase) Class
II (Asp-tRNA synthetase)
FIGURE 14 Separation of tRNA synthetases into
two classes
1825.11 Synthetases Use Proofreading to Improve
Accuracy
- Specificity of amino acid-tRNA pairing is
controlled by proofreading reactions that
hydrolyze incorrectly formed aminoacyl adenylates
and aminoacyl-tRNAs. - kinetic proofreading A proofreading mechanism
that depends on incorrect events proceeding more
slowly than correct events, so that incorrect
events are reversed before a subunit is added to
a polymeric chain.
19FIGURE 17 Kinetic proofreading reduces errors
2025.11 Synthetases Use Proofreading to Improve
Accuracy
- chemical proofreading A proofreading mechanism
in which the correction event occurs after the
addition of an incorrect subunit to a polymeric
chain, by means of reversing the addition
reaction.
FIGURE 18 Synthetases use chemical proofreading
2125.12 Suppressor tRNAs Have Mutated Anticodons
That Read New Codons
- A suppressor tRNA typically has a mutation in the
anticodon that changes the codons to which it
responds.
2225.12 Suppressor tRNAs Have Mutated Anticodons
That Read New Codons
- When the new anticodon corresponds to a
termination codon, an amino acid is inserted and
the polypeptide chain is extended beyond the
termination codon. - This results in nonsense suppression at a site of
nonsense mutation, or in readthrough at a natural
termination codon.
23FIGURE 21 Nonsense mutations can be suppressed
by a tRNA with a mutant anticodon
2425.12 Suppressor tRNAs Have Mutated Anticodons
That Read New Codons
- Missense suppression occurs when the tRNA
recognizes a different codon from usual, so that
one amino acid is substituted for another.
FIGURE 22 Missense suppressors compete with
wild type
2525.13 There Are Nonsense Suppressors for Each
Termination Codon
- Each type of nonsense codon is suppressed by a
tRNA with a mutated anticodon. - Some rare suppressor tRNAs have mutations in
other parts of the molecule.
FIGURE 23 Suppressors have anticodon mutations
2625.14 Suppressors May Compete with Wild-Type
Reading of the Code
- Suppressor tRNAs compete with wild-type tRNAs
that have the same anticodon to read the
corresponding codon(s). - Efficient suppression is deleterious because it
results in readthrough past normal termination
codons. - The UGA codon is leaky and is misread by Trp-tRNA
at 1 to 3 frequency.
27FIGURE 24 Nonsense suppressors read through
natural termination codons
2825.15 The Ribosome Influences the Accuracy of
Translation
- The structure of the 16S rRNA at the P and A
sites of the ribosome influences the accuracy of
translation.
FIGURE 25 The ribosome selects aminoacyl-tRNAs
2925.16 Frameshifting Occurs at Slippery Sequences
- The reading frame may be influenced by the
sequence of mRNA and the ribosomal environment. - recoding Events that occur when the meaning of
a codon or series of codons is changed from that
predicted by the genetic code. - It may involve altered interactions between
aminoacyl-tRNA and mRNA that are influenced by
the ribosome.
3025.16 Frameshifting Occurs at Slippery Sequences
- Slippery sequences allow a tRNA to shift by one
base after it has paired with its anticodon,
thereby changing the reading frame. - Translation of some genes depends upon the
regular occurrence of programmed frameshifting.
FIGURE 26 A tRNA that slips one base in pairing
with a codon causes a frameshift that
3125.16 Frameshifting Occurs at Slippery Sequences
FIGURE 27 Bypassing skips between identical
codons
3225.17 Other Recoding Events Translational
Bypassing and the tmRNA Mechanism to Free Stalled
Ribosomes
- Bypassing involves the capacity of the ribosome
to stop translation, release from mRNA, and
resume translation some 50 nucleotides downstream.
FIGURE 29 In bypass mode, a ribosome with its P
site occupied can stop translation
FIGURE 28 Frameshifting controls translation
3325.17 Other Recoding Events Translational
Bypassing and the tmRNA Mechanism to Free Stalled
Ribosomes
- Ribosomes that are stalled on mRNA after partial
synthesis of a protein may be freed by the action
of tmRNA, a unique RNA that incorporates features
of both tRNA and mRNA.