2018 - Lecture 4-5-Canvas
2018 - Lecture 4-5-Canvas
2018 - Lecture 4-5-Canvas
How can you show that the bands larger than YFP represent
polyubiquitylated forms of YFP?
YFP
0 6 12 hours
• Transcription
• Translation
• Transcription
RNA
Difference between RNA and DNA
General Features of Transcription
RNA Polymerase
Transcription in Prokaryotes
Transcription in eukaryotes
Post transcription regulation
Nucleosomes Are a
Basic Unit of Eukaryotic
Chromosome
Structure
• Indicate which feature (1 to 4) in the schematic drawing below
of a chromatin fiber corresponds to each of the following.
Your answer would be a four-digit number composed of digits
1 to 4 only, e.g. 2431.
•
What is RNA?
What is RNA?
RNA is a linear polymer made of four different types
of nucleotide subunits linked together by
phosphodiester bonds.
What is RNA?
RNA is a linear polymer made of four different types of nucleotide subunits
linked together by phosphodiester bonds.
Different Categories of RNA Molecules
Transcription
General Features of Transcription
• Produces RNA using one strand of DNA as template molecule
• Only small portion of DNA is transcribed
• Begins w/unwinding of small portion of DNA exposing bases
• Transcript elongated by complementary base pairing by RNA
polymerase
• RNA transcript shorter than DNA
Coding strand
Template strand
Transcription in eukaryotic cells
• many identical RNA copies can be made from the same gene, and each RNA
molecule can direct the synthesis of many identical protein molecules, cells
can synthesize a large amount of protein from a gene when necessary.
The particles at the 5ʹ end (the free end) of each rRNA transcript are
believed to reflect the beginnings of ribosome assembly
DNA and RNA polymerase differ in all of the
following EXCEPT...
• The sequence at -10 is called the Pribnow box, or the -10 element,
and usually consists of the six nucleotides TATAAT. The Pribnow
box is absolutely essential to start transcription in prokaryotes.
5′…GCGCTTGGTATAATCGCTGGGGGTCAAAGAT…3′
Transcription in Prokaryotes
Transcription in Prokaryotes
Initial RNA
synthesis
unproductive
transcripts are
often released.
However, once RNA
polymerase has
managed to
synthesize
about 10
nucleotides of RNA,
it breaks its
interactions with the
promoter DNA
The transcription cycle of bacterial RNA polymerase
Releases σ
factor—as the
polymerase
tightens around
the DNA and
shifts to the
elongation mode
of RNA synthesis
The transcription cycle of bacterial RNA polymerase
Elongation
The transcription cycle of bacterial RNA polymerase
Termination hairpin
formation
The transcription cycle of bacterial RNA polymerase
Termination
Directions of transcription along a short portion of a
bacterial chromosome
• Promoter sequences are asymmetric, ensuring that RNA polymerase can bind in only one
orientation.
• The polymerase can synthesize RNA only in the 5′ -to-3′ direction, the promoter
orientation specifies the strand to be used as a template
• Genome sequences reveal that the DNA strand that is used as the template for RNA
synthesis varies from gene to gene, depending on the orientation of the promoter
Bacterial DNA can contain the instructions for several different proteins, Eukaryotic mRNA
nearly always contain the information for only a single protein.
Transcription in Eucaryotes
3 Types of RNA Polymerases of similar in structure in
Eukaryotes
• RNA Pol I- transcribes tRNA, rRNA, smRNAs
• RNA Pol II- transcribes genes encoding proteins
• RNA Pol III- transcribes tRNA, rRNA, smRNAs
• Eukaryotic promoters
• Eukaryotic promoters are extremely diverse and are
difficult to characterize. They typically lie upstream of the
gene and can have regulatory elements several kilobases
away from the transcriptional start site. In eukaryotes, the
transcriptional complex can cause the DNA to bend back on
itself, which allows for placement of regulatory sequences
far from the actual site of transcription. Many eukaryotic
promoters, contain a TATA box (sequence TATAAA), which
in turn binds a TATA binding protein which assists in the
formation of the RNA polymerase transcriptional complex.
The TATA box typically lies very close to the transcriptional
start site (often within 50 bases)
RNA Polymerase II Requires a Set of General
Transcription Factors
Basal level of
transcription a) The promoter contains a
requires basal DNA sequence called the
transcription TATA box, which is located
factors bind 25 nucleotides away from
DNA the site at which
transcription is initiated.
Activators attract
ATP-dependent chromatin
remodeling complexes and
histone-modifying enzymes
Elongation
• Transcription
Elongation factors= ensures that RNA Pol does not disassociate before end of
gene; assoc. w/ RNA Pol shortly after initiation of transcription
• DNA topoisomerases removes superhelical tension
• DNA gyrases uses ATP to pump supercoils into DNA
• Elongation tightly coupled to RNA processing
How does a eukaryotic cell deal with the superhelical tension in its
genomic DNA resulting from the activity of RNA polymerases?
8. 5’ and 3’ junctions
brought together via U5
snRNP for second
esterification
Self-Splicing Introns
• Group I Intron= reactive G nucleotide attacks the initial
phosphdiester bound cleaved during the spicing rxn
• Group II Intron= reactive A in intron seq is attaching grp,
and lariat intermediate generated
• Sequence of self=splicing introns is critical; RNA folds in
specific 3d conformation that brings 5’ and 3’ junctions
together and provides precisiely positioned reactive grps to
perform chemistry
• Pre-mRNA splicing mech evolved from Grp II Splicing
spliceosomal snRNPs took over structural and chemical
roles of Grp II Introns so sequence constraints no longer
needed
Group I Introns Group II Introns
Processing of 3’ End of pre-mRNA
• Termination signs are transcribed into RNA and recognized proteins as RNA Pol
transcribes throuth them
• CstF (cleavage stimulating factor F) and CPSF (cleavage and processing specificity
factor) proteins assoc w/ RNA Pol tail transferred to RNA as it emerges
Processing the 3’ End of the Pre-mRNA
• Additional proteins assemble w/ CstF and CPSF to perform processing:
1. RNA is cleaved
2. Poly-A-Polymerase adds ~200 A’s to 3’ end of cleaved product
3. RNA Pol II continues to transcribe after pre- mRNA has been
cleaved; several 100 bases before falls off template and transcription terminates
4. RNA downstream of cleavage is degraded
Selective Export of Mature mRNAs from Nucleus
Transcription
How does cell distinguish btwn rate mature mRNA and debris from mRNA
processing?
• Export highly selected and coupled to correct mRNA processing
• mRNA exported only if appr set of proteins are bound including: 1) cap binding complex 2)
snRNP proteins absent 3) proteins that mark complete splicing
rRNA Genes
• Mammalian cells contain 10 million ribosomes
• Multi-copy genes
E. coli has 7 copies of its rRNA
Humans ~200 copies on 5 chromosomes
Xenopus ~600 copies single cluster on 1 chromosome
• 4 types of eucaryotic rRNAs ea present in one copy/ribosome
18S, 5.8S and 28S encoded by single lg precursor RNA-chemically modified
5S rRNA syn from separate cluster by Pol III- not chemically modified
Transcription
b. Ribosomal RNA ( rRNA) molecules form the core of ribosomes, and that
transfer RNA ( tRNA) molecules form the adaptors that select amino acids
and hold them in place on a ribosome for incorporation into protein.