Chapter 17 From
Gene to Protein
Lecture Outline
Overview: The Flow of
Genetic Information
·
The
information content of DNA is in the form of specific sequences of nucleotides
along the DNA strands.
·
The
DNA inherited by an organism leads to specific traits by dictating the
synthesis of proteins.
·
Gene
expression, the process by which DNA directs protein synthesis, includes two
stages called transcription and translation.
·
Proteins
are the links between genotype and phenotype.
°
For
example, Mendel’s dwarf pea plants lack a functioning copy of the gene that
specifies the synthesis of a key protein, gibberellin.
°
Gibberellins
stimulate the normal elongation of stems.
Concept 17.1 Genes specify proteins via transcription and
translation
The study of metabolic defects provided
evidence that genes specify proteins.
·
In
1909, Archibald Gerrod was the first to suggest that genes dictate phenotype
through enzymes that catalyze specific chemical reactions in the cell.
°
He
suggested that the symptoms of an inherited disease reflect a person’s
inability to synthesize a particular enzyme.
°
He
referred to such diseases as “inborn errors of metabolism.”
·
Gerrod
speculated that alkaptonuria, a hereditary disease, was caused by the absence
of an enzyme that breaks down a specific substrate, alkapton.
°
Research
conducted several decades later supported Gerrod’s hypothesis.
·
Progress
in linking genes and enzymes rested on the growing understanding that cells
synthesize and degrade most organic molecules in a series of steps, a metabolic
pathway.
·
In
the 1930s, George Beadle and Boris Ephrussi speculated that each mutation
affecting eye color in Drosophila
blocks pigment synthesis at a specific step by preventing production of the
enzyme that catalyzes that step.
°
However,
neither the chemical reactions nor the enzymes that catalyze them were known at
the time.
·
Beadle
and Edward Tatum were finally able to establish the link between genes and
enzymes in their exploration of the metabolism of a bread mold, Neurospora crassa.
°
They
bombarded Neurospora with X-rays and
screened the survivors for mutants that differed in their nutritional needs.
°
Wild-type
Neurospora can grow on a minimal medium of agar, inorganic salts,
glucose, and the vitamin biotin.
·
Beadle
and Tatum identified mutants that could not survive on minimal medium, because
they were unable to synthesize certain essential molecules from the minimal
ingredients.
°
However,
most of these nutritional mutants can
survive on a complete growth medium
that includes all 20 amino acids and a few other nutrients.
·
One
type of mutant required only the addition of arginine to the minimal growth
medium.
°
Beadle
and Tatum concluded that this mutant was defective somewhere in the biochemical
pathway that normally synthesizes arginine.
°
They
identified three classes of arginine-deficient mutants, each apparently lacking
a key enzyme at a different step in the synthesis of arginine.
°
They
demonstrated this by growing these mutant strains in media that provided
different intermediate molecules.
°
Their
results provided strong evidence for the one
gene–one enzyme hypothesis.
·
Later
research refined the one gene–one enzyme hypothesis.
·
First,
not all proteins are enzymes.
°
Keratin,
the structural protein of hair, and insulin, a hormone, both are proteins and
gene products.
·
This
tweaked the hypothesis to one gene–one
protein.
·
Later
research demonstrated that many proteins are composed of several polypeptides,
each of which has its own gene.
·
Therefore,
Beadle and Tatum’s idea has been restated as the one gene–one polypeptide hypothesis.
·
Some
genes code for RNA molecules that play important roles in cells although they
are never translated into protein.
Transcription and translation are the two main
processes linking gene to protein.
·
Genes
provide the instructions for making specific proteins.
·
The
bridge between DNA and protein synthesis is the nucleic acid RNA.
·
RNA
is chemically similar to DNA, except that it contains ribose as its sugar and
substitutes the nitrogenous base uracil for thymine.
°
An
RNA molecule almost always consists of a single strand.
·
In
DNA or RNA, the four nucleotide monomers act like the letters of the alphabet
to communicate information.
·
The
specific sequence of hundreds or thousands of nucleotides in each gene carries
the information for the primary structure of proteins, the linear order of the
20 possible amino acids.
