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6Nucleic Acids

Chapter 22 discusses nucleic acids, focusing on their types (DNA and RNA), structure, and functions in genetic information storage and protein synthesis. It covers the building blocks of nucleic acids, nucleotide formation, and the processes of DNA replication and transcription. Key concepts include the double helix structure of DNA, base pairing, and the roles of various RNA types in translating genetic code into proteins.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
12 views86 pages

6Nucleic Acids

Chapter 22 discusses nucleic acids, focusing on their types (DNA and RNA), structure, and functions in genetic information storage and protein synthesis. It covers the building blocks of nucleic acids, nucleotide formation, and the processes of DNA replication and transcription. Key concepts include the double helix structure of DNA, base pairing, and the roles of various RNA types in translating genetic code into proteins.

Uploaded by

Sitti Sallim
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter 22

Nucleic Acids
Chapter 22
Table of Contents
22.1 Types of Nucleic Acids
22.2 Nucleotide Building Blocks
22.3. Nucleotide Formation
22.4 Primary Nucleic Acid Structure
22.5 The DNA Double Helix
22.6 Replication of DNA Molecules
22.7 Overview of Protein Synthesis
22.8 Ribonucleic Acids
22.9 Transcription: RNA Synthesis
22.10 The Genetic Code
22.11 Anticodons and tRNA Molecules
22.12 Translation: Protein Synthesis
22.13 Mutations
22.14 Nucleic Acids and Viruses
22.15 Recombinant DNA and Genetic Engineering
22.16 The Polymerase Chain Reaction
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 2
Section 22.1
Types of Nucleic Acids

The Swiss physiologist Friedrich Miescher (1844-1895) discovered


nucleic acids in 1869 while studying the nuclei of white blood cells.
The fact that they were initially found in cell nuclei and are acidic
accounts for the name nucleic acid.
It is now known that nucleic acids are found throughout a cell, not
just in the nucleus.
Of all biomolecules, it is only the nucleic acids that have the
remarkable property of replicating itself, thus nature chose
these molecules to serve as the repository and transmitter of
genetic information in every cell and organism.
The genome or total DNA of a cell acts like a molecular file where

growth, reproduction, and even death) are encoded.

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 3


Section 22.1
Types of Nucleic Acids

Cells in an organism are exact replicas


Cells have information on how to make new cells
Molecules responsible for such information are nucleic acids
The nucleic acids (DNA in particular) are
; into their primary structure is encoded a set of directions
that ultimately governs the metabolic activities of the living cell.
Two types of Nucleic Acids:
DNA: Deoxyribonucleic Acid: found within cell nucleus
storage and transfer of genetic information
passed from one cell to other during cell division
RNA: Ribonucleic Acid: occurs in all parts of cell
primary function is to synthesize the proteins

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 4


Section 22.1
Types of Nucleic Acids
Gene is a segment of DNA which specifies the chain of amino acids that comprises
the protein molecule
most human genes are ~1000 3500 nucleotide units long
genome: all of the genetic material (the total DNA) contained in the
chromosomes of an organism
human genome is about 20,000 25,000 genes
The genetic message is transcribed by mRNA and translated by tRNA and rRNA
into thousands of different proteins.

The Central Dogma

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 5


Section 22.2
Nucleotide Building Blocks
Nucleic Acids: polymers in which
repeating unit is nucleotide
A nucleotide has three components:
pentose sugar - a
monosaccharide
phosphate group (PO43-)
heterocyclic base

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 6


Section 22.2
Nucleotide Building Blocks
Nitrogen-Containing Heterocyclic Bases

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 7


Section 22.2
Nucleotide Building Blocks

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 8


Section 22.3
Nucleotide Formation
Nucleoside Formation
Nucleoside: formed from condensation reaction between a five-carbon monosaccharide
and a purine or pyrimidine base derivative.
the N9 of a purine or N1 of a pyrimidine base is attached to C position of sugar (beta-
conformation) in an N-C-glycosidic linkage
Nomenclature:
for pyrimidine bases suffix -idine is used (cytidine, thymidine, uridine)
for purine bases suffix -osine is used (adenosine, guanosine)
prefix -deoxy is used to indicate deoxyribose present (e.g: deoxythymidine)

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 9


Section 22.3
Nucleotide Formation

Nucleotide Formation

Phosphate group is
added to a nucleoside
attached to C
position through a
phosphoester
bond
condensation
reaction (H2O
released)
named by
appending 5 -
monophosphate to
nucleoside name

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 10


Section 22.3
Nucleotide Formation
Nucleotide Nomenclature
1) The - nucleoside monophosphate
adenylic acid or adenosine
monophosphate (AMP)
b) guanosine guanylic acid or guanosine
monophosphate (GMP)
c) cytidine cytidylic acid or cytidine
monophosphate (CMP)
d) uridine uridylic acid or uridine
monophosphate (UMP)
e) deoxythymidine deoxythymidylic acid or
deoxythymidine monophosphate
(dTMP)
2) The -nucleoside diphosphates are ADP,GDP,
CDP, UDP, dTDP
3) The -nucleoside triphosphates are ATP, GTP,
CTP, UTP, dTTP

