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Central Dogma: - DNA replication - Transcription - Translation Metabolic regulation: - Genetic level - Metabolic pathway control - Cell receptor
Central Dogma
Central Dogma: universal
DNA Replication in
Cell Division Cycle (Mitosis)
Transcription
http://www.ncc.gmu.edu/dna/mRNAanim.htm
Transcription
DNA template
Promoter RNA polymerase Operator Gene 1 Gene 2 Gene 3
m-RNA
Transcription
Transcription requires: - RNA polymerases - Growth of RNA polymers is energy requiring. - Activated ribonucleotide triphosphate: ATP, GTP, UTP, CTP.
Transcription Process
- Initiation: The sigma factor recognizes a specific sequence of nucleotides on a DNA strand promoter region. the strands unwound. - Elongation: Transcription starts with the core enzyme then the sigma factor is released. - Termination: RNA polymerase encounter a stop signal or transcription terminator (e.g. rho protein in procaryotes). - the RNA polymerase dissociate from the DNA template - the RNA transcript is released.
Translation
Translation
Translation is the final step on the way from DNA to protein. - It is the synthesis of proteins directed by a mRNA template. - The information contained in the nucleotide sequence of the mRNA is read as three letter words (triplets), called codons. - Each word stands for one amino acid. - During translation amino acids are linked together to form a polypeptide chain which will later be folded into a protein.
Translation
Important Components: Ribosome: The ribosome is the cellular factory responsible for the protein synthesis. It consists of two different subunits, one small and one large and is built up from rRNA and proteins. sedimentation coefficients rough mass determination: 30S (small subunits) and 50S (big subunits) for procaryotes 40S (small subunits) and 60S (big subunits) for eucaryotes Inside the ribosome the amino acids are linked together into a chain through multiple biochemical reactions.
Translation-Components
t-RNA:
The charged t-RNA (aminoacyl-t-RNA) carries an amino acid at one end and has a triplet of nucleotides, an anticodon, at the other end.
It is formed by the energy from two phosphate bonds and enzymes (aminoacyl-t-RNA synthetases) The anticodon of a t-RNA molecule can basepair, i.e form chemical bonds, with the m-RNA's three letter codon. The t-RNA acts as the translator between m-RNA and protein by bringing the specific amino acid coded for by the m-RNA codon.
t-RNA
Translation-Components
m-RNA template
The translation process also involves a large number of protein factors that facilitate binding of mRNA and tRNA to the ribosome. Protein synthesis consumes a large part of the energy produced in the cell.
Translation Processes
Translation consists of Initiation, Elongation and Termination.
http://www.phschool.com/science/biology_place/biocoach/translation/init.html
Initiation results in the formation of an initiation complex in which the ribosome is bound to the specific initiation (start) site on the mRNA while the initiator tRNA charged with (Nformyl)methionine is annealed to the initiator codon and bound to the ribosome. - Protein synthesis begins with a AUG codon (less frequently GUG) on the m-RNA AUG encodes for a modified methionine, N-formylmethionine (fMet). In the middle of protein, AUG encodes for methionine.
Translation Processes
Elongation joins amino acids to the growing polypeptide chain according to the sequence specified by the message. - The formation of the peptide bond between the two amino acids occurs on adjacent sites on the ribosome: the P or peptidyl site and the A or aminoacyl site. - The growing protein occupies the P site, while the next amino acid to be added occupies the A site. - As the peptide bond is formed, the t-RNA associated with the P site is released.
http://www.phschool.com/science/biology_place/biocoach/translation/elong1.html
Translation Processes
Termination - At a stop codon, a release factor reads the triplet, and polypeptide synthesis ends. - the polypeptide is released from the tRNA. - the tRNA is released from the ribosome, the two ribosomal subunits separate from the mRNA.
http://www.phschool.com/science/biology_place/biocoach/translation/term.html
Posttranslation
Posttranslational modification means the chemical modification of a protein after its translation. It is one of the later steps in protein biosynthesis. It may involve the folding of a proper structure, the formation of disulfide bridges and attachment of any of a number of biochemical functional groups, such as phosphate, acetate, various lipids and carbohydrates.
e.g. phosphorylation catalyzed by enzymes such as with kinase. (e.g. phosphorylated TP53 protein functions as tumor suppressor).