·
To
get from DNA, written in one chemical language, to protein, written in another,
requires two major stages: transcription and translation.
·
During
transcription, a DNA strand provides
a template for the synthesis of a complementary RNA strand.
°
Just
as a DNA strand provides a template for the synthesis of each new complementary
strand during DNA replication, it provides a template for assembling a sequence
of RNA nucleotides.
·
Transcription
of many genes produces a messenger RNA
(mRNA) molecule.
·
During
translation, there is a change of
language.
°
The
site of translation is the ribosome,
complex particles that facilitate the orderly assembly of amino acids into
polypeptide chains.
·
Why
can’t proteins be translated directly from DNA?
°
The
use of an RNA intermediate provides protection for DNA and its genetic
information.
°
Using
an RNA intermediate allows more copies of a protein to be made simultaneously,
since many RNA transcripts can be made from one gene.
§
Also,
each gene transcript can be translated repeatedly.
·
The
basic mechanics of transcription and translation are similar in eukaryotes and
prokaryotes.
·
Because
bacteria lack nuclei, their DNA is not segregated from ribosomes and other
protein-synthesizing equipment.
°
This
allows the coupling of transcription and translation.
°
Ribosomes
attach to the leading end of an mRNA molecule while transcription is still in
progress.
·
In
a eukaryotic cell, transcription occurs in the nucleus, and translation occurs
at ribosomes in the cytoplasm.
°
The
transcription of a protein-coding eukaryotic gene results in pre-mRNA.
°
The
initial RNA transcript of any gene is called a primary transcript.
°
RNA processing yields the finished mRNA.
·
To
summarize, genes program protein synthesis via genetic messages in the form of
messenger RNA.
·
The
molecular chain of command in a cell is DNA à RNA à protein.
In the genetic code, nucleotide triplets
specify amino acids.
·
If
the genetic code consisted of a single nucleotide or even pairs of nucleotides
per amino acid, there would not be enough combinations (4 and 16, respectively)
to code for all 20 amino acids.
·
Triplets
of nucleotide bases are the smallest units of uniform length that can code for
all the amino acids.
·
With
a triplet code, three consecutive
bases specify an amino acid, creating 43 (64) possible code words.
·
The
genetic instructions for a polypeptide chain are written in DNA as a series of
nonoverlapping three-nucleotide words.
·
During
transcription, one DNA strand, the template
strand, provides a template for ordering the sequence of nucleotides in an
RNA transcript.
°
A
given DNA strand can be the template strand for some genes along a DNA
molecule, while for other genes in other regions, the complementary strand may
function as the template.
·
The
complementary RNA molecule is synthesized according to base-pairing rules,
except that uracil is the complementary base to adenine.
·
Like
a new strand of DNA, the RNA molecule is synthesized in an antiparallel
direction to the template strand of DNA.
·
The
mRNA base triplets are called codons,
and they are written in the 5’ à 3’ direction.
·
During
translation, the sequence of codons along an mRNA molecule is translated into a
sequence of amino acids making up the polypeptide chain.
°
During
translation, the codons are read in the 5’ à 3’ direction along the
mRNA.
°
Each
codon specifies which one of the 20 amino acids will be incorporated at the
corresponding position along a polypeptide.
·
Because
codons are base triplets, the number of nucleotides making up a genetic message
must be three times the number of amino acids making up the protein product.
°
It
takes at least 300 nucleotides to code for a polypeptide that is 100 amino
acids long.
·
The
task of matching each codon to its amino acid counterpart began in the early
1960s.
·
Marshall
Nirenberg determined the first match: UUU coded for the amino acid
phenylalanine.
°
He
created an artificial mRNA molecule entirely of uracil and added it to a test
tube mixture of amino acids, ribosomes, and other components for protein
synthesis.
°
This
“poly-U” translated into a polypeptide containing a single amino acid,
phenylalanine, in a long chain.
·
AAA, GGG, and CCC were solved in the same way.
·
Other
more elaborate techniques were required to decode mixed triplets such as AUA
and CGA.
·
By
the mid-1960s the entire code was deciphered.
°
Sixty-one
of 64 triplets code for amino acids.
°
The
codon AUG not only codes for the amino acid methionine, but also indicates the
“start” of translation.
