Gene Expression: Gene to Protein
DNA replication happens during the S phase
Eukaryotes: animals, plants, fungi, protist
Prokaryotes: bacteria
· We start off as one cell; a zygote; after the sperm fertilizes the egg
· ~40 trillion cells are in a fully mature adult
o Numerous cells must divide and differentiate to create a fully functioning organism
Central Dogma
DNA is transcribed to RNA and translated to protein
DNA to RNA = transcription
RNA to protein = translation
RNA to DNA = reverse transcription
Central Dogma control means endless possibilies?
How? Cut out a certain part of s gene and the cells only from the human ear and inject them into the rat
Why? To know how to grow a new ear
Gene expression: from template to product
Several types of RNA are required for regulation
· mRNA (Messenger RNA)- carries the instructions from DNA to the ribosome to make protein.
· rRNA (Ribosomal RNA)- Structural component of ribosomes, needed to form peptide bonds.
· tRNA (Transfer RNA)- Aligns amino acid with proper codon.
· snRNA (small nuclear RNA)- Required for splicing.
Key components of transcription
· Promoter- Required to recruit RNA initiation complex.
· RNA initiation complex- Needed for RNA polymerase function, one member is a helicase. TATA binding protein required to bind the promoter.
· RNA Polymerase- Recruits nucleotides to make RNA.
Promoter
· In eukaryotes the primary promoter is the TATA box (consensus sequence).
Promoter: DNA sequence to which RNA polymerase binds (initiation complex binds first). The region upstream of the transcription initiation site has 2 different consensus 6 base pair sequences. One at –10 and one at –35.
Transcription Overview
1. RNA initiation complex bind TATA box.
a. Specifically the first is TFIID (which contains TATA binding protein (TBP)).
2. Then RNA polymerase binds to complex.
3. Lastly remaining members of complex bind,
a. One member being a helicase.
Parts of Transcription
· Initiation- After all members of complex are present RNA polymerase starts recruiting nucleotides
· Elongation-RNA polymerase moves 5’ to 3’ recruiting nucleotides.
· Termination-RNA polymerase reaches termination sequence and then detaches.
Elongation
• RNA polymerase recruit's uracil instead of thymine. RNA polymerase lacks proofreading activity. How can RNA polymerase afford to lack proofreading activity?
RNA processing and turnover
· Transcriptional regulation is the major method to regulate gene expression, but RNA processing and turnover are also important
· Pre RNAs are modified before transport to the cytoplasm. This includes modification of both ends and removal of introns
· 7-methylguanosine cap: a cap is placed on the 5’ end co-transcriptionally. It stabilizes the RNA and facilitates binding of RNA to the ribosome
· Polyadenylation of tail: the hexanucleotide AAUAAA signals polyadenylation. A nuclease cleaves the RNA and a polyA polymerase adds a 200 A tail. This aids stability and translation into protein
· Splicing: introns are removed by splicing from exons
RNA processing and turnover
The spliceosome mediates splicing
Spliceosomes: large complexes of protein and RNA that mediate the splicing reaction
Ribozymes: RNA molecules that catalyze cleavage of RNAs at a specific recognition sequence.
Transfer RNAs are needed for translation
· Transfer RNAs (tRNAs): adaptors to align the correct amino acid (AA) on the right codon. Codons are 3 bases that code 1 AA. tRNAs are 70 – 80 nucleotides long with a clover leaf structure
· Two major sites: an AA attachment site and an anticodon loop located at the opposite end to bind the right codon
· Aminoacyl tRNA synthetases: enzymes that attach specific AA's to specific tRNAs
Ribosomes are needed for translation
Ribosomes : catalyze protein synthesis. Two subunits composed of protein and RNA. Abundant (1x106 in eukaryotic cells)
Ribosomal RNA deficiency disease
· Treacher Collins Syndrome- Mutated TCO1 gene which is required for rRNA transcription.
Initiation, elongation, and termination
Initiation is complex in eukaryotes (>12 initiation factors) but simpler in prokaryotes. Starts when tRNA-methionine and mRNA bind to the small ribosomal subunit
The peptide chain elongates by subsequent addition of AAs as the ribosome moves down the mRNA. When a stop codon is reached (UAA), the reaction terminates, the protein is released and the ribosome dissociates from mRNA.
Codon Table
Read the codon table
Initiation of translation
Methionine encoded by AUG, initiates translation in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes
The 7- methyl guanosine cap of eukaryotic mRNA binds the ribosome and helps to align it for translation
Initiation, elongation and termination factors
The first step in prokaryotes is binding of 3 initiation factors to the ribosome. The mRNA and tRNA join, GTP is hydrolyzed and the 70S initiation complex is formed
Initiation in eukaryotic cells is complex and requires at least 12 initiation factors. After initiation, elongation and termination factors are required for translation to be completed
Elongation of the peptide chain
Start with first amino acid, binding site, found in bacteria,
first amino acid comes to the P site
Everything else comes to the A
Peptide bond forms through dehydration reaction
Entire ribosome subunit shifts which pushed amino acid
First amino acid pops off and are then in the chain?
