1 / 28

Ribonucleic Acid (RNA) & Protein Synthesis

Ribonucleic Acid (RNA) & Protein Synthesis. Ms. Napolitano & Mrs. Haas CP biology. Recall: DNA Structure. A  T C  G Double helix. Genes. Genes – coded DNA instructions that control the production of proteins within the cell. Part I: RNA Structure. RNA Structure.

tan
Télécharger la présentation

Ribonucleic Acid (RNA) & 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. Ribonucleic Acid (RNA) & Protein Synthesis Ms. Napolitano & Mrs. Haas CP biology

  2. Recall: DNA Structure • A  T • C  G • Double helix

  3. Genes • Genes – coded DNA instructions that control the production of proteins within the cell

  4. Part I: RNA Structure

  5. RNA Structure • Long chain of nucleotides • Sugar • Phosphate • Nitrogenous base • Differences between DNA & RNA: In RNA: • Sugar is ribose (instead of deoxyribose) • Single stranded (instead of double stranded) • Contains uracil (instead of thymine)

  6. Types of RNA • Messenger RNA (mRNA) • Carries copies of DNA instructions out of the nucleus • Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) • Make up ribosomes • Transfer RNA (tRNA) • Transfers amino acids to the ribosome that are coded in the mRNA

  7. Part II: Protein Synthesis

  8. Protein Synthesis • How proteins are made • Need instructions from DNA • Made of 2 parts: • Transcription • Translation

  9. Transcription • Copying of the DNA sequence • Occurs in the nucleus • Makes a complimentary strand of mRNA • Uses protein RNA Polymerase • Separates DNA strand • Uses 1 strand of DNA as a template to make mRNA • Starts at a promoter – specific sequence of DNA

  10. RNA Editing • DNA contains segments of introns • Not involved in protein coding • Exons code for proteins • Introns are cut out of the mRNA sequence after transcription • Exons are spliced together

  11. The Genetic Code • The genetic code is read just 3 letters at a time • Codon – 3 consecutive nucleotides that specify for a single amino acid • Ex: Consider the RNA sequence UCGCACGGU • This would be read UCG-CAC-GGU • 3 different codons: UCG, CAC, & GGU • Codons represent different amino acids • UCG= serine • CAC = histidine • GGU = glycine

  12. The Genetic Code • Since 4 different bases, 44 = 64 possible codons • Some amino acids have more than one codon choice • AUG is always a “start” codon • Where protein synthesis begins • 3 stop codons (end of protein synthesis): • UGA • UAA • UAG

  13. Codon Wheel

  14. Codon Chart

  15. Translation • Recall: During transcription, mRNA code was made from DNA, mRNA proofread (introns cut out) • Translation – decoding of mRNA to produce proteins • mRNA moves from the nucleus to the ribosomes

  16. Steps of Translation • mRNA attaches to the ribosome. • As each codon moves through the ribosome, the proper amino acid is brought in by tRNA. • Each tRNA carries only 1 type of amino acid • tRNA has 3 unpaired bases (anticodon) that is complementary to mRNA codons • Peptide bonds form between amino acids & tRNA is released. • Polypeptide chain grows until a stop codon is reached.

  17. Translation

  18. Example of Protein Synthesis DNA strand: TAACGAGGTACT Transcription (nucleus): mRNA formed by base pairing mRNA strand: AUUGCUCCAUGA Translation: mRNA moves to ribosome, read as codons AUU-GCU-CCA-UGA Using codon chart, find amino acids that match Isoleucine-Alanine-Proline-Stop this is our new protein!

  19. Part III: Mutations

  20. Mutations • Mutations – changes in genetic material • Point mutations – occur at a single DNA point • Substitutions • Frameshift mutations – shift the reading frame of the genetic message • Dangerous! Could change every following amino acid • Insertions • Deletions

  21. Substitution • Point mutation • One base is changed to a different base • May/may not affect the protein code

  22. Insertions • Frameshift mutation • An extra base pair is (or extra base pairs are) added

  23. Deletions • Frameshift mutation • A base pair is (or base pairs are) removed

  24. Chromosomal Mutations • Chromosomal mutations – changes in the number or structure of chromosomes • Types: • Deletion – loss of part of a chromosome • Duplication – extra copies of part of a chromosome • Inversion – reverses the direction of part of the chromosome • Translocation – part of the chromosome breaks off & attaches to another

  25. Chromosomal Mutations

  26. Significance of Mutations • Most mutations do not have an effect on gene expression • Can be very harmful or fatal • Cystic fibrosis • Sickle cell anemia • Cancer • Source of genetic variability • Resistance to HIV • Polyploidy – extra sets of chromosomes • Beneficial in plants – larger and stronger than diploid plants

More Related