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Gene Expression Defines Cells. http:// www.ornl.gov/hgmis. Recall the Central Dogma. Info. Info Carrier. Functional Product. DNA RNA PROTEIN. All Information is in DNA. http:// www.ornl.gov/hgmis. DNA is a Nucleic Acid. Principle information molecules in the cell
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Gene Expression Defines Cells http://www.ornl.gov/hgmis
Recall the Central Dogma Info Info Carrier Functional Product DNA RNA PROTEIN
All Information is in DNA http://www.ornl.gov/hgmis
DNA is a Nucleic Acid • Principle information molecules in the cell • Linear polymer of nucleotides (or bases) • Two types • Deoxyribonucleic Acid – DNA • Information storage in cells • Ribonucleic Acid – RNA • Information carrier in cells
Nucleotides in DNA • Three components • Nitrogenous Base (A, C, G, T) • Ribose Sugar • Phosphate
DNA and RNA • For DNA bases are A, C, G, T • Sugar is deoxyribose (no OH at 2’ position) • For RNA bases are A, C, G. U • Sugar is ribose (OH at 2’ position)
Complementary Base Pairing • Holds nucleic acid strands together • H-bonding between complementary bases • This is an interaction that is easily broken • A pairs with T (DNA), (A-U for RNA) • G pairs with C (both DNA and RNA)
DNA is Transcribed http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:DNA_transcription.gif
Transcription Initiation Promoter with Transcription Factors http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/91/Simple_transcription_initiation1.svg/721px-Simple_transcription_initiation1.svg.png
Transcription and Translation http://stemcells.nih.gov/StaticResources/info/scireport/images/figurea6.jpg
Proteins Primary functional molecules of the cell; execute the tasks directed by the genetic material • Structural molecules (e.g., hair, fingernails, connective tissue) • Transmitting Information between cells (e.g., hormones) • Defense against infection (e.g., antibodies) • Enzymes (catalyze nearly all biochemical reactions)
Building Blocks are Amino Acids • 20 different amino acids in proteins • Chemical properties of side chains determine function • Central carbon atom (Ca) • H atom • Amino group (NH3+) • Carboxyl group (COO-) • R group (side chain)
R-group (Side Chain) • R -group determines identity, function • A.A. are categorized by chemical properties of the side chains 1) Polar (uncharged) = hydrophilic 2) Positively charged (basic) = ionic 3) Negatively charged (acidic) = ionic 4) Nonpolar = hydrophobic
Nonpolar Amino Acids The side chains of these a.a. tend to be located in the interior of proteins, where they are not in contact with water.
Peptide Bond • Links amino acids • Amide linkage between -NH3 and -COO- • Defines amino (N) terminus and carboxy (C) terminus
Protein Structure • Polypeptide (protein) chains fold into globular structure • Defines cracks and crevices that can interact with other molecules • Allows proteins to be enzymes
Enzymes • Enzymes are catalysts • They increase the rate of reactions • This allows rapid synthesis and degradation of products in cells
Building Proteins -Translation • mRNA contains 3 nucleotide codons • Each codon specifies an amino acid • Triplet codons are decoded by tRNA • decoding is base pairing between codon on mRNA and anticodon on tRNA • Each tRNA carries a specific amino acid • codon-anticodon pairing delivers specific aa to the growing polypeptide chain "protein: synthesis." Online Art. Britannica Student Encyclopædia. 10 Aug. 2008 <http://student.britannica.com/eb/art-1692>.
Overview of Gene Expression http://www.ornl.gov/hgmis