Basic Concepts
Basic Concepts
Steps in Meiosis I:
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Prophase 1
Longest phase
Nucleus and nucleolus disappear
• Chiasmata form
• Recombination of
information occurs
Crossing Over
creates variation (diversity) in the offspring’s traits.
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(e) Diakinesis
• Chromosomes condense further and the four parts of the
tetrads are actually visible
• Nucleoli disappear
• Cell divides
• Formation of two
daughter cells
complete
Meiosis II
• No interphase II
(or very short - no more DNA replication)
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Prophase II
• same as prophase in mitosis
• Chromosomes condense and the spindle forms
• Nucleus and nucleolus disappear
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Metaphase II
• Same as Metaphase in mitosis
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Anaphase II
• same as anaphase in mitosis
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Telophase II
• Same as telophase in mitosis.
• Cytokinesis occurs.
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Telophase II
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Meiosis II
Prophase II
Metaphase II
Anaphase II 4 Identical
Telophase II
haploid cells
Summary of Meiosis
RNA transcription
Transcription
• Transcription is the first step of gene expression.
• During this process, the DNA sequence of a gene
is copied into RNA.
• Before transcription can take place, the DNA
double helix must unwind near the gene that is
getting transcribed.
• The region of opened-up DNA is called
a transcription bubble.
• Transcription uses one of the two exposed DNA
strands as a template; called the template strand.
• The RNA product is complementary to the
template strand and is almost identical to the
other DNA strand, called
the nontemplate (or coding) strand.
• There is one important difference: in the newly
made RNA, all of the T nucleotides are replaced
with U nucleotides.
• The site on the DNA from which the first RNA
nucleotide is transcribed is called the +1, 1 site,
or the initiation site.
• Nucleotides that come before the initiation site
are given negative numbers and said to
be upstream.
• Nucleotides that come after the initiation site
are marked with positive numbers and said to
be downstream.
RNA Polymerase
• RNA polymerases are enzymes that transcribe
DNA into RNA.
• Using a DNA template, RNA polymerase builds
a new RNA molecule through base pairing.
• For instance, if there is a G in the DNA
template, RNA polymerase will add a C to the
new, growing RNA strand.
RNA polymerase always builds a new RNA strand in the 5’ to
3’ direction. That is, it can only add RNA nucleotides (A, U, C, or G) to
the 3' end of the strand.
• RNA polymerases are large enzymes with
multiple subunits, even in simple organisms
like bacteria.
• Humans and other eukaryotes have three
different kinds of RNA polymerases: I, II, and
III.
• Each one specializes in transcribing certain
classes of genes.
Transcription Initiation
• To begin transcribing a gene, RNA polymerase
binds to the DNA of the gene at a region called
the promoter.
• The promoter tells the polymerase where to
"sit down" on the DNA and begin transcribing.
Elongation
• Once RNA polymerase is in position at the promoter,
the next step of transcription—elongation—can begin.
• Elongation is the stage when the RNA strand
gets longer, due to the addition of new nucleotides.
• During elongation, RNA polymerase "walks" along one
strand of DNA, the template strand, in the 3' to 5'
direction.
• For each nucleotide in the template, RNA polymerase
adds a (complementary) sequence to the 3' end of the
RNA strand.
• The RNA transcript is nearly identical to
the non-template, or coding, strand of DNA.
• RNA strands have the base uracil (U) in place
of thymine (T), as well as a slightly different
sugar in the nucleotide.
• Each T of the coding strand is replaced with a
U in the RNA transcript.
Termination
• RNA polymerase will keep transcribing until it
gets signals to stop.
• The process of ending transcription is
called termination.
• It happens once the polymerase transcribes a
sequence of DNA known as a terminator.