* If deoxyribose is present, the prefix deoxy is used


(dAMP, dADP, dATP, dGMP, dGDP, dGTP, dCMP,
dCDP, dCTP)
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 11
Section 22.3
Nucleotide Formation

Nucleotide Nomenclature

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 12


Section 22.4
Primary Nucleic Acid Structure
Primary Structure
The nucleotides of a
polynucleotide chain are linked
to one another in -
phosphodiester bonds
Phosphoric acid forms a
phosphate ester to connect
the -hydroxyl group of one
pentose to the -carbon on
another pentose
Sugar-phosphate groups are
referred to as nucleic acid
backbone ; found in all
nucleic acids
Sugars are different in DNA
and RNA

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 13


Section 22.4
Primary Nucleic Acid Structure
Polynucleotides and the
Nucleic acids

A ribonucleic acid (RNA) is a


polynucleotide in which each
of the monomers contains
ribose, a phosphate group,
and one of the heterocyclic
bases adenine, cytosine,
guanine, or uracil
A deoxyribonucleic acid
(DNA) is a nucleotide polymer
in which each of the
monomers contains
deoxyribose, a phosphate
group, and one of the
heterocyclic bases adenine,
cytosine, guanine, or thymine.

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 14


Section 22.4
Primary Nucleic Acid Structure
5 end has free phosphate group and 3
end has a free OH group
the sequence of bases is read from 5
the next nucleotide

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 15


Section 22.4
Primary Nucleic Acid Structure
Shorthand Structure of Polynucleotides
bases are indicated by their
initials, the ribose by a
straight line extending from
the base, and the phosphate
by P.
the C and C of the ribose
or deoxyribose are indicated
by the fact that the C is at
the end of the ribose line and
the C is toward the middle
of the line.
Takadiasase (mold)
linkages in which
is linked to a purine
nucleotide
RNAse (bovine pancreas)
linkages in which
is linked to a pyrimidine
nucleotide

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 16


Section 22.5
The DNA Double Helix
DNA, a high mol.wt., double-stranded
polynucleotide that occurs almost
exclusively in the nucleus of the cell
primary function is storage and transfer of
genetic information which is used
(indirectly) to control many functions of a
living cell
genetic information is encoded in the
primary structure of the DNA
the primary structure of DNA is the
sequence of nucleotides in the chain
the base content of DNA displays three sets
of equivalent pairs:
A + G = T + C (pu / pyr ratio = 1)
A = T
G = C
the structure of the four bases permit
hydrogen bonding between specific base
pairs: Adenine always pairs with
Thymine and Guanine with Cytosine

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 17


Section 22.5
The DNA Double Helix
the proof of this base-pairing came when
Watson and Crick proved by x-ray
diffraction that the DNA structure was a
double helix whose chains were
complementary and antiparallel

complementary means that A binds


to T and C to G between the chains
- the sequence of bases on one
strand automatically determines the
sequence of bases on the other
strand

antiparallel means that each end of

chains travel in opposite directions


- only when the 2 strands are
antiparallel can the base pairs
form the H-bonds that hold them
together
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 18
Section 22.5
The DNA Double Helix
The double helical secondary
structure of DNA is stabilized by a
number of factors:
rule of base pairing:
(A=T and G C)
%A = %T and %C = %G)
example: human DNA
contains 30% adenine, 30%
thymine, 20% guanine and
20% cytosine
Stacking interaction of the
hydrogen-bonded bases (the
purines and pyrimidine rings) at the
center
Hydrophobic interior (bases) and
hydrophilic exterior (sugar-
phosphate backbone) ; contact with
bases through spiral grooves :
major and minor grooves

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 19


Section 22.5
The DNA Double Helix

Practice Exercise

Predict the sequence of bases in the DNA strand


complementary to the single DNA strand shown below:

5 A A T G C A G C T3

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Section 22.5
The DNA Double Helix

Practice Exercise

Predict the sequence of bases in the DNA strand


complementary to the single DNA strand shown below:

5 A A T G C A G C T3

Answer:
3 T T A C G T C G A5

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 21


Section 22.5
The DNA Double Helix

the sugar-phosphate backbone of the two


strands spiral around the outside of the helix
like the handrails on a spiral staircase
the nitrogenous bases extend into the center
at right angles to the acids of the helix as if
they are the steps of the spiral staircase

Denaturation of DNA
The loss of helical structure due to disruption
of H bonds is called denaturation or
melting, where the double strands separate
into single strands.
This can be due to extremes of pH, heat, or
chemicals that disrupt H-bonds.
DNAs which are G-C rich denature at a
higher temperature (Tm) than those which
are A-T rich.

