Title: Microbial Physiology
1Microbial Physiology
2Nucleic Acid Structure
3DNA
Nucleotide monomers
can be linked together via a phosphodiester
linkage
formed between the 3' -OH of a nucleotide
and the phosphate of the next nucleotide.
Two ends of the resulting poly- or
oligonucleotide are defined
The 5' end lacks a nucleotide at the 5' position,
and the 3' end lacks a nucleotide at the 3' end
position.
4DNA strands
- The antiparallel strands of DNA are not
identical, but are complementary. - This means that they are positioned to align
complementary base pairs C with G, and A with T.
- So you can predict the sequence of one strand
given the sequence of its complement. - Useful for information storage and transfer!
- Note sequence conventionally is given from the 5'
to 3' end
5RNA
Nucleotide monomers
can be linked together via a phosphodiester
linkage
formed between the 3' -OH of a nucleotide
and the phosphate of the next nucleotide.
Two ends of the resulting poly- or
oligonucleotide are defined
The 5' end lacks a nucleotide at the 5' position,
and the 3' end lacks a nucleotide at the 3' end
position.
6RNA has a Rich and Varied Structure
Watson-Crick base pairs (helical seg-ments
usually A-form). Helix is secondary
structure. Note A-U pairs in RNA
DNA can also form structures like this.
7Central Dogma of Biology
Replication
Translation
Transcription
8DNA Replication
9Origins of DNA Replication
- DNA replication begins from specific nucleotide
sequences called origins of replication - recognized by origin recognition proteins that
open the helix and recruit the replication
machinery - DNA synthesis proceeds in both directions outward
from the origin - replicated double helices being produced
ultimately join each other - when complete, there are two identical daughter
molecules
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11DNA Synthesis
DNA chain growth
Replication fork growth
3
5
3
5
DNA chain growth
12DNA replication is semiconservative
Replication is semiconservative, with each DNA
strand serving as template for synthesis of the
complementary strand
Fork movement
Replication fork
This is true for all eukaryotes, prokaryotes,
viruses and bacteriophage
13Leading and Lagging Strands
- Limitation is imposed by synthesis of DNA in a 5
to 3 direction only - The two DNA strands are used differently at
replication fork - leading strand is used for continuous DNA
synthesis - lagging strand is used in discontinuous synthesis
- forms Okazaki fragments
- fragments joined by DNA ligase
leading
lagging
14Lagging strand synthesis
Must supply a primer (i.e. 3-OH) to start DNA
synthesis This is the function of primase which
makes RNA primers
Must seal the DNA fragments made on the lagging
strand template This is the function of DNA ligase
15Replication Machine
16Transcription
17Prokaryote
18Initiation (Promoter) and Termination Signals for
Transcription
Prokaryote
19Prokaryote
Promoter
Cistron1
Cistron2
CistronN
Terminator
Transcription
RNA Polymerase
mRNA 5
3
1
2
N
N
N
C
N
C
C
1
2
3
Polypeptides
20Eukaryote
RNA polymerase II initiation
1. Binding of TFIID to the TATA box
2. Binding of TFIIA and TFIIB to TFIID on the DNA
3. Binding of RNA polymerase II complexed with
TFIIF
4. Binding of remaining general transcription
factors to assemble complex competent for
transcription
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22Review of Eukaryotic mRNA Production
23Protein Synthesis
24The Codon
mRNA sequence is decoded in sets of three
nucleotides. Since there are 64 possible
tri-nucleotide combinations and only 20 amino
acids, there must be some redundancy (a.k.a
degenerate code).
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26More amino acids
- 21st amino acid selenocysteine. Sometimes
inserted at UGA stop codons. - 22nd amino acid pyrrolysine. sometimes inserted
at UAG stop codons.
27Reading Frames
A reading frame is the uninterrupted sequence of
codons from start to stop that encodes a sequence
of amino acids.
28Start Methionine
AUG is start signal for most proteins,
specifying an N-terminal methionine
29tRNA Needed
- tRNA or transfer RNA is needed for translating
the codon to amino acid sequence. - The tRNA is linked to an amino acid by an
amino-acyl tRNA synthetase. - There are two tRNAs for Methionine, of which only
the initiation-specific tRNA can be used to start
translation.
30tRNA
31Amino acid attachment to tRNA
32codon - anticodon
33Wobble
- Due to non-standard interactions, some tRNAs
can base-pair with just two complementary bases. - The third position can be mismatched (wobble).
- This allows the 61 codons to be matched by as few
as 31 different tRNAs. - In part, this can be due to non-standard bases,
such as inosine, which is de-aminated adenine and
can base-pair with A, C, and U. In addition, G
can basepair with U, although its normal partner
is C.
34- Wobble hypothesis
- Proposed by Francis Crick in 1966.
- Occurs at 3 end of codon/5 end of anti-codon.
- Result of arrangement of H-bonds of base pairs at
the 3rd pos. - Degeneracy of the code is such that wobble always
results in translation of the same amino acid. - Complete set of codons can be read by fewer than
61 tRNAs.
Fig. 6.9
35All possible base pairings at the wobble position
No purine-purine or pyrimidine-pyrimidine base
pairs are allowed as ribose distances would be
incorrect (Neat!).
