Genetics Introduction Inheritance Patterns Mendel was the first scientist to develop a method for predicting the outcome of inheritance patterns. He performed his work with pea plants, studying seven traits: plant height, pod shape, pod color, seed shape, seed color, flower color, and flower location. Pea plants pollinate themselves. Therefore, over many generations, pea plants develop individuals that are homozygous for particular characteristics. These populations are known as pure lines. In his work, Mendel took pure-line pea plants and cross-pollinated them with other pure-line pea plants. He called these plants the parent generation. When Mendel crossed pure-line tall plants with pure-line short plants, he discovered that all the plants resulting from this cross were tall. He called this generation the F1 generation (first filial generation). Next, Mendel crossed the offspring of the F1 generation tall plants among themselves to produce a new generation called the F2 generation (second filial generation). Among the plants in this generation, Mendel observed that three-fourths of the plants were tall and one-fourth of the plants were short. Mendel's laws of genetics Mendel conducted similar experiments with the other pea plant traits. Over many years, he formulated several principles that are known today as Mendel's laws of genetics. His laws include the following: 1. Mendel's law of dominance: When an organism has two different alleles for a trait, one allele dominates. 2. Mendel's law of segregation: During gamete formation by a diploid organism, the pair of alleles for a particular trait separate, or segregate, during the formation of gametes (as in meiosis). 3. Mendel's law of independent assortment: The members of a gene pair separate from one another independent of the members of other gene pairs. (These separations occur in the formation of gametes during meiosis.) Genetics Part - I DNA replication, transcription and translation. In very general terms, what does a chromosome contain? • Information, genetic information to carry out the characteristics of life -- precise self replication, ability to exchange energy with the environment, etc. In very general terms, what are the two related functions of DNA? • Information storage • DNA replication • Information transfer • DNA transcribed into RNA • DNA's function in information transfer What is the Central Dogma associated with information storage and retrieval? • Central Dogma: DNA-->RNA-->unfolded protein-->native, folded protein What are the three processes of the central dogma? How does DNA function as an information molecule? • replication, DNA --> DNA • transcription, DNA --> RNA • translation, RNA --> unfolded protein --> folded protein In terms of molecular conformation, what occurs through the central dogma? • Translation of linear information, a sequence of nucleotides, into 3-D information, the structure of a protein. What are the differences between DNA and RNA? • base composition: RNA = AGCU, DNA = AGCT • carbohydrate: RNA = ribose, DNA = deoxyribose • structure: RNA = single stranded, DNA = double helix RNA • usually single stranded • linear polymer of ribonucleotides. • Some secondary and tertiary structure but often ill-defined. What are the different types of RNA? What are the functions of the different types of RNA? • messenger RNA = mRNA, information transfer • transfer RNA = tRNA, information transfer • ribosomal RNA = rRNA, structural • small nuclear RNA = snRNA, ribozymes, RNA processing. What is replication? Transfer of genetic information from one generation to the next. DNA-directed DNA synthesis: replication of the genome. What is the structural basis for the precise duplication of the genome? • The Watson-Crick structure of DNA: the strands are complementary, the nucleotide sequence in one automatically specifies the other. • The enzyme, DNA polymerase III, is very accurate: it has proof reading capabilities. Is replication conservative or semi-conservative? What does that mean? • Is the parental genome of double stranded DNA fully conserved in the parental cell or is it split equally (semi- conserved) between two daughter cells? • Replication is semi-conservative. Genetics Part - II What is the evidence for semi-conservative replication? Classical experiments of Meselson and Stahl. Label DNA with *heavy isotope* N15 and allow replication in light N14: distinguish heavy, light and hybrid DNA by centrifugation. Results: after 1 generation, each genome contains a hybrid N15-N14 DNA; after 2 generations, there are 2 hybrid and 2 light (N14-N14) genomes. • Each strand of DNA serves as a template for the synthesis of its complement. • The strands separate and each is used as a template for the synthesis of a daughter strand. • The two new double helices each