Title: Chapter 17~ From Gene to Protein
1Chapter 17 From Gene to Protein
2Protein Synthesis overview
- One gene-one enzyme hypothesis (Beadle and Tatum)
- One gene-one polypeptide (protein) hypothesis
- Transcription synthesis of RNA under the
direction of DNA (mRNA) - Translation actual synthesis of
a polypeptide under the direction of mRNA
3The Central Dogma
- Flow of genetic information in a cell
- How do we move information from DNA to proteins?
transcription
translation
protein
RNA
DNA
trait
DNA gets all the glory, but proteins do all
the work!
replication
4From gene to protein
nucleus
cytoplasm
transcription
translation
mRNA
DNA
protein
trait
5Transcription
- fromDNA nucleic acid languagetoRNA nucleic
acid language
6RNA
- ribose sugar
- N-bases
- uracil instead of thymine
- U A
- C G
- single stranded
- lots of RNAs
- mRNA, tRNA, rRNA, siRNA
transcription
RNA
DNA
7Transcription
- Making mRNA
- transcribed DNA strand template strand
- untranscribed DNA strand coding strand
- same sequence as RNA
- synthesis of complementary RNA strand
- transcription bubble
- enzyme
- RNA polymerase
coding strand
3?
C
C
G
G
A
A
T
T
5?
A
G
A
A
A
C
G
T
T
T
T
C
A
T
C
G
C
A
T
DNA
3?
C
T
G
A
A
5?
T
G
C
C
G
G
A
U
U
T
C
unwinding
3?
C
G
G
A
A
T
rewinding
mRNA
template strand
RNA polymerase
5?
build RNA 5??3?
8RNA polymerases
- 3 RNA polymerase enzymes
- RNA polymerase 1
- only transcribes rRNA genes
- makes ribosomes
- RNA polymerase 2
- transcribes genes into mRNA
- RNA polymerase 3
- only transcribes tRNA genes
- each has a specific promoter sequence it
recognizes
9Which gene is read?
- Promoter region
- binding site before beginning of gene
- TATA box binding site
- binding site for RNA polymerase transcription
factors - Enhancer region
- binding site far upstream of gene
- turns transcription on HIGH
10Transcription Factors
- Initiation complex
- transcription factors bind to promoter region
- suite of proteins which bind to DNA
- hormones?
- turn on or off transcription
- trigger the binding of RNA polymerase to DNA
11Matching bases of DNA RNA
A
- Match RNA bases to DNA bases on one of the DNA
strands
C
U
G
A
G
G
U
C
U
U
G
C
A
C
A
U
A
G
A
C
U
A
5'
3'
G
A
C
C
A
G
G
G
G
G
G
T
T
A
C
A
C
T
T
T
T
T
C
C
C
C
A
A
12Transcription the process
- 1.Initiation transcription factors mediate the
binding of RNA polymerase to an initiation
sequence (TATA box) - 2.Elongation RNA polymerase continues unwinding
DNA and adding nucleotides to the 3 end - 3.Termination RNA polymerase reaches terminator
sequence
13Eukaryotic genes have junk!
- Eukaryotic genes are not continuous
- exons the real gene
- expressed / coding DNA
- introns the junk
- inbetween sequence
intronscome out!
eukaryotic DNA
14mRNA splicing
- Post-transcriptional processing
- eukaryotic mRNA needs work after transcription
- primary transcript pre-mRNA
- mRNA splicing
- edit out introns
- make mature mRNA transcript
10,000 bases
eukaryotic DNA
pre-mRNA
primary mRNA transcript
1,000 bases
mature mRNA transcript
spliced mRNA
15Discovery of exons/introns
1977 1993
Richard Roberts
Philip Sharp
adenovirus
CSHL
MIT
common cold
beta-thalassemia
16Splicing must be accurate
- No room for mistakes!
- a single base added or lost throws off the
reading frame
AUGCGGCTATGGGUCCGAUAAGGGCCAU
AUGCGGUCCGAUAAGGGCCAU
AUGCGGUCCGAUAAGGGCCAU
MetArgSerAspLysGlyHis
AUGCGGCTATGGGUCCGAUAAGGGCCAU
AUGCGGGUCCGAUAAGGGCCAU
AUGCGGGUCCGAUAAGGGCCAU
MetArgValArgSTOP
17RNA splicing enzymes
Whoa! I think we just brokea biological rule!
- snRNPs
- small nuclear RNA
- proteins
- Spliceosome
- several snRNPs
- recognize splice site sequence
- cut paste gene
No, not smurfs! snurps
18Alternative splicing
- Alternative mRNAs produced from same gene
- when is an intron not an intron
- different segments treated as exons
Starting to gethard to define a gene!
19More post-transcriptional processing
- Need to protect mRNA on its trip from nucleus to
cytoplasm - enzymes in cytoplasm attack mRNA
- protect the ends of the molecule
- add 5? GTP cap
- add poly-A tail
- longer tail, mRNA lasts longer produces more
protein
20From gene to protein
nucleus
cytoplasm
transcription
translation
mRNA
DNA
protein
trait
21Translation
- fromnucleic acid languagetoamino acid language
22How does mRNA code for proteins?
4
ATCG
4
AUCG
20
- How can you code for 20 amino acids with only 4
nucleotide bases (A,U,G,C)?