°
Three
codons do not indicate amino acids but are “stop” signals marking the
termination of translation.
·
There
is redundancy in the genetic code but
no ambiguity.
°
Several
codons may specify the same amino acid, but no codon specifies more than one
amino acid.
°
The
redundancy in the code is not random. In many cases, codons that are synonyms
for a particular amino acid differ only in the third base of the triplet.
·
To
extract the message from the genetic code requires specifying the correct
starting point.
°
This
establishes the reading frame; subsequent
codons are read in groups of three nucleotides.
°
The
cell’s protein-synthesizing machinery reads the message as a series of
nonoverlapping three-letter words.
·
In
summary, genetic information is encoded as a sequence of nonoverlapping base
triplets, or codons, each of which is translated into a specific amino acid
during protein synthesis.
The genetic code must have evolved very early
in the history of life.
·
The
genetic code is nearly universal, shared by organisms from the simplest
bacteria to the most complex plants and animals.
·
In
laboratory experiments, genes can be transcribed and translated after they are
transplanted from one species to another.
°
This
has permitted bacteria to be programmed to synthesize certain human proteins
after insertion of the appropriate human genes.
·
Such
applications are exciting developments in biotechnology.
·
Exceptions
to the universality of the genetic code exist in certain unicellular eukaryotes
and in the organelle genes of some species.
°
Some
prokaryotes can translate stop codons into one of two amino acids not found in
most organisms.
·
The
evolutionary significance of the near
universality of the genetic code is clear.
°
A
language shared by all living things arose very early in the history of
life—early enough to be present in the common ancestors of all modern
organisms.
·
A
shared genetic vocabulary is a reminder of the kinship that bonds all life on
Earth.
Concept 17.2 Transcription is the DNA-directed
synthesis of RNA: a closer look
·
Messenger
RNA, the carrier of information from DNA to the cell’s protein-synthesizing
machinery, is transcribed from the template strand of a gene.
·
RNA polymerase separates the DNA strands
at the appropriate point and bonds the RNA nucleotides as they base-pair along
the DNA template.
°
Like
DNA polymerases, RNA polymerases can only assemble a polynucleotide in its 5’ à 3’ direction.
°
Unlike
DNA polymerases, RNA polymerases are able to start a chain from scratch; they
don’t need a primer.
·
Specific
sequences of nucleotides along the DNA mark where gene transcription begins and
ends.
°
RNA
polymerase attaches and initiates transcription at the promoter.
°
In
prokaryotes, the sequence that signals the end of transcription is called the terminator.
·
Molecular
biologists refer to the direction of transcription as “downstream” and the
other direction as “upstream.”
·
The
stretch of DNA that is transcribed into an RNA molecule is called a transcription unit.
·
Bacteria
have a single type of RNA polymerase that synthesizes all RNA molecules.
·
In
contrast, eukaryotes have three RNA polymerases (I, II, and III) in their
nuclei.
°
RNA
polymerase II is used for mRNA synthesis.
·
Transcription
can be separated into three stages: initiation, elongation, and termination of
the RNA chain.
·
The
presence of a promoter sequence determines which strand of the DNA helix is the
template.
°
Within
the promoter is the starting point for the transcription of a gene.
°
The
promoter also includes a binding site for RNA polymerase several dozen
nucleotides “upstream” of the start point.
·
In
prokaryotes, RNA polymerase can recognize and bind directly to the promoter
region.
·
In
eukaryotes, proteins called transcription
factors mediate the binding of RNA polymerase and the initiation of
transcription.
·
Only
after certain transcription factors are attached to the promoter does RNA
polymerase II bind to it.
·
The
completed assembly of transcription factors and RNA polymerase II bound to a
promoter is called a transcription
initiation complex.
°
A
crucial promoter DNA sequence is called a TATA
box.
·
RNA
polymerase then starts transcription.
·
As
RNA polymerase moves along the DNA, it untwists the double helix, 10 to 20
bases at time.
°
The
enzyme adds nucleotides to the 3’ end of the growing strand.
·
Behind
the point of RNA synthesis, the double helix re-forms and the RNA molecule
peels away.
