15.2 Flashcards
Explain transcription, including a description of important molecules involved in the process.
o The template strand provides a template for ordering the sequence of complementary nucleotides in an RNA transcript
o The first stage of gene expression
o RNA synthesis is catalyzed by the RNA polymerase
• Follows the same base-paring rules as DNA except U substitutes T
illustrate initiation of transcription in eukaryotes (transcription factors)
Necessary to get the RNA polymerase II enzyme to the promoter and initiate gene expression
Recognize and bind to the TATA box sequence in the promoter
Interact with RNA polymerase to form an initiation complex at the promoter
illustrate initiation of transcription in eukaryotes (promoter)
Forms the recognition and binding site for RNA polymerase
Found upstream of the start site
illustrate initiation of transcription in eukaryotes (TATA box)
specifies to other molecules where transcription begins, indicates where a genetic sequence can be read and decoded
illustrate initiation of transcription in eukaryotes (RNA polymerase)
Pries DNA strands apart and joins together RNA nucleotides
• Produces RNA that’s complementary to the DNA template strand and does not need a primer
RNA polymerase I
transcribe rRNA
RNA polymerase II
transcribes mRNA and snRNA
RNA polymerase III
transcribes tRNA and some other small RNAs
Describe the role of the RNA polymerase and sigma-factor in prokaryotic transcription initiation.
o Sigma factor binds to promoter sequence in DNA upstream of start site
o RNA polymerase opens the double helix
o Once transcription begins the sigma factor dissociates
Bacterial elongation of transcript
- Grows in the 5’ to 3’ direction as ribonucleotides are added
- Transcription bubble: Contains RNA polymerase, DNA template, and growing RNA transcript
- Passes after transcription allowing the now-transcribed DNA to be rewound as it leaves the bubble
Eukaryotic elongation of transcript
- as RNA polymerase moves along the DNA, it untwists the double helix
- a gene can be transcribe simultaneously by several RNA polymerases
- nucleotide are added to the 3’ end of growing RNA molecules
Bacterial termination of transcript
- terminator sequences signal “stop” to polymerase: RNA dissociates from template and DNA rewinds (mRNA can be translated without further modification)
- simplest terminator sequence: series of C-G base-pairs followed by a series of A-T base- pairs & forms a hairpin which causes RNA polymerase to pause
Eukaryotic termination of transcript
- RNA polymerase II transcribes the polyadenylation signal sequence and the RNA transcript is released 10-35 nucleotides past this sequence
- after transcription & RNA processing, the mRNA is transported out of the nucleus into the cytoplasm where it is translated
Trace the steps involved in eukaryotic RNA processing: 5’ cap, poly-A-tail, and RNA splicing.
o Addition of a 5; cap protects from degradation and is involved in translation initiation
o Addition of a 3’ poly-A tail: created by poly-A polymerase and protects from degradation
Removal of introns (splicing)
contrast introns and exons
introns: no coding sequences
exons: sequences that will be translated