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COT 6930 HPC and Bioinformatics Introduction to Molecular Biology

COT 6930 HPC and Bioinformatics Introduction to Molecular Biology. Xingquan Zhu Dept. of Computer Science and Engineering. Outline. Cell DNA DNA Structure DNA Sequencing RNA (DNA-> RNA) Protein. Life begins with Cell. Cells are fundamental working units of every living system.

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COT 6930 HPC and Bioinformatics Introduction to Molecular Biology

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  1. COT 6930HPC and BioinformaticsIntroduction to Molecular Biology Xingquan Zhu Dept. of Computer Science and Engineering

  2. Outline • Cell • DNA • DNA Structure • DNA Sequencing • RNA (DNA-> RNA) • Protein

  3. Life begins with Cell • Cells are fundamental working units of every living system. • A cell is the smallest structural unit of an organism that is capable of independent function • Unicellular organism (Any living being consisting of a single cell): mainly bacteria • Multicellular organism (Organisms consisting of more than one cell): Plant and animal • All cells have some common features • Membrane, cytoplasm • Cell is able to survive and multiply independently in appropriate environment • There are estimated about 6x1013 (60 trillions) cells in a human body, of about 210 distinct cell types • Cells may have different sizes: a human red blood cell may be 5 microns in diameter while some neurons are about 1 m long (from spinal cord to leg) • Name a cell visible with naked eyes..

  4. Cell • The basic unit of life • Every living thing is made of cells. • Every cell comes from a pre-existing cell • All of life’s functions are cellular • Living organisms (on Earth) require ability to • Separate inside from outside (lipids) • Build 3D machinery to perform biological functions (proteins) • Store information on how to build machinery (DNA)

  5. Organisms – Eukaryotes and Prokaryotes • Every organism is composed of one of two radically different types of cells: prokaryoticcells or eukaryotic cells. • Prokaryotic cells are simpler than eukaryotic cells • Prokaryotes are (mostly) single cellular organisms • Eukaryotic cell has a nucleus, separated from the rest of the cell by a membrane • Eukaryotes can be single cellular (Yeast) or multicellular (animals, plants)

  6. Organisms – Eukaryotes and Prokaryotes

  7. Structure of a Eukaryotic Cell • Nucleus contains chromosomes, which are the carrier of the genetic material • Organelles like centrioles, lysosomes, golgi complexes are enclosed compartments within the cell and are responsible for particular biological processes • Area of the cell outside the nucleus and the organelles is called the cytoplasm

  8. Composition of Cells • Cell membrane • Boundary between cell and outside world • Cell membranes consist of two layers of lipid molecules with hydrophobic ends facing in (keeps water out) • Nucleus • Contain genetic material • Separated from the rest of the cell by a nuclear membrane

  9. The nucleus 1. nuclear envelope2. nucleolus3. chromosomes chromosomes

  10. All Cells have common Cycles • Growth of a single cell and its subsequent division is called the cell cycle M: Mitosis • Prokaryotes, particularly bacteria, are extremely successful at multiplying. • Multicellular organisms typically begin life as a single cell. The single cell has to grow, divide and differentiate into different cell types to produce tissues and in higher eukaryotes, organs

  11. All cells come from pre-existing cells

  12. Molecular Biology: Studying life at the molecular level • DNA • Protein • RNA • mRNA • rRNA • tRNA • Protein synthesis • Protein transcription • Protein translation

  13. Molecules of Life • All Life depends on 3 critical molecules– DNA, RNA, and Protein • All 3 are specified linearly • DNA and RNA are constructed from nucleic acids (nucleotides) • Can be considered to be a string written in a four-letter alphabet (A C G T/U) • Proteins are constructed from amino acids • Strings in a twenty-letter alphabet of amino acids

  14. DNA RNA protein Central dogma of molecular biology phenotype

  15. DNA, RNA, Protein Self replication and genetic code DNA DNA → DNA (Replication) RNA DNA → RNA (Transcription / Gene Expression) Protein RNA → Protein (Translation)

  16. Outline • Cell • DNA • DNA Structure • DNA Sequencing • RNA (DNA-> RNA) • Protein

  17. DNA (Deoxyribonucleic Acid ) Structure • Physical structure • Double (stranded) helix • Sugar & phosphate groups form backbone • Complementary bases (A-T, C-G) connected by hydrogen bond • 5’ = end w/ free phosphate group • 3’ = end w/ free oxygen group

  18. DNA • Composition • Sequence of nucleotides • Deoxyribonucleotide = deoxyribose sugar + phosphate group + base

  19. Nucleotide Bases

  20. Nucleotides • The five-carbon sugar (a pentose) in nucleotides has two types • Deoxyribose, which has a hydrogen atom attached to its #2 carbon atom (designated 2') : DNA • Ribose, which has a hydroxyl group atom there: RNA

  21. DNA structure

  22. Why 5’ and 3’ • Deoxyribonucleotide = deoxyribose sugar + phosphate group + base The deoxyribose sugar in DNA is a pentose, a five-carbon sugar. Four carbons and an oxygen make up the five-membered ring; the other carbon branches off the ring. The carbon constituents of the sugar ring are numbered 1'-4' (pronounced "one-prime carbon"), starting with the carbon to the right of the oxygen going clockwise. The fifth carbon (5') branches from the 4' carbon.

  23. DNA - Denaturation, Hybridization

  24. DNA • For bioinformatics • DNA can be represented as a sequence of letters (A,C,G,T) • 5’ A T A C G T A 3’ • 3’ T A T G C A T 5’ (matching strand, redundant) • Terms • Base pair (bp) – one pair of DNA bases (1 letter) • Gene – section of DNA that produces a functional product • Chromosome – physical linear sequence of DNA • Genome – entire collection of DNA for an organism • E Coli 1 chromosome 5 x 106 bases (5 Mbps) • Drosophila 8 chromosomes 2 x 108 bases (200 Mbps) • Human 48 chromosomes 3 x 109 bases (3 Bbps)

  25. DNA Replication • DNA can be replicated • DNA strands are split • DNA polymerase (enzyme) reads one strand (template) • Builds new (complementary) strand to form duplicate DNA

  26. DNA fascinating fact Each cell has 2m of DNA Average person has 75 trillion cells = 75 * 1012 Length of DNA in a person = 150 * 1012 m Each person has enough DNA to go to the sun and back 500 times

  27. Organization of DNA in chromosomes Histone proteins 3 bases/ amino acid 27,000 bases/ protein (1 gene) 3,000,000,000 base pairs/ genome 20,000 genes/ genome Human Genome Project homologous

  28. Genome • Gene: Contiguous subparts of single strand DNA that are templates for producing proteins. • Chromosomes: compact chains of coiled DNA • Genome: The set of all genes in a given organism. • Noncoding part: The function of DNA material between genes is largely unknown. Source: www.mtsinai.on.ca/pdmg/Genetics/basic.htm

  29. More Terminology • The genome is an organism’s complete set of DNA. • A bacteria contains about 600,000 DNA base pairs • Human and mouse genomes have some 3 billion. • Human genome has 23 pairs of chromosomes. • Each chromosome contains many genes. • Gene • Basic physical and functional units of heredity. • Specific sequences of DNA bases that encode instructions on how to make proteins.

  30. DNA sequences in the human genome

  31. DNA homologies 98.7%

  32. Outline • Cell • DNA • DNA Structure • DNA Sequencing • RNA (DNA-> RNA) • Protein

  33. DNA Sequencing (Sanger’s Dideoxy Method) • Method for identifying short DNA sequences • Algorithm • Replicate DNA with (color-labeled) dideoxy-nucleotides • Creates fragments of DNA • Apply gel electrophoresis • Separates fragments based on size • Machine scans gel • Records level of color found at each position • Software calls bases • Predicts base at each position • Limitations • Upper bound of 700-800 bases on sequence length • Larger DNA sequences will need to be assembled

  34. DNA Sequencing • Dideoxynucleotides • Similar to normal nucleotide base • Missing 3’ hydroxyl group terminates DNA sequence • May be chemically modified to fluoresce under UV light

  35. DNA Sequencing • Example for GCGAATGTCCACAACGCTACAGGTG • Replicate DNA in the presence of dideoxy-Cytidine (ddC) • Replication terminates when ddC is used instead of C • Produces the following DNA fragments • GC • GCGAATGTC • GCGAATGTCC • GCGAATGTCCAC • GCGAATGTCCACAAC • GCGAATGTCCACAACGC • GCGAATGTCCACAACGCTAC

  36. DNA Sequencing • Gel electrophoresis • Place DNA fragments in gel • Apply electric field • Speed of fragment is determined by size • Smaller = faster • Larger = slower • After given time • Fragments are separated in gel • Fragments are sorted by size (number of bases)

  37. Gel electrophoresis

  38. DNA Sequencing

  39. DNA Sequencing

  40. Outline • Cell • DNA • DNA Structure • DNA Sequencing • RNA (DNA-> RNA) • Protein

  41. Replication Transcription Translation Central Dogma of Biology: DNA, RNA, and the Flow of Information

  42. Ribonucleic acid (RNA) • Composition • Sequence of nucleotides • Ribonucleotide = ribose sugar + phosphate group + base • Major difference between DNA and RNA • RNA: usually single stranded • RNA: ribose sugar, DNA: Deoxyribose sugar • RNA: Uracil (U) instead of Thymine (T) • DNA → RNA (Transcription / Gene Expression) • RNA polymerase (enzyme) • Finds gene initiation marker (codon) on DNA strand • Reads DNA strand containing marker • Builds (complementary) strand of messenger RNA (mRNA) • Stops when gene end marker (codon) found • Resulting RNA sequence = transcript

  43. Ribonucleotides • The five-carbon sugar (a pentose) in nucleotides has two types • Deoxyribose, which has a hydrogen atom attached to its #2 carbon atom (designated 2') : DNA • Ribose, which has a hydroxyl group atom there: RNA

  44. Transcription Example (1)

  45. Transcription Example (2)

  46. Transcription Example (3)

  47. Transcription Example (4)

  48. Transcription Example

  49. What is Enzyme? • Proteins that catalyze (i.e. accelerate) chemical reactions • They are not living things • Two types of Enzyme • Join specific molecules together to form new molecules • Break specific molecules apart into separate molecules • Things about Enzyme • Enzymes are specific: Performing only one specific job, about 3000 types enzymes identified so far • Enzymes are catalysts: Can perform that same job over and over again, millions of times, without being consumed in the process. • Enzymes are efficient: • Enzymes are natural: Once they have done their job, enzymes break down swiftly and can be absorbed back into nature

  50. Outline • Cell • DNA • DNA Structure • DNA Sequencing • RNA (DNA-> RNA) • Protein

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