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Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I. Basics of molecular biology II. Transcription III.Translation IV. Regulatory pathways V. DNA and diseases VI. Biotechnology
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Page 1: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

Course in Molecular BiologyLeuven, October – November 2002

Program

I. Basics of molecular biology

II. Transcription

III. Translation

IV. Regulatory pathways

V. DNA and diseases

VI. Biotechnology

Page 2: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

Lesson 1: Basics of molecular biology

I. The Cell’s Organization

II. Cell Cycle and Cell Division

III. Cellular Molecules

IV. The Genetic Dogma

Page 3: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

The Cell’s Organization

Page 4: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

All organisms: 1 or more cells

PR

OK

AR

YO

TE

SE

UK

AR

YO

TE

S

Page 5: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

The animal cell

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A plant cell

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A bacterium

Page 8: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

The Main Functions of the Membrane-bounded Compartments of a Eukaryotic Cell

Compartment Main Function

Cytosol contains many metabolic pathwaysprotein synthesis

Nucleus contains main genomeDNA and RNA synthesis

Endoplasmic reticulum (ER)

synthesis of most lipidssynthesis of proteins for distribution to many organelles and plasma membrane

Golgi apparatus modification, sorting, and packaging of proteins and lipids for either secretion or delivery to another organelle

Lysosomes intracellular degradation

Endosomes sorting of endocytosed material

Mitochondria ATP synthesis by oxidative phosphorylation

Chloroplasts (in plant cells)

ATP synthesis and carbon fixation by photosynthesis

Peroxisomes oxidation of toxic molecules

Page 9: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

Compartimentation of the eukaryote cell: various organelles

Page 10: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

Cell nucleus

Contains genetic information: DNA

Nucleolus:Ribosome building machine

Protein factories in the cytoplasm

Page 11: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.
Page 12: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

Each human cell contains 46 chromosomes (except sperm or egg cells)

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Chromosomesin a cell that is about to divide

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Mitochondria: factories of energy

glucose

O2

Pi

ADP

ATPH2O

CO2

Page 15: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

The endoplasmic reticulumsmooth (metabolism+synthesis of lipids)

rough (protein synthesis)

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The Golgi apparatus

cis trans

medial

processing of secretory proteins sorting cellular proteins

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Inside the cytosol: the cytoskeleton

“microtubules” maintainance of cell shape and mobility ancor for other cellular structures

Page 18: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

Presentation:DNA

Page 19: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

Cell Cycle and Cell Division

Page 20: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

Some Eukaryotic Cell-Cycle Times

Cell Type Cell-Cycle Times

Early frog embryo cells 30 minutes

Yeast cells 1.5-3 hours

Intestinal epithelial cells about 12 hours

Mammalian fibroblasts in culture about 20 hours

Human liver cells about 1 year

Page 21: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

The eukaryotic cell cycle

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Separation of sister chromatides during mitosis(mitosis = normal cell division)

Page 23: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

Microtubuli:assist chromosomes during cell division (mitosis)

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Different stages of the M phase during cell division (mitosis)

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The three DNA sequence elements needed to produce a eukaryotic chromosome that can be replicated and then segregated at mitosis

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Kinetochores and kinetochore microtubules

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Gametogenesis: meiosis(= specialized form of cell division giving rise to sperm and egg cells)

Me

iosi

s I

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Meiosis I (continued) Meiosis II

Cell division without DNA replication

Haploid cell

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Presentation: Chromosomes, mitosis and meiosis

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Cellular Molecules

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The four main families of small organic molecules in cells

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Macromolecules are abundant in cells

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The general reaction by which a macromolecule is made

Condensation reaction: H2O molecule is released

Page 34: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

The four main families of small organic molecules in cells

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Glucose, a simple sugar

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Monosaccharides

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Sugar ring formation in aqueous solution

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Disaccharides:formed by two sugar monomers

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Oligo- and polysaccharides

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Complex oligosaccharides

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The four main families of small organic molecules in cells

Page 42: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.
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Page 44: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.
Page 45: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

Phospholipid structure and orientation of phospholipids in membranes

Page 46: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

The four main families of small organic molecules in cells

Page 47: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

A simple amino acid: alanine

Page 48: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.
Page 49: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

A small part of a large protein molecule

Page 50: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

The four main families of small organic molecules in cells

Page 51: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.
Page 52: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.
Page 53: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

ATP:the energy carrier in cells

Page 54: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

Various functions of proteins

Page 55: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

Proteins as polypeptide chains

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Three types of noncovalent bonds that help proteins fold

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The size of proteins

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Several levels of protein organization

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Many protein molecules contain multiple copiesof a single protein subunit

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Proteins often have highly specific binding sites

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How a set of enzyme-catalyzed reactions generates a metabolic pathway

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Phosphorylation and ATP hydrolysis drive protein functions

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Genetic information is stored in the DNA

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DNA and its building blocks

Page 65: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

DNA has an orientation

Page 66: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

DNA encodes proteins

Page 67: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

“Genes” encode proteins

Page 68: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

DNA replication

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DNA synthesis and proofreading

Page 70: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

Replication of eukaryotic chromosomes

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The replication fork in detail

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DNA replication can cause mutations

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DNA repair

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Mutations:possible cause of diseases and disfunctionalities

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The Genetic Dogma

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From DNA to protein

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Transcription by RNA polymerase

Page 78: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

RNA vs DNA

mRNAs codes for proteins

rRNAs forms part of the structure of the ribosome and participates in protein synthesis

tRNAs used in protein synthesis as an adaptor between mRNA and amino acids

Small RNAs used in pre-mRNA splicing, transport of proteins to ER, and other cellular processes

Page 79: Course in Molecular Biology Leuven, October – November 2002 Program I.Basics of molecular biology II.Transcription III.Translation IV.Regulatory pathways.

Genes contain introns and exons


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