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The E. Coli genome includes approximately 4,000 genes • Chromosomes Strands of DNA that contain all of the genes an organism needs to survive and reproduce Chromosomes • Genes Segments of DNA that specify how to build a protein • genes may specify more than one protein in eukaryotes Chromosome maps are used to show the locus (location) of genes on a chromosome

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Page 1: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

The E. Coli genome includes approximately 4,000 genes

• Chromosomes Strands of DNA that contain all of

the genes an organism needs to survive and reproduce

Chromosomes

• Genes Segments of DNA that specify

how to build a protein • genes may specify more

than one protein in eukaryotes

Chromosome maps are used to show the locus (location) of genes on a chromosome

Page 2: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

• Genetic Variation Phenotypic variation among organisms is due to genotypic variation

(differences in the sequence of their DNA bases)

Differences exist between species and within a species

• Different genes (genomes) different proteins (proteomes)

• Different versions of the same gene (alleles)

• Differences in gene expression (epigenetics)

Chromosomes

Page 3: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

• Cell Division (mitosis) Cells must copy their chromosomes

(DNA synthesis) before they divide so that each daughter cell will have a copy

A region of the chromosome remains uncopied (centromere) in order to hold the sister chromatids together – Keeps chromatids organized to help

make sure each daughter cell gets exactly one copy

– Nondisjunction is when sister chromatids do not assort correctly and one cell ends up with both copies while the other cell ends up with none

DNA Replication

Page 4: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

• DNA Synthesis The DNA bases on each

strand act as a template to synthesize a complementary strand • Recall that Adenine (A)

pairs with thymine (T) and guanine (G) pairs with cytosine (C)

The process is semiconservative because each new double-stranded DNA contains one old strand (template) and one newly-synthesized complementary strand

DNA Replication

A G C T G

T C G A C

A G C T G

T C G A C

A G C T G

T C G A C

A G C T G

T C G A C

T C G A C

A G C T G

Page 5: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

DNA Replication • DNA Polymerase Enzyme that catalyzes the covalent bond between the phosphate of one

nucleotide and the deoxyribose (sugar) of the next nucleotide

DNA Polymerization

Page 6: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

3’ end has a free deoxyribose

5’ end has a free phosphate DNA polymerase:

can only build the new strand in the 5’ to 3’ direction

Thus scans the template strand in 3’ to 5’ direction

DNA Replication

Page 7: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Initiation • Primase (a type of RNA polymerase) builds an RNA primer

(5-10 ribonucleotides long)

• DNA polymerase attaches onto the 3’ end of the RNA primer

DNA Replication

DNA polymerase

Page 8: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Elongation • DNA polymerase uses each strand as a template in the 3’ to 5’ direction

to build a complementary strand in the 5’ to 3’ direction

DNA Replication

DNA polymerase

Page 9: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Elongation • DNA polymerase uses each strand as a template in the 3’ to 5’ direction

to build a complementary strand in the 5’ to 3’ direction results in a leading strand and a lagging strand

DNA Replication

Page 10: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Leading Strand 1. Topisomerase unwinds DNA and then Helicase breaks H-bonds 2. DNA primase creates a single RNA primer to start the replication 3. DNA polymerase slides along the leading strand in the 3’ to 5’ direction

synthesizing the matching strand in the 5’ to 3’ direction 4. The RNA primer is degraded by RNase H and replaced with DNA nucleotides by

DNA polymerase, and then DNA ligase connects the fragment at the start of the new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes)

DNA Replication

Page 11: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Lagging Strand 1. Topisomerase unwinds DNA and then Helicase breaks H-bonds 2. DNA primase creates RNA primers in spaced intervals 3. DNA polymerase slides along the leading strand in the 3’ to 5’ direction

synthesizing the matching Okazaki fragments in the 5’ to 3’ direction 4. The RNA primers are degraded by RNase H and replaced with DNA nucleotides

by DNA polymerase 5. DNA ligase connects the Okazaki fragments to one another (covalently bonds the

phosphate in one nucleotide to the deoxyribose of the adjacent nucleotide)

DNA Replication

Page 12: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Topoisomerase - unwinds DNA Helicase – enzyme that breaks H-bonds DNA Polymerase – enzyme that catalyzes connection of nucleotides to form complementary DNA strand in 5’ to 3’ direction (reads template in 3’ to 5’ direction) Leading Strand – transcribed continuously in 5’ to 3’ direction Lagging Strand – transcribed in segments in 5’ to 3’ direction (Okazaki fragments) DNA Primase – enzyme that catalyzes formation of RNA starting segment (RNA primer) DNA Ligase – enzyme that catalyzes connection of two Okazaki fragments

DNA Replication

Page 13: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Web Resources

DNA Replication (synthesis) • http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072556781/student_view0/chapter11/animation_quiz_2.html

• http://www.wiley.com/college/pratt/0471393878/student/animations/dna_replication/index.html