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 22


Section 22.5
The DNA Double Helix
Conformations of DNA:
DNA can assume different conformations
because deoxyribose is flexible and the C N-
glycosidic linkage rotates. (Recall that
furanose rings have puckered conformation)

B-DNA the common form as described by


Watson and Crick model
A-DNA when DNA becomes partially
dehydrated it assumes the A-form; observed
when DNA is extracted with solvents such as
ethanol.
Z-DNA
DNA segments with alternating purine and
pyrimidine bases (esp. CGCGCG) are most
likely to adopt a Z configuration; regions of
DNA rich in GC repeats are often regulatory,
binding specific proteins that initiate or block
transcription.

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 23


Section 22.5
The DNA Double Helix

Types of DNA sequences:


1. Exons the coding sequences; interrupted by
noncoding sequences
2. Introns the noncoding sequences; from 10 to
10,000 bases long
3. Palindrome or inverted repeats
a DNA sequence that contains the same
information whether it is read forward or

tendency to form hairpin loop and a snapback


(cruciform)
perfect palindrome forms with exact base pairs;
quasi palindrome, when not all will form hairpin
loop
4. Cruciform (or snapback)
as their name implies, are crosslike structures
when a DNA sequence contains a palindrome

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 24


Section 22.6
Replication of DNA Molecules
Process by which DNA molecules
produce exact duplicates of themselves
The two strands of the DNA double helix
unwind, the separated strands serve as
templates for the formation of new DNA
strands.
Free nucleotides pair with the
complementary bases on the separated
strands of DNA.
When the process is completed two
identical molecules of DNA are formed
The newly synthesized DNA has one new
DNA strand and old DNA strand
Two daughter DNA molecules are
produced from one parent DNA molecule,
with each daughter DNA molecule
containing one parent DNA strand and
one newly formed DNA strand.

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 25


Section 22.6
Replication of DNA Molecules

DNA replication is semiconservative and mostly


bidirectional
First step is the separation of the strands
accomplished by helicase, which breaks
the H-bonds between base pairs
positive supercoiling results when H-bonds
are broken, this is relieved by
topoisomerase
when supercoiling is relieved, single-strand
binding protein binds to the separated
strands to keep them apart
primase catalyzes synthesis of a 10-12

replication
DNA polymerase
or template, catalyzing the polymerization of a
complementary daughter strand; the enzyme
checks the correct base pairing and catalyzes
the formation of phosphodiester linkages

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 26


Section 22.6
Replication of DNA Molecules
There are different mechanisms for replication
of the two strands
DNA polymerase enzyme can function only in
the 5 -to-3 direction which can be offered only
by the
1) the is called the leading strand
because it is replicated in a continuous
process in the direction of the
unwinding;
2) the strand is the lagging strand, it is
replicated in a discontinuous
mechanism and grows in segments
(Okazaki fragments) in the opposite
direction; the segments are later
connected by DNA ligase

In the Leading Strand:


The DNA Polymerase, using and Mg2+,
cause the replication by base-pairing the
with free nucleotide units

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 27


Section 22.6
Replication of DNA Molecules
In the Lagging Strand
The enzyme primase (using and Mg2+)
puts primers on the lagging strand by forming
short RNA strands through base-pairing of the
.
DNA Polymerase recognize, then lengthen
the primers using .
The primers are then removed by
nucleotidase and further lengthening is done
by DNA Polymerase resulting to an OKAZAKI
STRAND.
The Okazaki strands are then linked together
and sealed using the enzyme ligase leading to
the formation of a NEW STRAND

DNA replication usually occurs at multiple sites


within a molecule (origin of replication) and the
replication is bidirectional from these sites
Multiple-site replication enables rapid DNA
synthesis

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 28


Section 22.6
Replication of DNA Molecules
Two conditions must be satisfied for replication to take place with high fidelity and accuracy:
a) normal electronic characteristics
b) normal base sequence

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 29


Section 22.7
Overview of Protein Synthesis
Protein synthesis is directly under the
direction of DNA
The expression of the information
contained in the DNA is fundamental to
the growth, development, and
maintenance of all organisms
Proteins are responsible for the
formation of skin, hair, enzymes,
hormones, and so on
Protein synthesis can be divided into
two phases.
Transcription a process by which
DNA directs the synthesis of mRNA
molecules
Translation a process in which
mRNA is deciphered to synthesize
a protein molecule

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 30


Section 22.8
Ribonucleic Acids

Differences Between RNA and DNA Molecules


The sugar unit in the backbone of RNA is ribose; it is deoxyribose
in DNA.
The base thymine found in DNA is replaced by uracil in RNA
RNA is a single-stranded molecule; DNA is double-stranded
(double helix)
A hairpin loop is produced when single-stranded RNA doubles
back on itself and complementary base pairing occurs.
RNA molecules are much smaller than DNA molecules, ranging
from 75 nucleotides to a few thousand nucleotides

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 31


Section 22.8
Ribonucleic Acids
Types of RNA Molecules
RNA functions primarily in the
synthesis of proteins, the molecules
that carry out essential cellular
functions
Heterogeneous nuclear RNA (hnRNA)
- formed directly by DNA transcription.
Messenger RNA (mRNA) - carries
instructions for protein synthesis
(genetic information) from DNA
Small nuclear RNA (snRNA) -
facilitates the conversion of hnRNA to
mRNA.
Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) - combines
with specific proteins to form
ribosomes - the physical site for
protein synthesis
Transfer RNA (tRNA) - delivers amino
acids to the sites for protein synthesis

