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The Flow of Genetic Information

Date post: 22-Feb-2016
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The Flow of Genetic Information. From Gene to Protein. It All Begins with DNA. DNA: in the nucleus Polymer of nucleotides Deoxyribose sugar Phosphate group (negative charge) Nitrogen base (A,T, C,G). Importance of Nucleotide Sequences. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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The Flow of Genetic Information From Gene to Protein
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Page 1: The Flow of Genetic Information

The Flow of Genetic Information

From Gene to Protein

Page 2: The Flow of Genetic Information

It All Begins with DNA• DNA: in the

nucleus• Polymer of

nucleotides– Deoxyribose sugar– Phosphate group

(negative charge)– Nitrogen base (A,T,

C,G)

Page 3: The Flow of Genetic Information

Importance of Nucleotide Sequences

• Different organisms : different order of nucleotides in DNA strands

• Closely related organisms: order of nucleotides in their DNA is more alike

Page 4: The Flow of Genetic Information

Central Dogma

Page 5: The Flow of Genetic Information

Codons• Sequence of 3

bases needed to code for an amino acid

• Amino acids are monomers for proteins

Page 6: The Flow of Genetic Information

Transcription

• Transcription: DNA to mRNA

• Occurs in the nucleus

Page 7: The Flow of Genetic Information

Important Aspects of Transcription

• RNA Polymerase : pries DNA strands apart, adds RNA nucleotides (only in a 5’ to 3’ direction)

• Promoter: DNA sequence where RNA polymerase attaches and begins transcription

• Transcription unit: stretch of DNA that is transcribed

Page 8: The Flow of Genetic Information

For each gene only one DNA Strand is Transcribed

Page 9: The Flow of Genetic Information

Process of Transcription

Page 10: The Flow of Genetic Information

Eukaryotic Cells Modify RNA

• 5’ end is capped off with a 5’ cap• 3’ end contains a poly-A tail• Introns (noncoding sequences are

removed)/RNA splicing• Exons are joined together

Page 11: The Flow of Genetic Information

From Pre-mRNA to mRNA

Page 12: The Flow of Genetic Information

Transcription Overview

Page 13: The Flow of Genetic Information

• Transcription occurs in the nucleus, mRNA is transported to cytoplasm

• Transcription results in pre-mRNA and RNA processing yields finished mRNA

Page 14: The Flow of Genetic Information

Translation

• mRNA brings its message to the ribosome and the message is interpreted by tRNA

Page 15: The Flow of Genetic Information

Ribosomes• Found in the cytoplasm• Facilitate the coupling of mRNA

codons and tRNA anticodons• Made of 2 subunits: large and small

subunits• Constructed of proteins and rRNA

Page 16: The Flow of Genetic Information

Ribosome Structure

Page 17: The Flow of Genetic Information

Translation Overview

Page 18: The Flow of Genetic Information

Protein Synthesis Overview


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