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Lecture Notes: RNA Transcription
Last revised: Tuesday, October 8, 2002 Copyright 2000. Thomas M. Terry
Reading: Ch. 17 in text
Note: These notes are provided as a guide to topics the
instructor hopes to cover during lecture. Actual coverage will always
differ somewhat from what is printed here. These notes are not a substitute
for the actual lecture!
The Expression of Genetic Information: an Overview
- All cells contain enormous amounts of DNA. Even the smallest known cell, a bacterium named Mycoplasma genitalium, contains nearly 500,000 base pairs (500 kilo base pairs, or 500 kbp).
- What do cells do with all this information? In bacteria (the simplest cells), DNA serves two major functions:
- encoding structural information that can be converted into RNA and (usually) thence into protein sequence.
- encoding regulatory signals that allow certain proteins to decide where to begin or terminate reading DNA
- In eukaryotic cells, where DNA also has to undergo condensation into chromosomes and mitotic or meiotic events, DNA also contains specialized sequences used for centromeres, telomeres, and other functions.
- The "central dogma" of molecular biology: information flows from nucleic acids to proteins, not the reverse:
DNA RNA polypeptides (proteins)
View graphic summary of information flow
- Transcription = the process of making RNA from DNA templates
- Translation = the process of making polypeptides
- View example of how information is coded from DNA to peptide
Transcription: the Synthesis of RNA
Structure of RNA
- Components: Ribose, Phosphate, A, C, G & U.
-
View RNA components (protected).
- U has same base pairing properties as T (forms U=A base pairs)
- RNA is not double stranded (except in some viruses)
- RNA can have extensive "hairpin" loops
- RNA can have modified bases (after transcription) -- find unusual bases such as inosine, pseudouridine. These still have base pairing properties, and contribute to stability of molecule,
-
Messenger RNA has half-life of only 3 minutes in bacteria, so cell must constantly make new messages to make new proteins-- allows rapid adaptation to new environments.
- Eucaryotic RNA is controlled very differently. RNA synthesized in nucleus, modified (to be discussed), and exported to cytoplasm before it is translated.
Types of RNA
- messenger RNA -- carries codons to RNA
- ribosomal RNA -- part of ribosome structure, catalyzes peptide bond formation
- transfer RNA -- set of small RNAs, transport amino acids to ribosome for incorporation into growing polypeptides
Transcription Process
RNA polymerase enzyme
-
View animation of transcription (protected).
- RNA polymerase enzyme opens up DNA helix for short stretch (~ 15 base pairs)
- selects one of two strands as template strand
- RNA synthesized in 5' to 3' direction
- RNA synthesis begins at promoters: sites on DNA that are recognized as "start" signals for RNA synthesis.
- Terminators: regions where RNA synthesis stops, RNA is released from DNA.
- Practice making RNA (Campbell website activity)
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