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 32


Section 22.9
Transcription: RNA Synthesis

Transcription

biosynthesis of RNA by DNA-dependent RNA Polymerase on a DNA template; an information transfer


process where one of the two DNA strands acts as a template, which is copied into a complementary RNA
molecule
transcription of DNA into RNA is restricted to discrete regions or genes of DNA
when a gene is transcribed, only one strand of the DNA serves as the template for RNA synthesis: the
template strand, also called the sense strand; the nontemplate strand is called the coding strand, also
called the antisense strand.
in the example below the blue 3 strand is the template strand, or the sense strand. RNA polymerase
sythesizes an hnRNA (shown in green) in the 5' to 3' direction complementary to this template strand. The
opposite 5 DNA strand (red), the nontemplate strand, is called the coding strand, or the antisense
strand. The easiest way to find the corresponding hnRNA sequence (shown in green) is to read the coding,
or antisense strand directly in the 5' to 3' direction substituting U for T.

5' T G A C C T T C G A A C G G G A T G G A A A G G 3'
3' A C T G G A A G C T T G C C C T A C C T T T C C 5'
5' U G A C C U U C G A A C G G G A U G G A A A G G 3'

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 33


Section 22.9
Transcription: RNA Synthesis
Steps in the Transcription Process

RNA Polymerase recognizes promoter


sites (sequence of bases which signals
where to start) and enhancer sites (base
sequence which make recognition clearer)
on DNA.
These sites interact to define the region
for transcription.
Like DNA Polymerase, RNA Polymerase
requires a - which can only
be provided by the of DNA
The RNA Polymerase, once it has spotted
the portion to be transcribed, does the

uses and Mg2+

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 34


Section 22.9
Transcription: RNA Synthesis
Steps in the Transcription Process
Unwinding of DNA double helix by RNA
polymerase to expose some bases (a
gene):
Alignment of free ribonucleotides along
the exposed DNA strand (template)
forming new base pairs
RNA polymerase catalyzes the linkage of
ribonucleotides one by one to form
hnRNA molecule
Transcription ends when the RNA
polymerase enzyme encounters a stop
signal on the DNA template:
The newly formed hnRNA molecule and
the RNA polymerase are released

Transcription occur with very high


accuracy and fidelity (normal base
sequence and normal electronic
character) except under conditions of
spontaneous and induced mutation

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 35


Section 22.9
Transcription: RNA Synthesis
Post-Transcription Processing: Formation of mRNA
hnRNA is a primary transcript which is
processed in post-transcriptional
modification, a three step process:
A 5' cap structure is added; this
structure is required for efficient
translation of the final mRNA
A 3' poly(A) tail is added by poly(A)
polymerase to protect the 3' end of
the mRNA from enzymatic digestion;
prolongs the life of the mRNA
RNA splicing removes portions of
the primary transcript that are not
protein coding

transcripts due to introns are removed


by spliceosomes
nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs,
read snurps ) ; the transcripts due to
exons are joined by ligase
the exons in DNA are transcribed as the
codons in mRNA

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 36


Section 22.9
Transcription: RNA Synthesis

Once the mRNA is formed and released from DNA, it moves into the cytoplasm
and combines with rRNA in ribosomes where protein synthesis occurs.

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 37


Section 22.10
The Genetic Code
In translation, the base
sequence in mRNA
determines the amino
acid sequence of the
protein synthesized
The base sequence of
an mRNA molecule
involves only 4
different bases - A, C,
G, and U
The code is a triplet
code since it involves
3 bases per coding
unit.
The coding unit is
called a codon.
The genetic code is a
series of base triplets
in mRNA called
codons that code for
a particular amino
acid.
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 38
Section 22.10
The Genetic Code
The genetic code is highly
degenerate:
many amino acids are
designated by more than one
codon.
Arg, Leu, and Ser are
represented by six codons.
most other amino acids are
represented by two codons
Met and Trp have only a
single codon.
codons that specify the same
amino acid are called
synonyms
There is a pattern to the
arrangement of synonyms in the
genetic code table.
all synonyms for an amino
acid fall within a single box
unless there are more than
four synonyms
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 39
Section 22.10
The Genetic Code
The genetic code is almost
universal:
with minor exceptions the
code is the same in all
organisms
the same codon specifies
the same amino acid
whether the cell is a
bacterial cell, a plant cell,
or a human cell.
An initiation codon exists:
the existence of stop
or termination codons
(UAG, UAA, and UGA)
suggests the existence
of start codons.
the codon - coding for
the amino acid
methionine (AUG)
functions as initiation
codon.
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 40
Section 22.10
The Genetic Code

Practice Exercise
Sections A, C, and E of the following base sequence section of a
DNA template strand are exons, and sections B and D are
introns.
a. What is the structure of the hnRNA transcribed from this
template?
b. What is the structure of the mRNA obtained by splicing the
hnRNA?

