Gene Expression Flashcards
What is a gene?
Stretch of DNA with a chromosomal locus, representing:
- a unit of inheritance
- a unit of transcription.
What are the 5 different types of RNA?
- mRNA - 2%
- 100,000s kinds
- few copies of each
- rRNA
- 4 kinds
- many copies of each
- tRNA
- 100 kinds
- very many copies of each
- miRNA
- Non-coding RNA
Where do transcription and translation occur?
- Transcription = nucleus
- Translation = cytoplasm
Describe the requirements of transcription and translation in terms of: enzyme, activated substrates, template and process.
Enzyme: RNA polymerase vs ribosome
Substrates: NTPs vs amino acids
Template: DNA vs mRNA
Process: initiation, elongation and termination.
Describe the initiation stage of transcription.
- TFs bind to gene promoter region (TATA box).
- Recruit RNA polymerase II. RNAP binding/activity requireds presence of:
- activator
- mediator
- chromatin-remodelling complex
- histone acetylase
- TF helicase unwinds DNA - exposes a DNA coding strand and DNA template strand.
Describe the elongation stage of transcription. In which direction does synthesis occur?
- RNAP moves along the template strand (reads 3’ to 5’), covalently linking nucleotides to form pre-mRNA strand (synthesises 5’ to 3’).
- Elongation is coupled to RNA processing.
Describe the termination stage of transcription.
- RNAP reaches 3’ termination sequence and falls of template strand.
How is pre-mRNA turned into mature mRNA?
Post-transcriptional processing:
- 5’ RNA capping
- 3’ polyadenylation
- intron splicing
What is 5’ capping and why does it occur?
- 7-methyl guanosine cap is added to 5’ end via 5’-5’ phosphate linkage.
- protects against degradation and role in translation initiation.
What is 3’ polyadenylation and why does it occur?
- Specific endonuclease recognises AAUAA cleavage site and cleaves mRNA a few bases further.
- Poly-A polymerase adds up to 200 A nucleotides.
- Protects against degradation.
Which enzyme catalyses the translation reaction?
Ribosomes
- 2 subunits
- made up of 4 rRNAs + 82 proteins
What is a codon?
- Nucleotide triplet in mRNA that encodes the information for a specific amino acid in a protein.
- Recognised by a complementary tRNA anti-codon.
Why is the triplet code degenerate?
Each codon (64) codes for 1 or more of the 20 aa.
What are the start and stop translation codons?
Initiation = AUG (methionine) Termination = UAA, UAG, UGA
What is the wobble hypothesis?
- 1 tRNA anti-codon recognises >1 codon: although pairing at first 2 bases must be complementary, pairing at 3rd codon base doesn’t have to match (‘wobbles’).
- Accommodated for by presence of inosine base: can recognise U, C or A.