23mRNA codes for proteins in triplets
24Cracking the code
1960 1968
Nirenberg Khorana
- Crick
- determined 3-letter (triplet) codon system
WHYDIDTHEREDBATEATTHEFATRAT
WHYDIDTHEREDBATEATTHEFATRAT
- Nirenberg (47) Khorana (17)
- determined mRNAamino acid match
- added fabricated mRNA to test tube of ribosomes,
tRNA amino acids - created artificial UUUUU mRNA
- found that UUU coded for phenylalanine
251960 1968
Marshall Nirenberg
Har Khorana
26The code
- Code for ALL life!
- strongest support for a common origin for all
life - Code is redundant
- several codons for each amino acid
- 3rd base wobble
Why is thewobble good?
- Start codon
- AUG
- methionine
- Stop codons
- UGA, UAA, UAG
27How are the codons matched to amino acids?
3?
5?
TACGCACATTTACGTACGCGG
DNA
5?
3?
AUGCGUGUAAAUGCAUGCGCC
mRNA
codon
3?
5?
tRNA
anti-codon
aminoacid
28From gene to protein
nucleus
cytoplasm
transcription
translation
mRNA
DNA
protein
trait
29Transfer RNA structure
- Clover leaf structure
- anticodon on clover leaf end
- amino acid attached on 3? end
30Loading tRNA
- Aminoacyl tRNA synthetase
- enzyme which bonds amino acid to tRNA
- bond requires energy
- ATP ? AMP
- bond is unstable
- so it can release amino acid at ribosome easily
Trp
CO
Trp
Trp
CO
H2O
OH
O
OH
CO
O
activating enzyme
tRNATrp
A
C
C
mRNA
U
G
G
anticodon
tryptophan attached to tRNATrp
tRNATrp binds to UGG condon of mRNA
31Ribosomes
- Facilitate coupling of tRNA anticodon to mRNA
codon - organelle or enzyme?
- Structure
- ribosomal RNA (rRNA) proteins
- 2 subunits
- large
- small
E
P
A
32Ribosomes
- A site (aminoacyl-tRNA site)
- holds tRNA carrying next amino acid to be added
to chain - P site (peptidyl-tRNA site)
- holds tRNA carrying growing polypeptide chain
- E site (exit site)
- empty tRNA leaves ribosome from exit site
Met
C
A
U
5'
G
U
A
3'
A
P
E
33Building a polypeptide
- Initiation
- brings together mRNA, ribosome subunits,
initiator tRNA - Elongation
- adding amino acids based on codon sequence
- Termination
- end codon
release factor
Leu
Val
Ser
Met
Met
Ala
Leu
Met
Met
Leu
Leu
Trp
tRNA
C
A
G
C
A
G
C
C
A
A
C
G
U
A
C
G
C
A
C
U
A
U
A
U
U
A
5'
5'
A
A
A
G
5'
U
C
U
A
5'
G
G
A
A
A
G
U
U
U
C
U
G
G
U
U
3'
C
A
U
C
G
G
A
U
A
U
A
A
C
C
mRNA
3'
3'
3'
A
A
U
U
G
G
3'
P
E
A
34Protein targeting
- Destinations
- secretion
- nucleus
- mitochondria
- chloroplasts
- cell membrane
- cytoplasm
- etc
- Signal peptide
- address label
start of a secretory pathway
35RNA polymerase
DNA
Can you tell the story?
aminoacids
exon
intron
tRNA
pre-mRNA
5' GTP cap
mature mRNA
aminoacyl tRNAsynthetase
poly-A tail
3'
large ribosomal subunit
polypeptide
5'
tRNA
small ribosomal subunit
E
P
A
ribosome
36Prokaryote vs. Eukaryote genes
- Prokaryotes
- DNA in cytoplasm
- circular chromosome
- naked DNA
- no introns
- Eukaryotes
- DNA in nucleus
- linear chromosomes
- DNA wound on histone proteins
- introns vs. exons
intronscome out!
eukaryotic DNA
37Translation in Prokaryotes
- Transcription translation are simultaneous in
bacteria - DNA is in cytoplasm
- no mRNA editing
- ribosomes read mRNA as it is being transcribed
38Translation prokaryotes vs. eukaryotes
- Differences between prokaryotes eukaryotes
- time physical separation between processes
- takes eukaryote 1 hour from DNA to protein
- no RNA processing
39Mutations
- Point mutations
- single base change
- base-pair substitution
- silent mutation
- no amino acid change
- redundancy in code
- missense
- change amino acid
- nonsense
- change to stop codon
When do mutationsaffect the nextgeneration?
40Point mutation leads to Sickle cell anemia
Missense!
41Sickle cell anemia
- Primarily Africans
- recessive inheritance pattern
- strikes 1 out of 400 African Americans
hydrophilicamino acid
hydrophobic amino acid
42Mutations
- Frameshift
- shift in the reading frame
- changes everything downstream
- insertions
- adding base(s)
- deletions
- losing base(s)
Where would this mutation cause the most
changebeginning or end of gene?
43Cystic fibrosis
- Primarily whites of European descent
- strikes 1 in 2500 births
- 1 in 25 whites is a carrier (Aa)
- normal allele codes for a membrane protein that
transports Cl- across cell membrane - defective or absent channels limit transport of
Cl- ( H2O) across cell membrane - thicker stickier mucus coats around cells
- mucus build-up in the pancreas, lungs, digestive
tract causes bacterial infections - without treatment children die before 5 with
treatment can live past their late 20s
44Deletion leads to Cystic fibrosis
delta F508
loss of oneamino acid
45Whats the value ofmutations?