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 41


Section 22.10
The Genetic Code

Practice Exercise
Sections A, C, and E of the following base sequence section of a
DNA template strand are exons, and sections B and D are
introns.
a. What is the structure of the hnRNA transcribed from this
template?
b. What is the structure of the mRNA obtained by splicing the
hnRNA?

Answers:
a. 3 GCG GCA UCA ACC GGG CCU CCU 5
b. 3 GCG ACC CCU CCU 5 or -UCC-CCA-GCG

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 42


Section 22.10
The Genetic Code

Practice Exercise
The structure of an mRNA segment obtained from a DNA
template strand is

mRNA 3 ACG-AGC-CCU-CUU 5

What polypeptide amino acid sequence will be synthesized using


this mRNA?

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 43


Section 22.10
The Genetic Code

Practice Exercise
The structure of an mRNA segment obtained from a DNA
template strand is

mRNA 3 ACG-AGC-CCU-CUU 5

What polypeptide amino acid sequence will be synthesized using


this mRNA?

Answer: Phe-Ser-Arg-Ala

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 44


Section 22.11
Anticodons and tRNA Molecules
During protein synthesis amino
acids do not directly interact
with the codons of an mRNA
molecule.
tRNA molecules as
intermediates deliver the amino
acids to mRNA.
Two important features of tRNA
the 3 end is where an
amino acid is covalently
bonded to the tRNA.
the loop opposite to the
open end is the site for a
sequence of three bases
called an anticodon.
Anticodon - a three-nucleotide
sequence on a tRNA molecule
that is complementary to a
codon on an mRNA molecule.
Codon-anticodon interaction is
antiparallel
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 45
Section 22.12
Translation: Protein Synthesis
Practice Exercise

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 46


Section 22.12
Translation: Protein Synthesis

Practice Exercise

A tRNA molecule possesses the anticodon 5 CGU 3 . Which


amino acid will this tRNA molecule carry?

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 47


Section 22.12
Translation: Protein Synthesis

Practice Exercise

A tRNA molecule possesses the anticodon 5 CGU 3 . Which


amino acid will this tRNA molecule carry?

Answer: Thr

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 48


Section 22.12
Translation: Protein Synthesis

Translation a process in which mRNA


codons are deciphered to synthesize a
protein molecule
Ribosome an rRNA protein complex
that serves as the site, or for
protein synthesis:
Ribosomal RNA (rRNA)
constitutes about 60% of the
ribosomes (40% protein)
structurally composed of two spherical
particles of unequal size: the smaller
has affinity for mRNA ; the larger has
an attraction for tRNA ;
has two sites to bind tRNA
P-site binds to the growing
peptide
A-site binds the aminoacyl tRNA

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 49


Section 22.12
Translation: Protein Synthesis

Five Steps of Translation Process


Activation of tRNA: addition of specific amino acids to the 3 -OH
group of tRNA.
Initiation of protein synthesis: Begins with binding of mRNA to small
ribosomal subunit such that its first codon (initiating codon AUG)
occupies a site called the P site (peptidyl site)
Elongation: Adjacent to the P site in an mRNA ribosome complex
is A site (aminoacyl site) and the next tRNA with the appropriate
anticodon binds to it. Peptidyl transferase links the A site and P site
amino acids via a peptide bond.
Termination: The polypeptide continues to grow via translocation
until all necessary amino acids are in place and bonded to each
other. The process stops when a stop codon is encountered.
Post-translational processing: Gives the protein the final form it
needs to be fully functional

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 50


Section 22.12
Translation: Protein Synthesis

Five Steps of Translation Process

(1) Activation of tRNA: addition of


specific amino acids to the 3 -OH group
of tRNA.
The amino acid combines with a
molecule of ATP, yielding a compound
known as aminoacyl adenylate.
The reaction is enzyme-catalyzed
The aminoacyl adenylate remains on the
surface of the enzyme and then
undergoes reaction with the proper
tRNA molecule to form the
corresponding aminoacyl-tRNA
complex (charged tRNA or activated
tRNA).

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 51


Section 22.12
Translation: Protein Synthesis

Five Steps of Translation Process


(2) Initiation of protein
synthesis begins with the
formation of an initiation
complex
mRNA binds to small
ribosomal subunit such
that its first codon
(initiating codon AUG)
occupies a site called the
P site (peptidyl site)
The initiator tRNA
recognizes the initiation
codon, AUG.
The large ribosomal
subunit binds to form the
complete, functional
ribosome.

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 52


Section 22.12
Translation: Protein Synthesis

Five Steps of Translation Process

(3) Elongation occurs in three steps that are repeated until protein
synthesis is complete:
(3a), the binding of the aminoacyl-tRNA to the empty A-site (amino acyl-
tRNA binding site)
(3b), peptide bond formation occurs catalyzed by an enzyme peptidyl
transferase that is part of the ribosome. Now the peptide chain is shifted
to the tRNA that occupies the A site.
(3c), the uncharged tRNA molecule left on the P site is discharged, and
the ribosome changes position so that the next codon on the mRNA
occupies the A-site. This movement is called translocation, which shifts
the new peptidyl-tRNA from the A-site to the P-site.