contain half the parental DNA. • This process produces a replication fork Is replication uni-directional or bi-directional? • Bi-directional • Two replication forks proceeding from the origin. DNA replication, transcription and translation. What is the major replication enzyme? DNA polymerase III, a DNA-directed DNA polymerase • Synthesis is 5'-->3' • Substrates are deoxynucleoside triphosphates (to make deoxyribonucleic acid) • Proof reading , errors removed by 3'--5' exonuclease • Processivity is very high (the ability of the enzyme to replicate a large tract of DNA before *falling* off) • Replication requires DNA unwinding by enzymes termed helicases: these enzymes unwind the DNA helix before the replication fork and wind it up again afterwards. There are large numbers of different enzymes and proteins involved at the replication fork in the replisome. DNA damage by UV radiation or chemicals is repaired by other DNA polymerases. UV-damage results in adjacent T residues in one strand becoming covaletly linked to each other, producing a thymine dimer. This causes the double helix to become distorted -- kinky. Xeroderma pigmentosa is a genetic disorder in which patients cannot carry out UV-radiation repair. They are very prone to skin cancer from an early age. What is Transcription? • Copying a gene as RNA • DNA-directed RNA synthesis from a gene What is a gene? • There is no good definition of a gene! • A sequence of DNA that is transcribed from specific start to specific stop base sequences. • Beadle and Tatum, working with the eukaryote mold Neurospora crassa, concluded that one gene codes for one protein. • But what about genes that code for RNA's like rRNA and tRNA? • A gene is a sequence of DNA that is transcribed into a single RNA as defined by specific start and stop sequences of bases. • Note the circularity of the argument! • But the single RNA may be polycistronic! What does that mean? • A cistron is synonymous with a gene. • A polycistronic RNA results from the transcription of an operon. DNA replication, transcription and translation. What's an operon? • A genetic unit containing several genes with related functions: the bacterial operon for lactose (milk sugar) metabolism contains 3 genes coding for 3 different proteins. • An operon is transcribed as a single unit, a polycistronic messenger RNA (mRNA) that codes for more than one gene product. Name 4 types of RNA. What are their functions? • mRNA, messenger RNA that is translated into protein • rRNA, ribosomal RNA that, together with ribosomal proteins, forms a structural scaffold for the translation of mRNA, the ribosome • tRNA, transfer RNA, a specific carrier of amino acids • snRNA, small nuclear RNA involved in processing of mRNA in the nucleus What is the major transcription enzyme? RNA polymerase, a DNA-directed RNA polymerase • RNA synthesis is 5'-->3' • substrates are ribonucleoside triphosphates ( to make ribonucleic acid) • begins at the promoter, 5' end of the gene • processivity is very high, proceeds to 3' end of gene without stopping or falling off the gene • proof reading by precise Watson-Crick base pairing, A=U and G=C Regulation of transcription of a gene is at the 5'-end of the gene at region(s) termed operators • Transcription of some genes is constitutive = housekeeping genes • Transcription of other genes is in response to a stimulus = inducible genes Genetics Part - III What are exons and introns? • exons are coding regions, and • introns are non-coding regions of the mRNA transcript • exons and introns are found in most, but not all, eukaryote genes • introns have to be spliced out before the mRNA is translated • splicing is by snRNA's acting as enzymes, or ribozymes, an example of the catalytic function of RNA DNA replication, transcription and translation: Translation: • Synthesis of a linear polymer of amino acids from a linear polymer of nucleotides Where does it occur? On the ribosome, a rRNA-protein complex that provides: • a scaffold for mRNA • sites for the docking of tRNA charged with a specific amino acid • an enzyme for peptide bond synthesis between amino acids • an enzyme for translocation of the mRNA through the ribosome What is the function of tRNA? • Carrier of a specific amino acid during translation What is the structure of tRNA? • secondary structure has some base-pairing --> cloverleaf • information transfer at the anti-codon loop, complementary to the codon • note the importance of H-bonds in the genetic code • tertiary structure is L-shaped which places the amino acid far from the codon-anticodon site • degeneracy of the code produces wobble What is the genetic code? A sequence of 3 nucleotides forms a codon • unambiguous, each codon specifies an amino acid, or start, or stop
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