°
Transcription
progresses at a rate of 60 nucleotides per second in eukaryotes.
·
A
single gene can be transcribed simultaneously by several RNA polymerases at a
time.
·
A
growing strand of RNA trails off from each polymerase.
°
The
length of each new strand reflects how far along the template the enzyme has
traveled from the start point.
·
The
congregation of many polymerase molecules simultaneously transcribing a single
gene increases the amount of mRNA transcribed from it.
·
This
helps the cell make the encoded protein in large amounts.
·
Transcription
proceeds until after the RNA polymerase transcribes a terminator sequence in
the DNA.
°
In
prokaryotes, RNA polymerase stops transcription right at the end of the
terminator.
§
Both
the RNA and DNA are then released.
°
In
eukaryotes, the pre-mRNA is cleaved from the growing RNA chain while RNA
polymerase II continues to transcribe the DNA.
§
Specifically,
the polymerase transcribes a DNA sequence called the polyadenylation signal
sequence that codes for a polyadenylation sequence (AAUAAA) in the pre-mRNA.
§
At
a point about 10 to 35 nucleotides past this sequence, the pre-mRNA is cut from
the enzyme.
§
The
polymerase continues transcribing for hundreds of nucleotides.
§
Transcription
is terminated when the polymerase eventually falls off the DNA.
Concept 17.3 Eukaryotic cells modify RNA after
transcription
·
Enzymes
in the eukaryotic nucleus modify pre-mRNA before the genetic messages are
dispatched to the cytoplasm.
°
During
RNA processing, both ends of the primary transcript are usually altered.
°
Certain
interior parts of the molecule are cut out and the remaining parts spliced
together.
·
At
the 5’ end of the pre-mRNA molecule, a modified form of guanine is added, the 5’ cap.
·
At
the 3’ end, an enzyme adds 50 to 250 adenine nucleotides, the poly-A tail.
·
These
modifications share several important functions.
°
They
seem to facilitate the export of mRNA from the nucleus.
°
They
help protect mRNA from hydrolytic enzymes.
°
They
help the ribosomes attach to the 5’ end of the mRNA.
·
The
most remarkable stage of RNA processing occurs during the removal of a large
portion of the RNA molecule in a cut-and-paste job of RNA splicing.
·
Most
eukaryotic genes and their RNA transcripts have long noncoding stretches of
nucleotides.
°
Noncoding
segments of nucleotides called intervening regions, or introns, lie between coding regions.
°
The
final mRNA transcript includes coding regions, exons, which are translated into amino acid sequences, plus the
leader and trailer sequences.
·
RNA
splicing removes introns and joins exons to create an mRNA molecule with a
continuous coding sequence.
·
This
splicing is accomplished by a spliceosome.
°
Spliceosomes
consist of a variety of proteins and several small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) that recognize the splice
sites.
°
snRNPs
are located in the cell nucleus and are composed of RNA and protein molecules.
°
Each
snRNP has several protein molecules and a small
nuclear RNA molecule (snRNA).
§
Each snRNA is about 150 nucleotides long.
·
The
spliceosome interacts with certain sites along an intron, releasing the introns
and joining together the two exons that flanked the introns.
°
snRNAs
appear to play a major role in catalytic processes, as well as spliceosome
assembly and splice site recognition.
·
The
idea of a catalytic role for snRNA arose from the discovery of ribozymes, RNA molecules that function
as enzymes.
°
In
some organisms, splicing occurs without proteins or additional RNA molecules.
°
The
intron RNA functions as a ribozyme and catalyzes its own excision.
°
For
example, in the protozoan Tetrahymena,
self-splicing occurs in the production of ribosomal RNA (rRNA), a component of
the organism’s ribosomes.
°
The
pre-rRNA actually removes its own introns.
·
The
discovery of ribozymes rendered obsolete the statement, “All biological
catalysts are proteins.”
·
The
fact that RNA is single-stranded plays an important role in allowing certain
RNA molecules to function as ribozymes.
·
A
region of the RNA molecule may base-pair with a complementary region elsewhere
in the same molecule, thus giving the RNA a specific 3-D structure that is key
to its ability to catalyze reactions.
·
Introns
and RNA splicing appear to have several functions.