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 53


Section 22.12
Translation: Protein Synthesis

Five Steps of Translation Process


(3) Elongation occurs in three
steps that are repeated until protein
synthesis is complete:
(3a), the binding of the
aminoacyl-tRNA to the empty
A-site (amino acyl-tRNA binding
site)
(3b), peptide bond formation
occurs catalyzed by an enzyme
peptidyl transferase that is part
of the ribosome.
Now the peptide chain is shifted
to the tRNA that occupies the A
site.

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 54


Section 22.12
Translation: Protein Synthesis

Five Steps of Translation Process

The transfer of
an amino acid
(or growing
peptide chain)
from the P site
to the A site
during peptide
bond formation
is an example
of an acyl
transfer
reaction

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 55


Section 22.12
Translation: Protein Synthesis

Five Steps of Translation Process

(3) Elongation occurs in three


steps that are repeated until
protein synthesis is complete:
(3c), the uncharged tRNA
molecule left on the P site is
discharged, and the ribosome
changes position so that the
next codon on the mRNA
occupies the A-site.
This movement is called
translocation, which shifts the
new peptidyl-tRNA from the
A-site to the P-site.

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 56


Section 22.12
Translation: Protein Synthesis

Five Steps of Translation

(4) Termination: The


polypeptide continues to grow
via translocation until all
necessary amino acids are in
place and bonded to each other.
The process stops when a stop
codon is encountered.
(5) Post-translational
processing: Gives the protein
the final form it needs to be fully
functional
cleavage of f-met (initiation
codon); association with
other proteins; bonding to
carbohydrate or lipid groups;
S S bonds between cys
units

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Section 22.12
Translation: Protein Synthesis

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Section 22.12
Translation: Protein Synthesis

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 59


Section 22.12
Translation: Protein Synthesis

Efficiency of mRNA Utilization


Polysome (polyribosome):
The complex of a mRNA
and several ribosomes
Many ribosomes can move
simultaneously along a
single mRNA molecule
The multiple use of mRNA
molecules reduces the
amount of resources and
energy that the cell
expends to synthesize
needed protein
In the process several
ribosomes bind to a single
mRNA - polysomes

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 60


Section 22.12
Translation: Protein Synthesis

Regulation of protein synthesis


Since protein is not synthesized continuously but only as needed, the DNA

A repressor, which is a polypeptide, binds to small segment of the DNA


called the operator site
As long as the repressor is bonded to the operator site of the DNA, no
mRNA is produced and protein synthesis is inhibited
When a particular protein is needed, an inducer is formed
The inducer combines with the repressor changing its shape so that it can
no longer bind to the DNA
Once the repressor is removed from the DNA, synthesis of mRNA and
hence, protein can begin
When sufficient protein has been synthesized, the inducer is removed and
the repressor once again binds the DNA, stopping protein synthesis

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 61


Section 22.12
Translation: Protein Synthesis
Antibiotics inhibit bacterial protein synthesis
Several antibiotics stop bacterial infections by interfering with the synthesis
of proteins needed by the bacteria. Some antibiotics act only on bacterial
cells by binding to the ribosomes in bacteria, but do not act on human cells.

Antibiotic Effect on ribosomes to inhibit protein synthesis

Chloramphenicol Inhibits peptide bond formation and prevents the binding of


Erythromycin Inhibits peptide chain growth by preventing the translocation of the
ribosome along the mRNA
Puromycin Causes release of an incomplete protein by ending the growth of the
polypeptide early
Streptomycin Prevents the proper attachment of ; mRNA misreading by binding
30S
Tetracycline Prevents the binding of by binding to 30S subunit
========================================================================

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 62


Section 22.13
Mutations

Replication, transcription, and translation occur with very high accuracy


and fidelity (normal base sequence and normal electronic character)
except under conditions of spontaneous and induced mutation

An error in base sequence reproduced during DNA


replication
Errors in genetic information is passed on during
transcription.
The altered information can cause changes in amino
acid sequence during protein synthesis and thereby alter
protein function
Such changes have a profound effect on an organism.

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 63


Section 22.13
Mutations
Spontaneous Mutations
1. Point Mutations
- substitution of a single nucleotide for
another caused by tautomeric base-
mispairs due to the ease by which rare
tautomers are formed
- C is the most mutable base due to the
very small energy difference between its
two tautomers
- in nature, there are more A-T pairs than
G-C pairs to protect us from the effect of
spontaneous mutation

A. Transition (C-A* ; G-T* ; C *- A mispair)


- a purine base is changed to another
purine; a pyrimidine base to another
pyrimidine
B. Transversion (A-A* mispair)
- a purine base is changed to pyrimidine;
a pyrimidine base changed to purine

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 64


Section 22.13
Mutations
Spontaneous Mutations
2. Frameshift mutation
-leads to a change in the
reading frame
A. Insertion
B. Deletion

In an insertion or deletion
mutation, one or more
nucleotides are added to or
deleted from the DNA
sequence.