• http://www.biostudio.com/d_%20DNA%20Replication%20Coordination%20Leading%20Lagging%20Strand%20Synthesis.htm

• http://www.biostudio.com/d_%20DNA%20Replication%20Nucleotide%20Polymerization.htm

• http://www.dnalc.org/resources/3d/DNAReplicationBasic_w_FX.html (download this video file from the website to view it without interruptions)

• http://www.stolaf.edu/people/giannini/flashanimat/molgenetics/dna-rna2.swf

• http://www.bioteach.ubc.ca/TeachingResources/MolecularBiology/DNAReplication.swf

Page 14: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

• • Each gene dictates how to build a single protein in prokaryotes

• The sequence of nucleotides (AGCT) in DNA dictate the order of amino acids that make up a protein

Protein Synthesis

Nucleotide sequence of His gene

Page 15: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Protein Synthesis

Nucleotide sequence of His gene Amino acid sequence of His protein

• DNA provides the instructions for how to build proteins • Each gene dictates how to build a single protein in prokaryotes

• The sequence of nucleotides (AGCT) in DNA dictate the order of amino acids that make up a protein

Page 16: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

• Protein synthesis occurs in two primary steps

Protein Synthesis

mRNA is used by ribosome to build protein

(Ribosomes attach to the mRNA and use its sequence of nucleotides to determine the order of amino acids in the protein)

Cytoplasm of prokaryotes and eukaryotes

Some proteins feed directly into rough ER in eukaryotes

2

Page 17: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

(eukaryotes)

Protein Synthesis 1) INITIATION

RNA polymerase binds to a

region on DNA known as the promoter, which signals the start of a gene

Promoters are specific to genes RNA polymerase does not need

a primer Transcription factors assemble

at the promoter forming a transcription initiation complex – activator proteins help stabilize the complex

Gene expression can be regulated (turned on/off or up/down) by controlling the amount of each transcription factor

Page 18: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Protein Synthesis 1) INITIATION

• Transcription Elongation RNA polymerase unwinds

the DNA and breaks the H-bonds between the bases of the two strands, separating them from one another

Base pairing occurs between incoming RNA nucleotides and the DNA nucleotides of the gene (template) • recall RNA uses uracil

instead of thymine

AGTCAT

UCA GUA

Page 19: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Protein Synthesis • Transcription

Elongation RNA polymerase unwinds

the DNA and breaks the H-bonds between the bases of the two strands, separating them from one another.

Base pairing occurs between incoming RNA nucleotides and the DNA nucleotides of the gene (template) • recall RNA uses uracil

instead of thymine

RNA polymerase catalyzes bond to form between ribose of 3’ nucleotide of mRNA and phosphate of incoming RNA nucleotide

3’

5’

3’

5’

+ ATP

+ ADP

Page 20: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Protein Synthesis • Transcription

Elongation The gene occurs on only one of the DNA strands; each strand possesses a separate set of genes

Page 21: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Protein Synthesis 1) INITIATION

• Transcription Termination A region on DNA known as

the terminator signals the stop of a gene

RNA polymerase disengages the mRNA and the DNA

Page 22: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Exons are

“coding” regions

Introns are removed

different combinations of exons form different mRNA resulting in multiple proteins from the same gene

Humans have 30,000 genes but are capable of producing 100,000 proteins

Protein Synthesis • Alternative Splicing (eukaryotes only)

Page 23: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

mRNA copy of a gene is synthesized

Cytoplasm of prokaryotes Nucleus of eukaryotes

1

Protein Synthesis

mRNA is used by ribosome to build protein

(Ribosomes attach to the mRNA and use its sequence of nucleotides to determine the order of amino acids in the protein)

Cytoplasm of prokaryotes and eukaryotes

Some proteins feed directly into rough ER in eukaryotes

mRNA

Transcription

Translation

mRNA

tRNA synthesis

Page 24: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Transcription

Translation

mRNA

tRNA synthesis

Protein Synthesis • Translation Every three mRNA nucleotides (codon) specify an amino acid

Page 25: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Protein Synthesis • Translation tRNA have an anticodon region that specifically binds to its codon

Page 26: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Transcription

Translation

mRNA

tRNA synthesis

Protein Synthesis • Translation Each tRNA carries a

specific amino acid

Page 27: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Transcription

Translation

mRNA

tRNA synthesis

Protein Synthesis

Aminoacyl tRNA synthetases attach amino acids to their specific tRNA

Page 28: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Protein Synthesis • Translation

Initiation Start codon signals where the gene

begins (at 5’ end of mRNA)

AUGGACAUUGAACCG… 5’ 3’

start codon

Translation

mRNA

Page 29: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Protein Synthesis • Translation

Initiation Start codon signals where the gene

begins (at 5’ end of mRNA) Ribosome binding site (Shine

Dalgarno sequence) upstream from the start codon binds to small ribosomal subunit – then this complex recruits the

large ribosomal subunit

Small ribosomal subunit

Small ribosomal subunit

Ribosome

Large ribosomal subunit

Page 30: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Protein Synthesis • Translation

