Polysaccarides & Lipids Flashcards
1950s - Beadle & Tatum - early ideas on gene expression
- Believed that 1 gene = 1 product due to experiments with fungus neurospores
- concept kept for decades*
- Later saw nematode (C. elegans) = 18000 genes vs Human genome = 26000 to 70000
Found it’s not the number of genes you have - it’s what you do with them (same w/ protein)
Process of Gene to protein
-Glycosylation
1 gene -> protein -> MODIFICATION -> multiple forms of protein w/ different functions
*Modification; Glycosylation (the addition of polysaccharide chains to proteins)
2 main forms of sugars
- Hexoses (6 C form)
- different groups added to carbon to give different sugars (i.e. glucose, fructose, glactose mannose)
- Furanoses (5 C form)
- i.e. pentose ring (nucleotides)
How are polysaccharides made?
- Made when simple sugars are joined together
- are able to join in different ways to make complicated branch structures/arrays
e.g. polysaccharides w/ branch structures found in plant cell wall are very complex & strong (i.e. chitin, glycans, starch)
Where protein synthesis & glycosylation occurs
-glycosylation in different species
Proteins (synthesised in cytoplasm) -> some go to ER -> Golgi apparatus -> different possible outcomes/location
- Glycolysation starts in E.R. and continues in golgi apparatus
- The glycosylation pattern is different among species (Activity of protein often relies on glycolation pattern)
Example of protein; Notch
- Notch protein has a domain inside & outside cell - is involved in cell-cell communication
- outer domain interacts w/ jaggered protein on other cells
- intracellular domain breaks off & goes to nucleus to affect gene epression (activates expression of genes in nucleus)
- Notch 1 contains series of ECF repeats (are proteins on outer domain) & these repeats are glyosylated w/ different sidechains
- side chains & protein can create v. complex structure
Importance of Glycosylation (in CNS)
-Gycoforms
-Critical for development of nervous system
Glycoforms: different forms of glycosylated proteins
-outer surface of eukaryotic cells coated by polysaccharide chains - helps communication b/w cells via things that bind to them - can change protein expression w/in cells
Lipids
- what they are a major component of
- examples
- role of cholesterol in lipid bilayer
- principle component of membranes (regulates flow of materials into & out of cell
e. g. cortisol, testosterone- those w/ ring structure (i.e. testosterone) function as hormones or messengers - important in development
- Cholesterol provides order to lipid bilayer