Then a frameshift occurs


which leads to a misreading
of all the codons following
the base change.

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 65


Section 22.13
Mutations

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 66


Section 22.13
Mutations

Mutagens
Although a number of structural features of nucleic acids promote
stabilization of base sequences, reactivity with some physical and chemical
agents can alter the electronic characteristics of the bases and other
structural units.
Consequently, nucleic acid functions would be affected
A mutagen is a substance or agent that causes a change in the structure of
a gene:
Physical agents : heat, Ultraviolet, ionizing radiation (X-ray, gamma
rays)
Chemical agents :HNO2 can convert cytosine to uracil
Nitrites, nitrates, and nitrosamines can form nitrous acid in cells
Under normal conditions mutations are repaired by repair enzymes

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 67


Section 22.13
Mutations
Induced Mutations Physical Agents
UV radiation
absorbed primarily by the pyrimidine bases.
UV light causes covalent linkage of
adjacent pyrimidine bases forming
cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer
when T is irradiated with UV, excitation of
pi electrons to antibonding
in the formation of T diradicals. Coupling
of T diradicals may result in the formation
of thymine cyclobutane dimers
Failure to repair this defect can lead to
xeroderma pigmentosum; people who
suffer from this genetic skin disorder are
very sensitive to UV light and develop
multiple skin cancers
No purine dimers since purines are more
thermodynamically stable than
pyrimidines
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 68
Section 22.13
Mutations
Induced Mutations Physical Agents
heat mutagenesis
- characterized by transmigration of N C
glycosidic bonds producing neoguanosine
crosslinks

ionizing radiation
more often when a plant or animal is
irradiated most of the energy is deposited
in the aqueous phase. Less often will a
primary ionization occur in an organic
molecule
a portion of damage to the living system
results from reactive particles that are
formed in the water phase and diffuse to
an organic molecule in the cell causing
secondary reactions (free radicals are
implicated in radiation damage)

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 69


Section 22.13
Mutations
Induced Mutations Chemical Agents
intercalating agents (PAH), alkylating agents, heavy metal ions, etc.
one notorious source of numerous mutagens is cigarette smoke
It contains PAH, nitrosamines, hydrazines, pyrolysates, alkoxy free
radicals, superoxide anion radicals, Cd2+, etc.
other notorious sources are: cured foods; burnt portion of broiled
fish and meat; moldy peanuts and cereals; pesticides;
polluted air (epoxides, SO2, ozone, Pb2+, ethylene dibromide, etc.)
laboratory chemicals (benzene has been linked to leukemia, CHCl3,
CCl4, etc)

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 70


Section 22.13
Mutations
Induced Mutations Chemical Agents
Intercalating agents
- with polycyclic planar structures, like PAH,
e.g. benzo(a)pyrene, interpose between the
strands within the grove of DNA
- inhibit its replication/transcription, or cause
deletions

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 71


Section 22.13
Mutations
Induced Mutations Chemical Agents
Alkylating agents
- have electrophilic sites or may be
metabolized to electrophiles which
can interact with alkylating sites at
DNA; include PAH, nitrosamines,
aflatoxins, aromatic amines,
epoxides, nitrogen mustard,
nitrosoureas, etc.
- bases in DNA are nucleophiles and
as such are strongly attracted to
electrophilic compounds

N7- alkylation leads to apurinic sites


(positivity of R is relayed to C8 & N9 thereby
enhancing the dipositivity of the N-C
glycosidic bond & render it more less
stable)
O6- alkylation leads to base mispairs

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 72


Section 22.13
Mutations
Chemical mutagens. (a) HNO
(nitrous acid) converts cytosine 2
to uracil and adenine to
hypoxanthine. (b) Nitrosoamines,
organic compounds that react to
form nitrous acid, also lead to
the oxidative deamination of A
and C. (c) Hydroxylamine
(NH OH) reacts with cytosine,
2
converting it to a derivative that
base-pairs with adenine instead
of guanine. The result is a C-G
to T-A transition. (d) Alkylation of
G residues to give O -
methylguanine, which6 base-pairs
with T. (e) Alkylating agents
include nitrosoamines,
nitrosoguanidines, nitrosoureas,
alkyl sulfates, and nitrogen
mustards. Note that
nitrosoamines are mutagenic in
two ways: they can react to yield
HNO or they can act as
2
alkylating agents.