°
Some
introns play a regulatory role in the cell. These introns contain sequences
that control gene activity in some way.
°
Splicing
itself may regulate the passage of mRNA from the nucleus to the cytoplasm.
°
One
clear benefit of split genes is to enable one gene to encode for more than one
polypeptide.
·
Alternative RNA splicing gives rise to two or more
different polypeptides, depending on which segments are treated as exons.
°
Sex
differences in fruit flies may be due to differences in splicing RNA
transcribed from certain genes.
°
Early
results of the Human Genome Project indicate that this phenomenon may be common
in humans, and may explain why we have a relatively small number of genes.
·
Proteins
often have a modular architecture with discrete structural and functional
regions called domains.
·
The
presence of introns in a gene may facilitate the evolution of new and
potentially useful proteins as a result of a process known as exon shuffling.
°
In
many cases, different exons code for different domains of a protein.
·
The
presence of introns increases the probability of potentially beneficial
crossing over between genes.
°
Introns
increase the opportunity for recombination between two alleles of a gene.
§
This
raises the probability that a crossover will switch one version of an exon for
another version found on the homologous chromosome.
°
There
may also be occasional mixing and matching of exons between completely
different genes.
°
Either
way, exon shuffling can lead to new proteins through novel combinations of
functions.
Concept 17.4 Translation is the RNA-directed
synthesis of a polypeptide: a closer look
·
In
the process of translation, a cell interprets a series of codons along an mRNA
molecule and builds a polypeptide.
·
The
interpreter is transfer RNA (tRNA),
which transfers amino acids from the cytoplasmic pool to a ribosome.
°
A
cell has all 20 amino acids available in its cytoplasm, either by synthesizing
them from scratch or by taking them up from the surrounding solution.
·
The
ribosome adds each amino acid carried by tRNA to the growing end of the
polypeptide chain.
·
During
translation, each type of tRNA links an mRNA codon with the appropriate amino
acid.
·
Each
tRNA arriving at the ribosome carries a specific amino acid at one end and has
a specific nucleotide triplet, an anticodon,
at the other.
·
The
anticodon base-pairs with a complementary codon on mRNA.
°
If
the codon on mRNA is UUU, a tRNA with an AAA anticodon and carrying
phenylalanine will bind to it.
·
Codon
by codon, tRNAs deposit amino acids in the prescribed order, and the ribosome
joins them into a polypeptide chain.
·
The
tRNA molecule is a translator, because it can read a nucleic acid word (the
mRNA codon) and translate it to a protein word (the amino acid).
·
Like
other types of RNA, tRNA molecules are transcribed from DNA templates in the
nucleus.
·
Once
it reaches the cytoplasm, each tRNA is used repeatedly, picking up its
designated amino acid in the cytosol, depositing the amino acid at the
ribosome, and returning to the cytosol to pick up another copy of that amino
acid.
·
A
tRNA molecule consists of a strand of about 80 nucleotides that folds back on
itself to form a three-dimensional structure.
°
It
includes a loop containing the anticodon and an attachment site at the 3’ end
for an amino acid.
·
If
each anticodon had to be a perfect match to each codon, we would expect to find
61 types of tRNA, but the actual number is about 45.
·
The
anticodons of some tRNAs recognize more than one codon.
·
This
is possible because the rules for base pairing between the third base of the
codon and anticodon are relaxed (called wobble).
°
At
the wobble position, U on the anticodon can bind with A or G in the third
position of a codon.
°
Wobble
explains why the synonymous codons for a given amino acid can differ in their
third base, but not usually in their other bases.
·
Each
amino acid is joined to the correct tRNA by aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase.
·
The
20 different synthetases match the 20 different amino acids.
°
Each
has active sites for only a specific tRNA-and-amino-acid combination.
°
The
synthetase catalyzes a covalent bond between them in a process driven by ATP
hydrolysis.
§
The
result is an aminoacyl-tRNA or activated amino acid.
·
Ribosomes
facilitate the specific coupling of the tRNA anticodons with mRNA codons during
protein synthesis.
°
Each
ribosome is made up of a large and a small subunit.
°
The
subunits are composed of proteins and ribosomal
RNA (rRNA), the most abundant RNA in the cell.
