1 / 45

NOTE SHEET 13 – Protein Synthesis

NOTE SHEET 13 – Protein Synthesis. What are the “instructions” that are found in DNA?. DNA holds the instructions to build proteins Proteins are important because they make up many of the structures in an organism and perform many functions

fauna
Télécharger la présentation

NOTE SHEET 13 – Protein Synthesis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NOTE SHEET 13 – Protein Synthesis

  2. What are the “instructions” that are found in DNA? • DNA holds the instructions to build proteins • Proteins are important because they make up many of the structures in an organism and perform many functions • Human DNA holds the instructions to build about 30,000 different proteins!

  3. It is the presence of specific proteins that give an organism its characteristics and allow it to function The instructions to build these specific proteins are in the organism’s DNA Proteins Determine Traits

  4. Why are you a human? • The DNA in all your cells holds the instructions to make the specific proteins necessary to form the structures of and perform the functions of a human organism

  5. How are proteins built by a cell? • Cells build proteins out of small molecules called amino acids – the amino acids are bonded together making a long protein chain • Proteins are built at the ribosomes • DNA instructions tell the cell which amino acids to use and where to put them in the chain • Protein Synthesis – the process where cells build protein using instructions stored in DNA

  6. What is RNA? • RNA (ribonucleic acid) – a long, single-stranded molecule made out of nucleotides that helps cells build protein • RNA has ribose sugar, and the bases A, C, G, and U (uracil)

  7. DNA vs RNA • DNA is a double helix, RNA is a single strand • DNA has deoxyribose sugar in its nucleotides, RNA has ribose sugar in its nucleotides • RNA has the nitrogen base uracil (U) instead of thymine (T)

  8. There are 3 types of RNA: • messenger (mRNA) – carries a copy of DNA instructions from the nucleus to the ribosome • transfer (tRNA) – brings amino acids to the ribosome and puts them in the correct order • ribosomal (rRNA) – bonds the amino acids together to make a protein chain

  9. Building a protein is like building a house… • You need a blueprint (instructions) for the house in the construction office – this is like the DNA in the nucleus • You need a work site to build the house – this is like the ribosome • You need a copy of the blueprint that can travel to the work site – this is like the mRNA • You need workers to deliver the materials to build the house to the job site – this is like the tRNA • You need builders to put all the materials together and make the house – this is like the rRNA

  10. Building a protein is like building a house… • The blueprint is copied and the copy is brought to the work site. Workers bring the correct materials to the work site and set them up according to the information in the blueprint. Builders put everything together building the house. • An mRNA copy is made of DNA and the mRNA travels to the ribosome. The tRNA brings the correct amino acids to the ribosome and lines them up according to the information in the mRNA. The rRNA puts the amino acids together forming the protein.

  11. DNA unzips and a mRNA copy is made Transcription takes place in the nucleus The mRNA leaves the nucleus and travels to the ribosome Transcription – process where DNA instructions are copied in the nucleus What are the 2 steps of protein synthesis?

  12. tRNA “reads” the instructions in the mRNA, brings the correct amino acids to the ribosome and lines them up in the correct order rRNA bonds the amino acids together making a protein chain Translation takes place at the ribosome Translation – process where a protein is built at the ribosome What are the 2 steps of protein synthesis?

  13. DNA unzips

  14. An mRNA copy is made of DNA

  15. An mRNA copy is made of DNA

  16. An mRNA copy is made of DNA

  17. An mRNA copy is made of DNA

  18. An mRNA copy is made of DNA

  19. An mRNA copy is made of DNA

  20. An mRNA copy is made of DNA

  21. An mRNA copy is made of DNA

  22. An mRNA copy is made of DNA

  23. An mRNA copy is made of DNA

  24. The mRNA leaves the nucleus and travels to the ribosome

  25. tRNA “reads” the instructions in the mRNA, brings the correct amino acids to the ribosome and lines them up in the correct order

  26. tRNA “reads” the instructions in the mRNA, brings the correct amino acids to the ribosome and lines them up in the correct order