TRANSLATION
Translation
• Translation is the RNA directed synthesis of
polypeptides
• The pathway of protein synthesis is called
translation because the ‘language’ of nucleotide
sequence on the mRNA is translated to the
‘language’ of amino acid sequence
• The mRNA is translated from its 5’ end to its 3’
end producing a protein synthesized from its
amino terminal end to its carboxyl terminal end
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Protein Synthesis
1. Activation of the amino acid
2. Initiation
3. Elongation
4. Termination and release
5. Folding and posttranslational processing
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Amino acid activation
Adding of Amino acid to tRNA
• Amino acid activation refers to the
attachment of an amino acid to its Transfer
RNA (tRNA).
• The reactions are catalysed by a group of
enzymes called aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases
(named after the reaction product aminoacyl-
tRNA or aa-tRNA)
Amino Acid Activation
tRNA
amino acid
aminoacyl-
tRNA
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General Structure of
Aminoacyl-tRNA
• Aminoacyl group is
esterified to the 3’
position of the
terminal adenylate
residue
• Ester link
(highlighted):
activates amino acid
and links it to tRNA,
large free energy
release if hydrolysed
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amino acid
(tryptophan) High
energy
tRNA bond
(tRNATrp)
High energy
bond
base pairing
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Initiation
• When the mRNA interacts with the big
ribosome sub-unit, this triggers the approach
of transfer RNA (tRNA).
• The tRNA molecule possess a specific
sequence of 3-bases (anti-codon), which hast
to complement a corresponding sequence
(codon) within the mRNA sequence
Initiation…
• When it finds it, it attaches to the mRNA, as
the other end of the tRNA is “loaded” with an
amino acid.
• At this point arrives the other sub-unit of the
ribosome and a complete structure is formed.
• The first tRNA binds to a so called “start
codon”, which is one and the same for all
proteins
Translation Initiation complex
Initiation of translation requires 4 specific steps;
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ELONGATION
• Elongation is a cyclic process on the
ribosome in which one amino acid at a
time is added to the nascent peptide chain
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Binding of aminoacyl-tRNA to the A site
• In the initiation complex , both the A site (aminoacyl or acceptor
site) and E site (deacylated tRNA exit site) are free
• The binding of the appropriate aminoacyl-tRNA in the A site
requires proper codon recognition
• Elongation factor EF1A forms a ternary complex with GTP and
the entering aminoacyl -tRNA
• This complex then allows the correct aminoacyl-tRNA to enter the
A site with the release of EF1A GDP and phosphate.
• GTP hydrolysis is catalyzed by an active site on the ribosome;
hydrolysis induces a conformational change in the ribosome
concomitantly increasing affinity for the tRNA
• EF1A-GDP then recycles to EF1A-GTP with the aid of other
soluble protein factors and GTP
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Peptide bond formation
• The -amino group of the new aminoacyl-tRNA in the A
site carries out a nucleophilic attack on the esterified
carboxyl group of the peptidyl-tRNA occupying the P site
(peptidyl site)
• This reaction is catalyzed by a peptidyltransferase, a
component of the 28S RNA of the 60S ribosomal subunit
• Because the amino acid on the aminoacyl-tRNA is
already "activated," no further energy source is required
for this reaction
• The reaction results in attachment of the growing peptide
chain to the tRNA in the A site
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Translocation of the ribosome on mRNA
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TERMINATION
• Polypeptide chain termination occurs when a chain-
termination codon (stop codon) enters the A site of the
ribosome.
• The stop codons are UAA, UAG, and UGA.
• When a stop codon is encountered, a release factor
binds to the A site.
• A water molecule is added to the carboxyl terminus of
the nascent polypeptide, causing termination
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Protein chain released
into cytoplasm
mRNA
released and
ribosome
dissociates
into its 2
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subunits
Translation Summary
• tRNA is the adaptor between mRNA codon and amino acid
It has complementary sequence to the codon (anticodon)
The first base of the anti-codon may be a wobble base (does
not follow a watson crick base pairing)
Aminoacyl tRNA synthetases activate amino acids by
attaching them to the appropriate tRNA
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