·
In
eukaryotes, the subunits are made in the nucleolus.
°
After
rRNA genes are transcribed to rRNA in the nucleus, the rRNA and proteins are
assembled to form the subunits with proteins from the cytoplasm.
·
The
subunits exit the nucleus via nuclear pores.
·
The
large and small subunits join to form a functional ribosome only when they
attach to an mRNA molecule.
·
While
very similar in structure and function, prokaryotic and eukaryotic ribosomes
have enough differences that certain antibiotic drugs (like tetracycline) can
paralyze prokaryotic ribosomes without inhibiting eukaryotic ribosomes.
·
Each
ribosome has a binding site for mRNA and three binding sites for tRNA
molecules.
°
The
P site holds the tRNA carrying the
growing polypeptide chain.
°
The
A site carries the tRNA with the
next amino acid to be added to the chain.
°
Discharged
tRNAs leave the ribosome at the E
(exit) site.
·
The
ribosome holds the tRNA and mRNA in close proximity and positions the new amino
acid for addition to the carboxyl end of the growing polypeptide.
°
It
then catalyzes the formation of the peptide bond.
°
As
the polypeptide becomes longer, it passes through an exit tunnel in the ribosome’s large unit and is released to the
cytosol.
·
Recent
advances in our understanding of the structure of the ribosome strongly support
the hypothesis that rRNA, not protein, carries out the ribosome’s functions.
°
RNA
is the main constituent at the interphase between the two subunits and of the A
and P sites.
°
It
is the catalyst for peptide bond formation.
°
A
ribosome can be regarded as one colossal ribozyme.
·
Translation
can be divided into three stages: initiation, elongation, and termination.
·
All
three phases require protein “factors” that aid in the translation process.
·
Both
initiation and chain elongation require energy provided by the hydrolysis of
GTP.
·
Initiation brings together mRNA, a
tRNA with the first amino acid, and the two ribosomal subunits.
°
First,
a small ribosomal subunit binds with mRNA and a special initiator tRNA, which
carries methionine and attaches to the start codon.
°
The
small subunit then moves downstream along the mRNA until it reaches the start
codon, AUG, which signals the start of translation.
§
This
establishes the reading frame for the mRNA.
§
The
initiator tRNA, already associated with the complex, then hydrogen-bonds with
the start codon.
°
Proteins
called initiation factors bring in
the large subunit so that the initiator tRNA occupies the P site.
·
Elongation involves the
participation of several protein elongation factors, and consists of a series
of three-step cycles as each amino acid is added to the proceeding one.
°
During
codon recognition, an elongation factor assists hydrogen
bonding between the mRNA codon under the A site with the corresponding anticodon
of tRNA carrying the appropriate amino acid.
§
This
step requires the hydrolysis of two GTP.
°
During
peptide bond formation, an rRNA
molecule catalyzes the formation of a peptide bond between the polypeptide in
the P site with the new amino acid in the A site.
§
This
step separates the tRNA at the P site from the growing polypeptide chain and
transfers the chain, now one amino acid longer, to the tRNA at the A site.
°
During
translocation, the ribosome moves
the tRNA with the attached polypeptide from the A site to the P site.
§
Because
the anticodon remains bonded to the mRNA codon, the mRNA moves along with it.
§
The
next codon is now available at the A site.
§
The
tRNA that had been in the P site is moved to the E site and then leaves the
ribosome.
§
Translocation
is fueled by the hydrolysis of GTP.
§
Effectively,
translocation ensures that the mRNA is “read” 5’ à 3’ codon by codon.
°
• The three steps of elongation continue to
add amino acids codon by codon until the polypeptide chain is completed.
·
Termination occurs when one of the
three stop codons reaches the A site.
°
A
release factor binds to the stop
codon and hydrolyzes the bond between the polypeptide and its tRNA in the P
site.
°
This
frees the polypeptide, and the translation complex disassembles.
·
Typically
a single mRNA is used to make many copies of a polypeptide simultaneously.
°
Multiple
ribosomes, polyribosomes, may trail
along the same mRNA.
°
Polyribosomes
can be found in prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells.
