5 - RNA coding and noncoding Flashcards
RNA as genetic material experiment
Could mix RNA and protein from different TMV strains and produce viral progeny identical to the strain of the RNA donor, not the protein donor.
Differences between RNA and DNA
- Bases differ (U in RNA not T)
- Sugar is ribose not deoxyribose
- RNA is more flexible but less stable
Can uracil base pair with other ribonucleotides
Yes. including itself. However 2 hydrogen bonds between U - G for example are weaker than two between U - A (normal)
2 classes of RNa
- Coding: Encodes information to makr proteins (mRNA)
- Noncoding: functional RNAs (e.g. RNA itself is the final functional product)
What are the three key types of RNA involved in protein synthesis
- mRNAs: Messenger RNAs, code for proteins
- rRNAs: Ribosomal RNA, form the basic structure of the ribosome and catalyse protein synthesis
- tRNA: Transfer RNAs, adaptors between mRNA and amino acids
explain process of making mRNA (RNA processing steps)
- Introns, exons and a long 3’ end are all transcribed into pre-mRNA
- A 5’ cap is added
- Cleavage at the 3’end is downstream of the consensus sequence
- Polyadenylation at the cleavage site produces the poly(A) tail
- Introns are removed producing mature mRNA
3 co transcriptional processing methods
- 5’ RNA capping
- Splicing
- 3’ polyadenylation
RNA capping
Addition of 7-methylguanosine to primary transcript via 5’-5’ phosphodiester bond (triphosphate linkage)
Function of RNA capping
- Protects against 5’-3’ exonuclease attack
- Facilitates transport from nucleus
- Facilitates RNA splicing
Function of poly A tail
Important for nuclear export, translation and stability of mRNA
What are the three sequences required for splicing
- Splice donor site (5’ end of intron)
- Splice acceptor site (3’ end of intron)
- Branch point sequence in intron
Y nomenclature
C or U
R nomenclature
A or G
N nomenclature
any base
What carries out the splicing reaction
Spliceosome-Ribonucleoprotein complex, forms RNA intermediate (Lariat)