Scanning The ribosome moves in 5’ to 3’ direction “reading” the mRNA and

assembling amino acids into the correct protein

large ribosome subunit

small ribosome subunit

Page 31: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Protein Synthesis • Translation

Scanning The ribosome moves in 5’ to 3’ direction “reading” the mRNA and

assembling amino acids into the correct protein

Page 32: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Protein Synthesis • Translation

Termination Ribosome disengages from the mRNA

when it encounters a stop codon

Page 33: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Practice Question Translate the following mRNA sequence

AGCUACCAUACGCACCCGAGUUCUUCAAGC

Page 34: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Protein Synthesis • Multiple RNA polymerases can

engage a gene at one time

• Multiple ribosomes can engage a single mRNA at one time

DNA mRNAs Transcription

Translation

Page 35: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Protein Synthesis • Eukaryotes:

transcription occurs in the nucleus and translation occurs in the cytoplasm

• Prokaryotes: Transcription and translation occur simultaneously in the cytoplasm

Page 36: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

• There are four main types of RNA: 1. mRNA

- RNA copy of a gene used as a template for protein synthesis

2. rRNA - part of structure of ribosomes

3. tRNA - amino acid carrier that matches to mRNA codon

4. snRNA - found in nucleus where they have several important jobs

RNA

Page 37: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

1. Why is DNA synthesis said to be “semiconservative”? 2. What role do DNA polymerase, DNA primase (a type of RNA polymerase),

helicase, topoisomerase, RNase H, and ligase play in DNA replication? 3. What is the difference between how the leading strand and lagging strand are

copied during DNA replication? Why do they have to be synthesized differently in this fashion?

4. What would happen if insufficient RNase H were produced by a cell? What if insufficient ligase were produced by a cell?

5. What are four key differences between DNA polymerase and RNA polymerase? (“they are difference molecules” doesn’t count as one!)

6. Compare and contrast codons and anticodons? 7. What is alternative splicing? Why is it necessary in eukaryotes? 8. During translation, what amino acid sequence would the following mRNA

segment be converted into: AUGGACAUUGAACCG? 9. How come there are only 20 amino acids when there are 64 different codons? 10. How come prokaryotes can both transcribe and translate a gene at the same

time, but eukaryotes cannot?

Practice Questions

Page 38: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Web Resources

Translation • Eukaryotic: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5bLEDd-PSTQ&feature=related • Prokaryotic: http://www.biostudio.com/d_%20Protein%20Synthesis%20Prokaryotic.htm • http://www.biostudio.com/d_%20Peptide%20Bond%20Formation.htm • http://www.johnkyrk.com/DNAtranslation.html • http://www.dnalc.org/resources/3d/TranslationBasic_withFX0.html • http://www.dnalc.org/resources/3d/TranslationAdvanced.html

Page 39: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Web Resources

Transcription • http://www.biostudio.com/d_%20Transcription.htm • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WsofH466lqk • http://www.dnalc.org/resources/3d/TranscriptionBasic_withFX.html

Translation • Eukaryotic: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5bLEDd-PSTQ&feature=related • Prokaryotic: http://www.biostudio.com/d_%20Protein%20Synthesis%20Prokaryotic.htm • http://www.biostudio.com/d_%20Peptide%20Bond%20Formation.htm • http://www.johnkyrk.com/DNAtranslation.html • http://www.dnalc.org/resources/3d/TranslationBasic_withFX0.html • http://www.dnalc.org/resources/3d/TranslationAdvanced.html

Alternative Splicing • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FVuAwBGw_pQ&feature=related

Page 40: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Insulin Example of Protein Synthesis http://www.biotopics.co.uk/as/insulinproteinstructure.html

Hemoglobin Example of Protein Synthesis http://www.biotopics.co.uk/as/insulinproteinstructure.html

Collagen Example of Protein Synthesis http://www.biotopics.co.uk/JmolApplet/collagen.html

Web Resources

Page 41: Chromosomes - Biology Building Blocksbioblocks.weebly.com/.../notes_-_dna_rep__protein_synth_student.pdf · new strand to the end of the new strand (in circular chromosomes) DNA Replication

Images • http://www.kscience.co.uk/as/module1/pictures/bacteria.jpg • http://www.biologie.uni-hamburg.de/b-online/library/onlinebio/14_1.jpg • http://pharmamotion.com.ar/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/nrti_mechanism_action_antiretrovirals.jpg • http://biology200.gsu.edu/houghton/4564%20%2704/figures/lecture%204/AAAreverse.jpg • http://www.ebi.ac.uk/thornton-srv/databases/pdbsum/2d8x/traces.jpg • http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov • http://xarquon.jcu.cz/edu/uvod/09nucleus/092function/images/activation3.jpg • http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov • http://bass.bio.uci.edu/~hudel/bs99a/lecture23/lecture4_4.html • http://selfhpvdna.diagcorlab.com/images/images/CervicalCancer.jpg