Protein Synthesis I Flashcards
1) What is the difference between the DNA template strand and the coding strand?
- Template (sense) strand is used for RNA production and is involved in complementary base pairing
- Coding (antisense) strand is complementary to the template strand, so is similar to the RNA strand produced though T/U bases are different
2) Which enzyme is involved in the production of RNA and what does it do?
- RNA polymerase
- Addition of nucleotides in a 5’ -> 3’ direction (the template strand is read from 3’ -> as its antiparallel
- the RNA nucleotides are joined by covalent phosphodiester bonds
3) What are the three stages of RNA synthesis and where do they take place?
- Initiation : RNA polymerase binding to template strand and beginning transcription
- Elongation : reading of DNA sequence on template and synthesis of mRNA
- Termination : reaching transcriptional termination site, mRNA synthesis finishes
- In the nucleus
4) How do the RNA nucleotides reach the DNA template strand for complementary base pairing?
- Via a ribonucleoside triphosphate (RNA nucleotide) uptake channel on the RNA polymerase
5) Describe how RNA polymerase finds the transcription initiation site in prokaryotic cells (e.g. E.Coli)
- During initiation, RNA polymerase is directed to the start site of transcription on the double stranded DNA. - The enzyme is able to find the transcriptional start site, after the promoter region and UTRs (untranslated regions, which are shorter in prokaryotes 3-10 nucleotides long) on the template strand
6) What is the purpose of the 5’ UTR and 3’ UTR (on either end) of the template strand?
- 5’ signals for initiation of transcription
- 3’ signals transcriptional termination
7) Which two areas on the template strand are important for RNA polymerase to locate the transcription initiation site?
- The -35 and -10 groups/boxes
- [-10 aka Pribnow box]
8) What does the RNA polymerase bind to, on the template strand, before transcription occurs?
- Sigma factor
- This dissociates shortly after transcription starts
9) Describe the sequence of events after transcription of the mRNA strand has completed
- mRNA strand grows in length as the RNA polymerase moves along the DNA strand
- RNA polymerase reaches the 3’ UTR which signals the termination of transcription
- mRNA dettachment from the DNA template is facilitated by the ‘hairpin’ shape (with a G-C rich stem loop) at the end of mRNA strand, which has weak A-U base pairing to DNA
10) Describe the structures and functions of mRNA, tRNA and rRNA
mRNA: messenger RNA, transport RNA to a ribosome in cytosol/on RER for translation
tRNA: transfer RNA, to bring correct amino acids to ribosome, which are coded for by the mRNA strand
rRNA: ribosomal RNA, associates with proteins to form ribosomes
11) What are the differences between eukaryotic and prokaryotic transcription?
- Eukaryotic is more complex with more proteins involved (polymerases, initiation and elongation factors, other helper proteins)
- In eukaryotes, the main enzyme involved is RNA Polymerase II
- Eukaryotic has additional mRNA processing
12) What are the two regions eukaryotic genes are split into?
- Introns (non-coding regions), these are spliced out so aren’t present in mature mRNA
- Exons (coding regions) found in mature mRNA
13) Define the term hnRNA
heteronuclear RNA
-heterogeneous RNA which is the primary transcript from DNA, these are unprocessed mRNA molecules in the nucleus that haven’t undergone any post-transcriptional changes yet
14) Name 3 post-transcriptional modifications that occur in eukaryotic cells during conversion of the hnRNA to mRNA.
- Capping : formation of 7-methylguanosine ‘cap’ at 5’ end (Guanosine triphosphate -GTP- reacts with 5’ end of mRNA so its added to a 5’ phosphate group -> 5’ -5’ bond). Guanosine is methylated at 7’ position
- Splicing : removal of introns from pre-mRNA/ hnRNA
- Polyadenylation : addition of polyadenyl tails (long stretcch of adenosines to stabilise mRNA) to the 3’ end of RNA [adds 50-250 adenosine residues]
15) State one way in which hnRNA can be spliced differently, from simply intron removal, and how this is beneficial
- