1 / 30

Protein Synthesis

Protein Synthesis. DNA  RNA  Protein. 2 Major Steps. Transcription – DNA is transcribed (copied!) into single stranded mRNA (DNA code transcribed into RNA code) Translation – mRNA is translated into protein (amino acids). Transcription. Occurs in nucleus (where the DNA is located!)

truda
Télécharger la présentation

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. Protein Synthesis

  2. DNA  RNA  Protein

  3. 2 Major Steps • Transcription – DNA is transcribed (copied!) into single stranded mRNA (DNA code transcribed into RNA code) • Translation – mRNA is translated into protein (amino acids)

  4. Transcription • Occurs in nucleus (where the DNA is located!) • Generally divided into three steps – initiation, elongation, termination

  5. A. Initiation • RNA polymerase (enzyme) attaches to promoter regions of DNA at TATA box • RNAP requires TATA box and other transcription factors to be present

  6. B. Elongation • RNAP can only add nucleotides to the 3’ of the growing mRNA strand; thus mRNA is synthesized in the 5’ 3’ direction

  7. C. Termination • Transcription ends when mRNA polymerase reaches a specific STOP sequence: • ATT • ATC • ACT

  8. mRNA processing • After transcription, mRNA must be modified so that it can exit the nucleus 1. GTP cap added to 5’ end of mRNA (stability & attachment point for ribosome down the road) 2. Poly-A tail added to 3’ end of mRNA (stability & guidance so mRNA goes from nucleus to ribosome) 3. Removal of introns

  9. Introns vs. Exons • Exons – sequences that contain the code for a polypeptide (protein); exons are expressed • Introns – non-coding sequences of mRNA

  10. Original, unprocessed mRNA contains both introns and exons • Before mRNA exits nucleus for translation at ribosome, snRNPs(small nuclear ribonucleoproteins) remove introns and splice exons together

  11. Translation • Occurs in cytoplasm where processed mRNA meets ribosome and is translated into protein • Steps: • Initiation • Elongation • Termination

  12. For translation to occur, you need… • Activated tRNA -tRNA in cytoplasm finds the correct amino acid -Attachment (activation) requires 1 ATP and enzyme

  13. 2. Ribosomal subunits • Ribosomes consist of 2 subunits (small and large) • Each subunit is made of rRNA and protein • Each is built separately in nucleolus • The two subunits exit nucleolus and form the ribosome in the cytoplasm when translation starts

  14. The Genetic Code • Codon – triplets of bases • mRNA makes a template strand (from DNA) that is translated into protein via a triplet code • Every three base pairs codes for a particular aa

  15. 1. Initiation • Brings together mRNA (from nucleus), tRNA (in cytoplasm), and ribosomal subunits (from nucleolus) • Small ribosomal subunit binds to mRNA and a specific tRNA (methionine) • Small subunit scans mRNA until it finds AUG (start codon) • Large subunit attaches the complex

  16. 2. Elongation • Begins with the next tRNA arriving at the P site of the ribosome

  17. Polyribosome

  18. 3. Termination • Occurs when the ribosome encounters one of three STOP codons located on mRNA • At this point, polypeptide synthesis is complete and the ribosome detaches from the polypeptide

  19. Point Mutations • Chemical changes in just one base pair of a gene • 2 general types: • Base pair substitutions • Base pair insertions or deletions

  20. 1. Base pair substitutions • Substitution of one base pair with another • Often silent mutationsbecause they don’t have an effect on encoded protein due to redundancy of genetic code: • DNA: CCG  CCA • mRNA: GGC  GGU • AA: gly  gly

  21. Example: Sickle Cell Anemia • Results from a single point mutation in a gene that codes for one of the polypeptide chains that form hemoglobin • Fatigue, paleness, rapid heart rate, shortness of breath, jaundice

  22. 2. Insertions & Deletions • Additions or deletions of nucleotide base pairs • BAD NEWS… these are often called frameshift mutations because they literally shift the reading frame of the mRNA  protein

  23. Example: Tay-Sachs Disease • Inherited frameshift mutation on chromosome 15 • Mutation results in malformation of hexoaminidase A, a protein that breaks down a particular chemical in gangliosides (nerve tissue) • Deafness, blindness, dementia, paralysis, slow growth, mental retardation etc

  24. Mutagens • Spontaneous mutations – errors that result from cellular machinery malfunction • Environmental mutations – damage to DNA caused by environment • Mutagens – chemical agents that interact with DNA and cause problems • X-rays, UV light, various drugs (seriously)

More Related