36Wobble pairing non Waston-crick base paring
37tRNA is not enough
- The tRNA can only base-pair with a complementary
codon and bring an amino acid along. However, it
cannot create a polypeptide alone. - Ribosomes are required as the amino-acid-linking
machinery. - Ribosomes are multi-subunit structures consisting
of both multiple rRNAs and proteins. - Functionally can be considered two subunits,
large and small (50S/30S in prokaryotes, 60S/40S
in eukaryotes).
38Ribosome
39Ribosomal RNAs
- While their exact sequences differ, analogous
rRNAs from different species all fold into
similar structures containing many stem-loops and
binding sites for other RNAs and proteins. - It is thought that the large rRNA binds incoming
tRNAs and catalyzes peptide bond formation
(peptidyl transferase activity).
40Prokaryotic Initiation
Initiation factors bind 30S ribosomal subunit.
In conjunction with fMet-tRNAiMet, binds to site
near AUG.
Shine-Dalgarno sequence conserved 6 nucleotides
just upstream of start AUG. Basepairs with 3 end
of 16S rRNA.
Used as a basic translational control mechanism
in prokaryotes.
Large subunit binds in reaction requiring
hydrolysis of GTP bound to IF2
41Shine-Delgarno element
42Formation of initiation complex
43Eukaryotic Initiation 1
eIF6 and eIF3 serve to keep the 60S and
40S subunits apart.
44Eukaryotic Initiation 2
3 is the ternary complex of eIF2- GTP-Met-tRNAi
Met
eIF4 recognizes methylated 5-cap of mRNA, allows
binding of small subunit.
45Eukaryotic Initiation 3
It then proceeds in the 3 direction until it
hits the first AUG (usually).
46Euk and Pro initiation
- Although eukaryotic is more complex, there are
important similarities. - Both use GTP hydrolysis to provide energy to
search for start codon.
47Elongation (a.a. addition)
In elongation, an incoming aminoacyl-tRNA moves
through three ribosomal sites Comes into A
site, pairing anticodon to codon. Ribosome
shifts it over to the about the distance of one
codon as it catalyzes the peptide
bond formation. tRNA without amino acid is
now ejected from the E site for reuse, and the A
site is ready for the next aminoacyl-tRNA.
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53Termination
Two kinds of termination factors Recognize
STOP codons Hydrolyze peptidyl-tRNA bond
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55Polyribosomes
Circular polyribosome has advantage of
efficiency. In prokaryotes only, the ribosome can
latch onto an mRNA before it has been completed,
following closely behind the RNA polymerase
56Antibiotic inhibition
- Puromycin Streptomyces alboniger similar to 3
end aminoacyl-tRNA premature polypeptide
synthesis termination - Tetracycline blocking A site
- Chloramphenicol blocking peptidyl transfer
bacterial, mitochondrial, chloroplast - Cycloheximide blocking peptidyl transfer 80S
eukaryotic ribosome - Streptomycin misreading genetic code bacterial
57Toxin inhibition
- Diphteria toxin inactivate eEF2
- Ricin castor bean inactive 60S ribosome
58End
59Translational control and post-translational
events
- Translational control
- Polyproteins
- Protein targeting
- Protein modification
- Protein degradation
60Translational control
- In prokaryotes, the level of translation of
different cistrons can be affected by (a) the
binding of short antisense molecules, - (b) the relative stability to nucleases of parts
of the polycistronic mRNA , - (c) the binding of proteins that prevent
ribosome access.
61- In eukaryotes,
- protein binding can also mask the mRNA and
prevent translation, - repeats of the sequence 5'-AUUUA -3' can make the
mRNA unstable and less frequently translated.
62Polyprotein
- A single translation product that is cleaved to
generate two or more separate proteins is called
a polyprotein. Many viruses produce polyprotein.
63Protein targeting
- The ultimate cellular location of proteins is
often determined by specific, relatively short
amino acid sequence within the proteins
themselves. These sequences can be responsible
for proteins being secreted,
imported into the nucleus or targeted to
other organelles.
64Prokaryotic protein targeting secretion
65Eukaryotic protein targeting
- Targeting in eukaryotes is necessarily more
complex due to the multitude of internal
compartments - There are two basic forms of targeting pathways
2.
1.
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67The secretory pathwayin eukaryotes
(co-translational targeting)
68- The signal sequence of secreted proteins causes
the translating ribosome to bind factors that
make the ribosome dock with a membrane and
transfer the protein through the membrane as it
is synthesized. Usually the signal sequence is
then cleaved off by signal peptidase.
69Protein modification
- Cleavage
- To remove signal peptide
- To release mature fragments from polyproteins
- To remove internal peptide as well as trimming
both N-and C-termini
70- Covalent modification
- Acetylation
- Hydroxylation
- Phosphorylation
- Methylation
- Glycosylation
- Addition of nucleotides.
71 72Protein degradation
- Different proteins have very different
half-lives. Regulatory proteins tend to turn over
rapidly and cells must be able to dispose of
faulty and damaged proteins.
73Protein degradation process
- Faulty and damaged proteins are attached to
ubiquitins (ubiquitinylation). - The ubiquitinylated protein is digested by a 26S
protease complex (proteasome) in a reaction that
requires ATP and releases intact ubiquitin for
re-use.
74- In eukaryotes, it has been discovered that the
N-terminal residue plays a critical role in
inherent stability. - 8 N-terminal aa correlate with stability
Ala Cys Gly Met Pro Ser Thr Val - 8 N-terminal aa correlate with short t1/2
Arg His Ile Leu Lys Phe Trp Tyr - 4 N-terminal aa destabilizing following chemical
modification
Asn Asp Gln Glu
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