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Gene Expression: from DNA to protein to phenotype. How is DNA transcribed to RNA? How is mRNA translated to protein? How do alterations in DNA lead to alterations in phenotype?.
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Gene Expression: from DNA to protein to phenotype • How is DNA transcribed to RNA? • How is mRNA translated to protein? • How do alterations in DNA lead to alterations in phenotype?
Q: This figure shows gene expression in what type of cell? (polyribosome = complex of ribosomes + mRNA + polypeptide chains being synthesized) Prokaryotic cell Eukaryotic cell Could be either prokaryotic or eukaryotic
Q: What is the direction of transcription in this figure? left to right right to left not enough information to determine
Q: The sequence below is a portion of the template strand of DNA. What is the RNA sequence transcribed from this template? 5’-AAGCTGAGCGAT-3’ • 5’-AAGCUGAGCGAU-3’ • 5’-TTCGACTCGCTA-3’ • 5’-AUCGCUCAGCUU-3’ • 5’-UUCGACUCGCUA-3’ • 5’-ATCGCTCAGCTT-3’
Q: The sequence below is the 5’ end of an mRNA; what are the first four amino acids of the polypeptide that will be translated from it? 5’-UACGAGUAUGCCAGGUCAG…. • N-TyrGluTyrAla…. • N-AspTrpThrVal…. • N-MetProGlyGln…. • C-MetProGlyGln…. • N-TyrThrArgGlu….
Q: The sequence below is the 5’ end of an mRNA; what are the first three amino acids of the polypeptide that will be translated from it? 5’-AUAUGAGUAUGCCAGGUC…. • C-MetSerMet…. • N-MetSerMet…. • N-MetProGly…. • N-IleTyrMet…. • N-Ile(Stop)….
Q: The sickle cell mutation changes a glutamic acid (glu) to valine (val). What is the specific base change in the DNA? A→T A→U A→G G→A G→C
Which type of mutation is most likely to render a protein non-functional? A mis-sense mutation A nonsense mutation near the 3’ end of the coding region A single nucleotide deletion near the 5’ end of the coding region A single nucleotide insertion near the 3’ end of the coding region A 3-nucleotide deletion in the middle of the coding sequence.
Questions for discussion: • What is a mutation? • Do healthy people have “mutations” in their DNA? • Do all “mutations” have bad consequences?
Genomics is now, and it’s personal! • Resnick TED talk • 23 and Me SNP (single nucleotide polymorphism) profiling http://www.mun.ca/biology/scarr/DNA_Chips.html
Breast cancer (BRCA1,2) What do these 3 SNPs: 185delAG, 5382insC, and 6174delT have in common?
Lactose intolerance Based on this information, what is the mode of inheritance of lactose intolerance?
Closer look at prostate cancer Overall heritability estimate: 42-57% Asian ancestry: 16.4% Average risk: 11.2% European ancestry: 15.3% Average risk: 17.8%