  27. rRNA bonds the amino acids together making a protein chain

  28. rRNA bonds the amino acids together making a protein chain

  29. A protein is a chain of amino acids just like a word is a chain of lettersThere are 20 amino acids and there are 26 letters in the English alphabetIn order to spell a word you need to know which letters to use and what order to put them in, and likewise, to build a protein a cell needs to know which amino acids to use and what order to put them in

  30. If you need to know how to spell a specific word, a dictionary will tell you what letters to use and what order to put them inIf a cell needs to build a specific protein, DNA will “tell” the cell what amino acids to use and what order to put them in

  31. Every 3 bases on an mRNA molecule stands for aan amino acid These pieces of mRNA are called codons Each codon in the mRNA tells a cell which of the 20 amino acids to use The Genetic Code

  32. DNA bases: A T C G Bond with mRNA bases: U A G C How To Transcribe

  33. How To Transcribe – Example 1 • DNA: TAC TCA CGC ATC • mRNA: AUG AGU GCG UAG

  34. How to Translate • Every 3 mRNA bases together stand for 1 amino acid in the protein chain – these pieces of mRNA are called codons • Use the amino acid chart to figure out which amino acid each codon stands for

  35. How to Translate – Example 1 • mRNA: AUG AGU GCG UAG • AUG = Met (start codon) • AGU = Ser • GCG = Ala • UAG = STOP • Protein: Met-Ser-Ala-STOP

  36. DNA : TAC TGA ATA CCT CAA GGA GGC ACC TGG ACT mRNA:AUG ACU UAU GGA GUU CCU CCG UGG ACC UGA Protein: Met-Thr-Tyr-Gly-Val-Pro-Pro-Trp-Thr-Stop Transcribe and Translate –Example 2

  37. DNA : TAC AAA GGA CGA GTA GTT TAA GCA AGA ATT mRNA:AUG UUU CCU GCU CAU CAA AUU CGU UCU UAA Protein: Met-Phe-Pro-Ala-His-Glu-Ile-Arg-Ser-Stop Transcribe and Translate –Example 3

  38. Mutation • Mutation – Any change in the DNA base sequence which leads to a change in a protein. Sometimes mutation are beneficial, but they usually lead to non-functioning or incorrectly functioning proteins.

  39. Original DNA: TAC AAA GGA CGA GTA GTT TAA GCA AGA ATT Original Protein: Met-Phe-Pro-Ala-His-Glu-Ile-Arg-Ser-Stop 4th triplet in DNA, first base C changed to G Mutated DNA: TAC AAA GGA GGA GTA GTT TAA GCA AGA ATT Incorrect mRNA: AUG UUU CCU CCU CAU CAA AUU CGU UCU UAA Mutated Protein: Met-Phe-Pro-Pro-His-Glu-Ile-Arg-Ser-Stop The 4th amino acid is proline instead of alanine Point Mutation – One base in sequence is changed

  40. Point Mutation

  41. Original DNA: TAC AAA GGA CGA GTA GTT TAA GCA AGA ATT Original Protein: Met-Phe-Pro-Ala-His-Glu-Ile-Arg-Ser-Stop 2nd triplet in DNA, first base A deleted Mutated DNA: TAC AAG GAC GAG TAG TTT AAG CAA GAA TT Incorrect mRNA: AUG UUC CUG CUC AUC AAA UUC GUU CUU AA Mutated Protein: Met-Phe-Leu-Leu-Ile-Lys-Phe-Val-Leu After the second amino acid, the protein is completely different Frameshift Mutation – One base added or deleted from the DNA sequence

  42. Frameshift Mutation

  43. Why is it important to eat protein? • Your body needs 20 different amino acids to make all the necessary proteins • Your body is only able to produce 12 of these amino acids on its own • The other 8 amino acids come from foods you eat that contain protein (meat, nuts, dairy products, beans, etc.) – These are called essential amino acids because you cannot survive without eating them

  44. The bottom line about DNA… • No DNA = No Protein = No Cells = No Life • Reproduction is all about passing DNA from one cell to another and from one generation of organisms to the next

More Related