·
A
ribosome requires less than a minute to translate an average-sized mRNA into a
polypeptide.
·
During
and after synthesis, a polypeptide coils and folds to its three-dimensional
shape spontaneously.
°
The
primary structure, the order of amino acids, determines the secondary and
tertiary structure.
·
Chaperone
proteins may aid correct folding.
·
In
addition, proteins may require posttranslational
modifications before doing their particular job.
°
This
may require additions such as sugars, lipids, or phosphate groups to amino
acids.
°
Enzymes
may remove some amino acids or cleave whole polypeptide chains.
°
Two
or more polypeptides may join to form a protein.
Signal peptides target some eukaryotic
polypeptides to specific destinations in the cell.
·
Two
populations of ribosomes, free and bound, are active participants in protein
synthesis.
·
Free
ribosomes are suspended in the cytosol and synthesize proteins that reside in
the cytosol.
·
Bound
ribosomes are attached to the cytosolic side of the endoplasmic reticulum.
°
They
synthesize proteins of the endomembrane system as well as proteins secreted
from the cell.
·
While
bound and free ribosomes are identical in structure, their location depends on
the type of protein that they are synthesizing.
·
Translation
in all ribosomes begins in the cytosol, but a polypeptide destined for the
endomembrane system or for export has a specific signal peptide region at or near the leading end.
°
This
consists of a sequence of about 20 amino acids.
·
A
signal recognition particle (SRP)
binds to the signal peptide and attaches it and its ribosome to a receptor
protein in the ER membrane.
°
The
SRP consists of a protein-RNA complex.
·
After
binding, the SRP leaves and protein synthesis resumes with the growing
polypeptide snaking across the membrane into the cisternal space via a protein
pore.
°
An
enzyme usually cleaves the signal polypeptide.
·
Secretory
proteins are released entirely into the cisternal space, but membrane proteins
remain partially embedded in the ER membrane.
·
Other
kinds of signal peptides are used to target polypeptides to mitochondria,
chloroplasts, the nucleus, and other organelles that are not part of the
endomembrane system.
°
In
these cases, translation is completed in the cytosol before the polypeptide is
imported into the organelle.
°
While
the mechanisms of translocation vary, each of these polypeptides has a “ZIP
code” that ensures its delivery to the correct cellular location.
·
Prokaryotes
also employ signal sequences to target proteins for secretion.
Concept 17.5 RNA plays multiple roles in the cell:
a
review
·
The
cellular machinery of protein synthesis and ER targeting is dominated by
various kinds of RNA.
°
In
addition to mRNA, these include tRNA; rRNA; and in eukaryotes, snRNA and SRP
RNA.
°
A
type of RNA called small nucleolar RNA
(snoRNA) aids in processing pre-rRNA transcripts in the nucleolus, a
process necessary for ribosome formation.
°
Recent
research has also revealed the presence of small, single-stranded and
double-stranded RNA molecules that play important roles in regulating which
genes get expressed.
§
These
types of RNA include small interfering RNA (siRNA) and microRNA (miRNA).
°
The
diverse functions of RNA are based, in part, on its ability to form hydrogen
bonds with other nucleic acid molecules (DNA or RNA).
°
It
can also assume a specific three-dimensional shape by forming hydrogen bonds
between bases in different parts of its polynucleotide chain.
·
DNA
may be the genetic material of all living cells today, but RNA is much more
versatile.
·
The
diverse functions of RNA range from structural to informational to catalytic.
Concept 17.6 Comparing gene expression in
prokaryotes and eukaryotes reveals key differences
·
Although
prokaryotes and eukaryotes carry out transcription and translation in very
similar ways, they do have differences in cellular machinery and in details of
the processes.
°
Eukaryotic
RNA polymerases differ from those of prokaryotes and require transcription
factors.
°
They
differ in how transcription is terminated.
°
Their
ribosomes also are different.
·
One
major difference is that prokaryotes can transcribe and translate the same gene
simultaneously.
°
The
new protein quickly diffuses to its operating site.
·
In
eukaryotes, the nuclear envelope segregates transcription from translation.
°
In
addition, extensive RNA processing is carried out between these processes.
