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Molecular Biology. the study of biology at a molecular levelbiology and chemistry, particularly genetics and biochemistryinterrelationship
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1. Molecular Biology in a Nutshell
2. Molecular Biology
the study of biology at a molecular level
biology and chemistry, particularly genetics and biochemistry
interrelationship & interactions between DNA, RNA and protein biosynthesis
how these interactions are regulated.
3. Outline
Molecular Biology in the Cell
Gene Expression
Regulation of Gene Expression
4. Molecular Biology in the Cell
Prokaryotes: single cells without nucleus, (generally) no internal membranes, like bacteria
Eukaryotes: multicellular-nucleus, genetic materials in nucleus, all higher organisms
5. An Animal Cell with major organelles
(1) nucleolus (2) nucleus
(3) ribosome (4) vesicle
(5) rough endoplasmic reticulum (ER)
(6) Golgi apparatus (7) Cytoskeleton
(8) smooth ER (9) mitochondria
(10) vacuole (11) cytoplasm
(12) lysosome (13) centrioles
6. Four Classes of Biological Molecules
Carbohydrates: storage and transport of energy (starch, glycogen); structural components (cellulose in plants, chitin in animals)
Lipids: nutrients, energy storage, structural components; hydrophobic character
Proteins
Nucleic Acids
7. Protein
Structure
a chain of amino acids
Each amino acid has a central carbon (Ca), an
amino (NH2) group, a carboxyl (COOH) group,
a hydrogen (H) atom, and one side chain(R).
20 amino acids vary only at side chains
function is derived from 3D structure, and
3D structure is specified by amino acid sequence
8. Protein
Function
build up framework of the cell (structure & movement)
control the transcription and translation
control the degradation of proteins
9. Nucleic Acids A chain of nucleotides
Nucleotide: a nucleoside and a phosphate
Nucleoside: a base and a pentose(sugar)
10. Nucleic Acids
Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA)
Ribonucleic Acid (RNA)
11. DNA
the molecule storing
genetic information
Double stranded chain
of nucleotides with
4 types of bases: A T C G
12. DNA Replication
The process of DNA to make an exact
copy of itself
Denaturation: strand separation
Renaturation: two separated
complementary strands to reform a
double helix
Hybridization: two separated strands
to reform a double helix
13. RNA Transfer genetic information from DNA to protein synthesis
Single strand
4 types of bases: A U C G
Less stable than DNA
3 major types:
mRNA: messenger RNAs, code for proteins rRNA: ribosomal RNAs, form the basic structure of the ribosome and catalyze protein synthesis
tRNA: transfer RNAs, adaptors in protein synthesis between mRNA and amino acids
14. RNA Structure
primary structure
secondary structure
A) single stranded regions
B) duplex
C) hairpin
D) internal loop
E) bulge loop
F) junction
G) pseudoknot
15. RNA Structure
primary structure
secondary structure tertiary structure
16. Molecular Biology in the Cell
Molecules are held together by chemical bonds and forces(ionic, covalent, hydrogen bond, nonpolar association, van der Waals forces)
Properties of molecules determine possible interaction
Complex interactions of molecules determine cell structures and processes
17. Gene Expression
The process during which the genetic information of certain gene is translated into protein
Products of Gene Expression: RNA & Protein
Transcription
Posttranscription
Translation
Central Dogma
19. Gene Gene:
a segment in DNA molecule, located
in a particular position on a specific
chromosome, whose base sequence
contains the information necessary
for protein synthesis
Chromosomes
a molecule of DNA in a cell
Genome
an organisms complete set of DNA
(600,000bp-3billion bp)
20. Gene
Comprise only about 2% of the human genome
The size of a gene is on average 3,000 bp, but vary greatly
More than half of predicted genes are function-unknown
Repeats make up half of the genome
Non-coding regions: do not code for the gene products, but regulate gene expression
Promoter: regulatory region of DNA located upstream of a gene, providing a control point for regulated gene transcription
21. Genetic code
set of rules by which information encoded
in genetic material (DNA or RNA sequences)
is translated into proteins
defines a mapping between
codons and amino acids
Codon: tri-nucleotide sequence
specifying a single amino acid
start/stop codons: Translation begin/stop signals
22. Open reading frame(ORF)
a portion of an organism's genome which contains a sequence of bases that could potentially encode a protein
locatied between a start codon(AUG/ATG) and a stop codon
23. Transcription(DNA-mRNA)
the synthesis of an RNA employing a DNA region as a template
different types of enzyme responsible for the synthesis of different RNA
proceeds in the 5' ? 3' direction, and uses base pairing complimentarity
24. Post-transcription pre-mRNA is converted into mature mRNA
Modification: RNA splicing
25. Post-transcription each exon contains part of the open reading frame (ORF) that codes for a specific portion of the complete protein
Alternative Splicing: combination of exons
26. Translation
occurs in the cytoplasm where the ribosomes are located
According to genetic code, mRNAs are decoded to produce a chain of amino acids that form a protein
tRNA: a sequence of three complementary base; a single amino acid
the amino acid is added to the growing protein chain
27. Steps Leading from Gene to Protein
28. Procedure
1) DNA->pre-mRNA
2) pre-mRNA->mature mRNA
3) nucleus-> cytoplasm
4) mature mRNA->protein
5) protein remain in cytoplasm
6)-10) proteins transferred to
and stored in other organelles
29. Central Dogma DNA has the genetic information
RNA is the intermidiate
Information flow: once information has passed into protein, it cannot get out again
Possible: nucleic acid-> nucleic acid;
nucleic acid-> protein
Impossible: protein-> nucleic acid
protein-> protein
30. Regulation of Gene Expression
Regulatory mechanisms which repress or enhance the level of gene expression so that only certain genes in an organism can be expressed in a specific cell.
Result:
control the amount & timing of changes of functional product of a gene(RNA or protein)
control the structure and function of a cell
Any step of the gene's expression may be modulated:
from DNA-RNA transcription to post-translational modification of a protein
31. Regulation of transcription
controls when transcription occurs and how much RNA is created
Repressors:
a DNA-binding protein that decreases the rate of transcription; binds to non-coding sequences on the DNA strand that are close to the promoter region, impeding RNA enzyme's progress along the strand, thus impeding the expression of the gene
Activators:
a DNA-binding protein that increases the rate of transcription;
enhances the interaction between RNA enzyme and a particular promoter, encouraging the expression of the gene.
32. Posttranscriptional Regulation regulation on how much the mRNA is translated into Proteins
Capping
Splicing
Addition of poly(A) tails
33. Up-regulation& down-regulation triggered by a signal (internal or external to the cell)
Up-regulation: a process resulting in increased expression of genes and the protein encoded by those genes
Down-regulation: a process resulting in decreased expression of genes and corresponding protein expression
34. Image Credits
U.S. Department of Energy Human Genome Program, http://www.ornl.gov/hgmis
Molecular Biology of the Cell http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books
Access Excellence, Graphics Gallery http://www.accessexcellence.org/AB/GG/