Download - Special Topics
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Special Topics Review of Gene Expression
OutlineI. Definition of gene expressionII. Proteins- the end product of gene expression
A. Polymers of monomersB. Joined by peptide bond
C. Denaturing of proteins leads to loss of functioni. Ways to denature protiens
D. Genes code for proteinsi. Genome vs. geneii. Polymer of monomers (nucleic acid vs. nucleotide)
III. Transcription – DNA to RNA A. Where does this occur?
IV. Translation –RNA to protein A. Where does this occur?
VI. Why do we care about gene expression as allied health students?VII. Terminology to be aware of throughout the semester
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Gene Expression- the process that makes a heart a heart, a brain a brain, and you
different from me. The final end result is the synthesis of a protein.
DNA RNA Protein
•Structural molecules
•Enzymes
•Receptors for signals and hormones
•Adhesion molecules
•Recognition markers
The physiology comes from protein functions!
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Proteins are chains of amino acids linked by the Peptide Bond
Primary structure
R RR R
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Essential 20: central carbon, hydrogen, amine group and carboxyl group....different R groups
Glycine Alanine Valine Leucine Isoleucine
Serine Threonine Cysteine Methionine Glutamic acid
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Aspartic acid Lysine Arginine Asparagine Glutamine
Phenylalanine Tyrosine Histidine Tryptophan Proline
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Denaturing proteins: loss of structure leads to loss of function
Heat
pH
high salt
What is another way to change a protein’s conformation?
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Folding and coiling is stabilized by bonds formed between the “R groups” of amino acids.
R R
First, understand this:
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Changing a single amino acid can change the shape of the
protein
Can result in loss of protein function
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Genes code for proteins
A gene is a code which determines the
sequence of amino acids in a protein
DNA
RNA
Protein
So changes in a gene can result in changes in protein structure (and
the protein’s ability to function)
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Genome vs gene?
• Genome: like a cookbook• Gene: single recipe• How are recipes written?
– Ingredient list– Order of adding ingredients
• The gene= the recipe for a protein.– Which amino acids to link
together– Order of linking them together– Mutation= heritable change
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April 2003- Human Genome Project was completed.
What do we know• Haploid genome is a little
over 3 billion base pairs.• 20-25,000 protein-
encoding genes• What’s the rest?
– RNA genes (tRNA, rRNA, RNAi/ RNAa’s, too)
– “junk DNA” (pseudogenes)– Repeating elements,
transposons, etc.
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DNA is•Macromolecule made by dehydration synthesis•Double stranded•Antiparallel•5’ end to 3’end• has base-pairing rules:
A-TC-G
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Transcription: Making a “working copy” of a gene. This process occurs in the nucleus of a cell
DNA RNA Proteintranscription
RNA:• Is a macromolecule• is single stranded• It contains the sugar ribose (rather than deoxyribose)• It lacks T, uses U instead (uracil rather than thymine)
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Translation: the ribosome makes a protein using the
code in the mRNA molecule and this occurs in the cytoplasm
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Summary
Interactive Workshop Activity on Protein Synthesishttp://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aso/tryit/dna/index.html#
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Why do we care about gene expression?
• Drug reaction due to expression of “alternate” forms of genes. (Personalized medicine is coming! NewScientist 27 Oct 2007)
• Some people are more susceptible to disease states or infection (HIV/ Alzheimer’s / Diabetes/ obesity)
• Your feelings can alter gene expression! (September 2007 issue of Genome Biology) loneliness desensitizes the glucocorticoid receptor and cuts off immune control and anti-inflammatory effects of cortisol.
• Massage/hugging/gentle touch increases the synthesis and release of oxytocin (a protein hormone). More oxytocin means better social bonds.
• The smell of coffee upregulates gene expression of nine different genes
• Just to name a few......
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Terminology• Mutation vs. DNA damage• Pluripotent vs. unipotent stem cells • Determined vs. Differentiated