°
This
provides additional steps whose regulation helps coordinate the elaborate
activities of a eukaryotic cell.
·
Eukaryotic
cells also have complicated mechanisms for targeting proteins to the
appropriate organelle.
Concept 17.7 Point mutations can affect protein
structure and function
·
Mutations are changes in the
genetic material of a cell (or virus).
·
These
include large-scale mutations in which long segments of DNA are affected (for
example, translocations, duplications, and inversions).
·
A
chemical change in just one base pair of a gene causes a point mutation.
·
If
these occur in gametes or cells producing gametes, they may be transmitted to
future generations.
·
For
example, sickle-cell disease is caused by a mutation of a single base pair in
the gene that codes for one of the polypeptides of hemoglobin.
°
A
change in a single nucleotide from T to A in the DNA template leads to an
abnormal protein.
·
A
point mutation that results in the replacement of a pair of complementary
nucleotides with another nucleotide pair is called a base-pair substitution.
·
Some
base-pair substitutions have little or no impact on protein function.
°
In
silent mutations, altered nucleotides
still code for the same amino acids because of redundancy in the genetic code.
°
Other
changes lead to switches from one amino acid to another with similar
properties.
°
Still
other mutations may occur in a region where the exact amino acid sequence is
not essential for function.
·
Other
base-pair substitutions cause a readily detectable change in a protein.
°
These
are usually detrimental but can occasionally lead to an improved protein or one
with novel capabilities.
°
Changes
in amino acids at crucial sites, especially active sites, are likely to impact
function.
·
Missense mutations are those that still code
for an amino acid but a different one.
·
Nonsense mutations change an amino acid
codon into a stop codon, nearly always leading to a nonfunctional protein.
·
Insertions and deletions are additions or losses of nucleotide pairs in a gene.
°
These
have a disastrous effect on the resulting protein more often than substitutions
do.
·
Unless
insertion or deletion mutations occur in multiples of three, they cause a frameshift mutation.
°
All
the nucleotides downstream of the deletion or insertion will be improperly
grouped into codons.
°
The
result will be extensive missense, ending sooner or later in nonsense—premature
termination.
·
Mutations
can occur in a number of ways.
°
Errors
can occur during DNA replication, DNA repair, or DNA recombination.
°
These
can lead to base-pair substitutions, insertions, or deletions, as well as
mutations affecting longer stretches of DNA.
°
These
are called spontaneous mutations.
·
Rough
estimates suggest that about 1 nucleotide in every 1010 is altered
and inherited by daughter cells.
·
Mutagens are chemical or physical
agents that interact with DNA to cause mutations.
·
Physical
agents include high-energy radiation like X-rays and ultraviolet light.
·
Chemical
mutagens fall into several categories.
°
Some
chemicals are base analogues that may be substituted into DNA, but they pair
incorrectly during DNA replication.
°
Other
mutagens interfere with DNA replication by inserting into DNA and distorting
the double helix.
°
Still
others cause chemical changes in bases that change their pairing properties.
·
Researchers
have developed various methods to test the mutagenic activity of different
chemicals.
°
These
tests are often used as a preliminary screen of chemicals to identify those
that may cause cancer.
°
This
makes sense because most carcinogens are mutagenic and most mutagens are
carcinogenic.
What is a gene? We revisit the question.
·
The
Mendelian concept of a gene views it as a discrete unit of inheritance that
affects phenotype.
°
Morgan
and his colleagues assigned genes to specific loci on chromosomes.
°
We
can also view a gene as a specific nucleotide sequence along a region of a DNA
molecule.
§
We
can define a gene functionally as a DNA sequence that codes for a specific
polypeptide chain.
·
All
these definitions are useful in certain contexts.
·
Even
the one gene–one polypeptide definition must be refined and applied
selectively.
°
Most
eukaryotic genes contain large introns that have no corresponding segments in
polypeptides.
°
Promoters
and other regulatory regions of DNA are not transcribed either, but they must
be present for transcription to occur.
°
Our
molecular definition must also include the various types of RNA that are not
translated into polypeptides, such as rRNA, tRNA, and other RNAs.
·
This
is our definition of a gene: A gene is a region of DNA whose final product is
either a polypeptide or an RNA molecule.