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1246650
Gene Expression
Descripción
Christine Lee 2014 5th September
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transcription
proteinsynthesis
proteins
biology
gene expression
high school
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CChristine
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Resumen del Recurso
Gene Expression
PROTEINS
Importance of Proteins
all enzymes are proteins
chemical messengers of the body
make up important structures of the body
e.g. hair, muslce
carry O2 around the body
i.e. haemoglobin
fight disease
e.g. antibodies antioxins
make up important parts of the cell membrane
Structure of Proteins
main elements making up amino acids:
carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen
amino acids join together in a long chain forming a protein
there are 20 diff amino acids
held together by peptide bonds
many amino acids joined together = polypeptide chain
proteins are polymers
i.e. large molecule made of many repeating units
can be either:
long and stringy
fibrous proteins
folded into almost circular balls or globs
globular proteins
divided into 4 diff stages
primary structure:
amino acids joined to form polypeptide strands
secondary structure:
polypeptide strands form alpha helixes or Beta pleated sheets
Tertiary structure
polypeptides fold, forming specific shapes
Quarternary structure
two or more folded polypeptides assemble to form larger protein molecules
a functional unit made of 1 or more polypeptide chains
produced from instructions of genes
gene: length of DNA that codes for a ppolypeptide
PROTEINSYNTHESIS
RNA
Ribonucleic acid
mRNA
messenger RNA
carries genetic info from DNA to ribosomes so that photosynthesis can occur
long single stranded chain (molecule) made in nucleus
long string of nucleotides grouped in sets of 3 bases called codons
each codon codes fora specific amino aid
tRNA
picks up amino acids from cytoplasm and carries it to ribosomes
amino acids are joined together to make a polypeptide chain at ribosomes
clover leaf shaped molecule
has a 3 base anticodon
complementary to codon on mRNA
and an amino acid attachment site at other end
each tRNA molecule is able to pick up only 1 type of amino acid
rRNA
makes up part of the structure of the ribosomes
holds together the mRNA and tRNA so that peptide bond b/w amino acids can be formed
rRNA made in nucleolus of the cell
Transcription
a section of DNA unwinds and mRNA strand is produced using the template strand
using the base-pairing rule except Thymine is replaced by Uracil
When RNA polymerase reaches the terminator sequence, transcription is completed
mRNA strand detaches and 2 DNA strands re-join and helix reforms
where DNA's code is transcribed onto the mRNA in the nucleus
Translation
mRNA molecule latches onto a ribosome and protein synthesis is initiated by a start codon
through complementary base pairing, tRNA attaches anticodons on the codons
as amino acids on the other end of the tRNA bind together (by peptide bonds) forming a polypeptide chain
as more amino acids are added, the next tRNA falls into place.
the tRNA molecule separates and a functioning protein is formed when a stop codon is reached on the DNA
these polypeptide chains fold into 3D shapes to function
each tRNA molecule is able to pick up only 1 type of amino acid
THE GENETIC CODE
living things use 20 amino acids to produce proteins
combination of amino acids is controlled by 4 diff bases
Adenine, Thymine, Guanine, Cytosine
as there are 20 amino acids, each must be coded for by 3 nucleotides
this is the triplet code on DNA and has a corresponding 3 nucleotides on mRNA called codons
there are 64 different codons and only 20 amino acids, most amino acids are coded for by more than 2 codon
This redundancy in the code is called degeneracy.
it buffers the effect of mutations
if only 1 base changes, in the 3rd position,
it doesnt necessarily change the amino acid picked up, the same amino acid in coded for
genetic code is universal
the same codons code for the same amino acids in plants, fungi, bacteria and viruses
1 codon codes for amino acid methionine
(AUG) start signal
termination/stop codons
UAA
UAG
UGA
MUTATION
permanent change in the DNA
mutagenic agents: something that causes a mutation
can be chemicals, or forms of energy
Point mutations
small changes in the base sequences.
can happen in DNA replication just before meiosis or by mistakes made during crossing over
affect only a single gene
alters one nucleotide
can be:
neutral
have no effect on functioning of polypeptide chain produced
due to degeneracy of the code
change in a single base usually in the third position of triplet
may result in same amino acid being coded for
if a new amino acid is coded for at a position of polypeptide chain
that does not form part of the active site of the enzyme
if shape of active site is unchanged, enzyme is likely to function
beneficial
change of an amino acid may alter shape of protein allowing it to function better than before
harmful
if the change in shape of polypeptide chain changes active site
may decrease the functioning of enzyme or stop it working at all
may introduce a stop codon and prematurely stop the formation of polypeptide chain
result in necessary protein not being formed
as a result, a function critical to life may not occur
Types of point mutations
Deletion
one base is removed from the DNA sequence
causes a reading frame shift
i,e. every amino acid coded for after this mutation will be different
usually produce a non-functioning protein
harmful to the organism
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