To create long polypeptide chain
Continues until release factor binds to ?
Termination of translation
The release factor breaks the bond between the peptide chain and the tRNA
The nascent protein, tRNA, and ribosome all dissociate
Polysomes: mRNAs are translated by multiple ribosomes at one time and are spaced about 200 bases apart
Classes of Mutations
Two classes of mutations:
Point mutations- A substitution mutation in which one base is switched for another base.
Three types of point mutation:
1) Silent mutation
2) Missense mutation
3) Non-sense mutation
Frameshift mutations: A mutation that alters the entire reading frame of a mRNA sequence.
Two types of frameshifts:
1) Insertion mutation
2) Deletion mutation
Silent Mutations
Silent mutation- A mutation that does not alter the amino acid sequence of a protein.
Example- UUA change to UUG
Missense Mutations
Missense mutation- A mutation that switches one amino acid for another.
Does nothing for the ...
Nonsense Mutations
Nonsense mutation- A mutation that results in an early stop codon.
Frameshift Mutations
Mutation that alters the reading frame, nucleotides are read three nucleotides at a time.
Normal sequence
AUG-CAC-UUG
Insertion Example
AUG-UCA-CUU-G
Deletion Example
AUG-ACU-UG
Protein folding and processing
Chaperones: proteins that facilitate folding of other proteins. They act as catalysts; they are not part of the folded complex
They work by assisting other proteins to self-assemble, possibly by stabilizing the unfolded intermediates
For example, proper folding might require both the carboxy and amino terminus. Chaperones maintain the protein until it is completely translated and ready to properly fold
Protein cleavage
Cleavage of the polypeptide chain is important for maturation
Signal sequence: 20 AA at amino terminal that targets secreted proteins to the endoplasmic reticulum. This sequence is hydrophobic and assists the protein through the membrane
Signal peptidase: cleaves signal sequence and allows protein to enter the ER.
The cell cycle
Organism
^
Cells 2 cells
^
Organelle
^
Macromolecules
^
Atom
S phase = DNA replication
Transcription / central dogma happens anytime
In a single human, we have enough DNA to stretch from the surface of the earth to the moon
Heredity
· Offspring inherit chromosomes containing genetic material from parental generation.
· Chromosomes- made of two sister chromatids.
· Sister chromatids- made of chromatin.
· Chromatin made of histones and DNA.
G1= linear chromosome
S = after it replicates, each half of the X = a sister chromatid but the whole X is a chromatid
G2 = X
X shape means that the chromosome has already divided
Chromosome pairs
· In humans there are 22 pairs of autosomes and 1 pair of sex chromosomes.
Y = male
Don’t have a Y = female
Chromosomes in Species
· Chromosome number vary between species, the number of chromosomes within species remain consistent.
· Genes are carried on chromosomes, what are genes?
• Coding regions in DNA
The cell cycle has distinct phases
Stages of the Cell Cycle
· Interphase
· Mitosis (Diploid/somatic cells)
· Cytokinesis
Þ The length of the cell cycle varies
Þ Most adult cells divide slowly (once every few days or weeks)
Þ Cancer cells and some normal cells (bone marrow, stomach) divide constantly.
Þ Embryo cells also divide fast during cleavage
Interphase
· G1 phase- Primary cell growth (cell organelles duplicated).
· S- DNA synthesis
· G2- Secondary growth (centrosomes form)
· G0-Cell leaves the cell cycle and enters cell cycle arrest.
Centrosomes
· Centrosomes are organelles that organize microtubules. Contains 2 centrioles which are small cylinder-shaped organelles that help form mitotic spindle.
Mitosis
1. Prophase
2. Prometaphase
3. Metaphase
4. Anaphase
5. Telophase
1. Prophase
· Mitotic spindle forms, chromosomes condense, and nuclear envelope disappears.
2. Prometaphase
· Kinetochore forms at the centromere.
o Centromere = Middle of the chromosome that connects the two arms of the chromosome
· Some kinetochores attach to centromere while others interact with opposite poles of cell
3. Metaphase
· Centrosomes go to opposite poles of the cell. Chromosomes line up along metaphase plate.
o Sister chromatids are identical / no difference
4. Anaphase
· Cohesion protein that holds sister chromatids together are degraded and sister chromatids are separated to opposite poles.
5. Telophase
· Nuclear envelope reappears, chromosomes become less condense and microtubules disassemble.
o Start unwrapping
o Centrosome breaks apart
Cytokinesis
· Animal cell forms cleavage furrow (actin filaments).
· Plant cell forms cell plate from cell wall (vesicles).
Mitosis Diagram