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Protein Synthesis. DNA & RNA. DNA. Deoxyribonucleic Acid Shape - double helix - twisted ladder. DNA cont. Made up of three parts A sugar molecule - deoxyribose A phosphate group A nitrogen base Adenine Guanine Cytosine Thymine. Bases.
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Protein Synthesis DNA & RNA
DNA • Deoxyribonucleic Acid • Shape - double helix - twisted ladder
DNA cont. • Made up of three parts • A sugar molecule - deoxyribose • A phosphate group • A nitrogen base • Adenine • Guanine • Cytosine • Thymine
Bases • Purines - 2 rings of carbon and nitrogen atoms • Adenine • Guanine • Pyrimidines - 1 ring of carbon and nitrogen atoms • Thymine • Cytosine
Complementary Base Pairing • Nucleotides that normally pair together • 2 Base-pairing rules • Cytosine bonds with guanine • Adenine bonds with thymine • Base pairs connect by hydrogen bonds
The DNA Songto the tune of "Row, Row, Row your Boat We love DNA, made of nucleotides. Sugar, phosphate and a base bonded down one side. Adenine and thymine make a lovely pair, cytosine without guanine would feel very bare.
Replication of DNA • Replication= process of copying DNA in the cell. • 1. Two nucleotide chains are separated by helicase enzyme. (AKA replication fork) • 2. Hydrogen bonds within DNA are broken. • 3. DNA polymerases attached to strands. • 4. Complimentary DNA strands are formed. • 5. New strands bind with old strands resulting in two full strands of DNA.
RNA • Ribonucleic Acid • Shape - Single helix
Three Type of RNA • Messanger RNA (mRNA) • Carries genetic material from DNA in the nucleus to the cytosol. • Transfer RNA (tRNA) • Hairpin shaped. • Binds directly to amino acids. • Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) • Most abundant type of RNA • Assist in production of proteins
RNA cont. • Made up of three parts • A sugar molecule - ribose • A phosphate group • A nitrogen base • Adenine • Guanine • Cytosine • Uracil
Complementary Base Pairing • 2 Base-pairing rules • Cytosine bonds with guanine • Adenine bonds with URACIL
General Information • One strand of the DNA double helix is used as a template • DNA is only found in the nucleus • Protein synthesis takes place in ribosomes.
Breaking the Bonds • RNA polymerase bumps into the promotor site of the DNA • Helicase is an enzyme used to unzip the DNA • Occurs inside the nucleus!
Breaking the Bonds cont. • Messenger RNA (mRNA) is synthesized by RNA polymerase until a stop signal is reached.
After mRNA is Made • Helix zips the DNA molecule as hydrogen bonds form • mRNA leaves the nucleus
mRNA • mRNA leaves the nucleus through pores in the nuclear membrane and travels to the cytoplasm • Every 3 bases make what is known as a codon • Look on page 195 of text
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Something to notice • There is only one start codon. • For translation to occur, mRNA must have AUG. • There are three stop codons. • Translation will stop if mRNA reaches UAA, UAG or UGA.
Translation • Ribosomes bind with the mRNA at the start codon (AUG) • tRNA (transfer RNA) has an anticodon (three nitrogenous bases that are complementary to the codon on mRNA) that codes for the same amino acid.
Translation cont. • tRNA finds the amino acid that the genetic code asks for and bring it to the ribosomes.
Translation • What would the tRNA sequence be?
Translation cont. • The ribosomes build peptide bonds connecting the amino acids to form a polypeptide.
Ending Translation • At the end, the stop codon terminates translation • The complete polypeptide is released from the ribosome.
Termination of Translation • What would the peptide sequence be?
How many stop codons are there?
Proteins Synthesis • DNA is “unzipped” • mRNA is made and leaves the nucleus • tRNA takes the amino acids to the ribosomes • Protein is made