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 73


Section 22.13
Mutations
When DNA is hit by a mutagen
Mutagen

DNA
Lesions repaired Cell death

Lesions escape repairs


in in in

Somatic cells Germ cells


Cells during Organogenesis
STERILITY

GENETIC DISORDER
CANCER (can be transmitted from
BIRTH DEFECTS
one generation
to the next)

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 74


Section 22.13
Mutations

Some chemical and environmental carcinogens

Carcinogen Tumor occurrence

Asbestos Lung, respiratory tract


Arsenic Skin, lung
Cadmium Prostate, kidneys
Chromium Lung
Nickel Lung, sinuses
Aflatoxin Liver
Nitrites Stomach
Aniline dyes Bladder
Vinyl chloride Liver
Benzene Leukemia

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 75


Section 22.13
Mutations
DNA Repair Mechanisms

DNA is the only macromolecule that is repaired


rather than degraded.
The repair processes are very efficient with fewer
than 1 out of 1,000 accidental changes resulting
in mutations.
The rest are corrected through various repair
mechanisms before, during, or after replication

A) photoreactivation repair
uses an enzyme photolyase, which
binds the T-T cyclobutane dimer & in
the presence of visible light changes
the cyclobutane ring back into
individual pyrimidine bases

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 76


Section 22.13
Mutations
DNA Repair Mechanisms
B) excision repair
mutations are excised by a
series of enzymes that remove
incorrect bases and replace
them with the correct ones.
Base excision repair involves a
battery of enzymes called DNA
glycosylases each of which recognizes a
single type of altered base in DNA and
catalyzes its hydrolytic removal from
the deoxyribose sugar (e.g., removing
deaminated cytosine, deaminated
adenine, alkylated bases, etc.)
Nucleotide excision repair

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 77


Section 22.14
Nucleic Acids and Viruses

Viruses
Viruses: Tiny disease causing agents with outer protein
envelope and inner nucleic acid core
They can not reproduce outside their host cells (living
organisms)
Invade their host cells to reproduce and in the process
disrupt the normal cell s operation
Virus invade bacteria, plants animals, and humans
Many human diseases are of viral origin, e. g. Common cold,
smallpox, rabies, influenza, hepatitis, and AIDS

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 78


Section 22.14
Nucleic Acids and Viruses

Human cancers caused by oncogenic viruses

Virus Disease
RNA viruses
Human T-cell leukemia-lymphoma virus-1 Leukemia
Human immunodeficiency virus Acquired immune deficiency (AIDS)
DNA viruses
Epstein-Barr virus
Nasopharyngeal carcinoma

Hepatitis B virus Liver cancer


Herpes simplex virus Cervical and uterine cancer
Papilloma virus Cervical and colon cancer, genital warts

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 79


Section 22.15
Recombinant DNA and Genetic Engineering

Recombinant DNA: DNA molecules that have been


synthesized by splicing a sequence of segment DNA
(usually a gene) from one organism to the DNA of
another organism.
Genetic Engineering (Biotechnology): A process in
which an organism is intentionally changed at the
molecular (DNA) level so that it exhibits different traits.

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 80


Section 22.15
Recombinant DNA and Genetic Engineering

Benefits
First genetically engineered organism are bacteria
(1973) and Mice (1974)
Insulin producing bacteria - commercialized in 1982.
Bacteria act as protein factories
Many plants have now been genetically engineered and
numerous beneficial situations have been created.
Disease resistance increased crop yield
Drought resistance consumption of less water
Predator resistance less insecticide use
Frost resistance resist changes in temps below freezing.
Deterioration resistance long shelf-life.

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 81


Section 22.15
Recombinant DNA and Genetic Engineering

Recombinant DNA Production using a Bacterial Plasmid


Dissolution of cells:
E. coli cells of a specific strain containing the plasmid of interest are treated with
chemicals to dissolve their membranes and release the cellular contents
Isolation of plasmid fraction:
The cellular contents are fractionated to obtain plasmids
Cleavage of plasmid DNA:
Restriction enzymes are used to cleave the double-stranded DNA
Gene removal from another organism:
Using the same restriction enzyme the gene of interest is removed from a
chromosome of another organism
Gene plasmid splicing:
The gene (from Step 4) and the opened plasmid (from Step 3) are mixed in the
presence of the enzyme DNA ligase to splice them together.
Uptake of recombinant DNA:
The recombinant DNA prepared in step 5 are transferred to a live E. coli culture
where they can be replicated, transcribed and translated.

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 82


Section 22.15
Recombinant DNA and Genetic Engineering

Transformed cell can reproduce a large number of


identical cells clones:
Clones are the cells that have descended from a
single cell and have identical DNA
Given bacteria grow very fast, within few hours 1000s of
clones will be produced
Each clone can synthesize the protein directed by
foreign gene it carries

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Section 22.15
Recombinant DNA and Genetic Engineering

Recombinant DNA Production using a Bacterial Plasmid

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 84


Section 22.16
The Polymerase Chain Reaction

The polymerase chain reaction (PCR): A method for rapidly


producing multiple copies of a DNA nucleotide sequence (gene).
This method allows to produce billions of copies of a specific gene
in a few hours.
PCR is very easy to carryout and the requirements are:
Source of gene to be copied
Thermostable DNA polymerase
Deoxynucleotide triphosphates (dATP, dGTP, dCTP and dTTP)
A set of two oligonucleotides with complementary sequence to
the gene (primers)
Thermostable plastic container and
Source of heat

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Section 22.16
The Polymerase Chain Reaction

Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 86

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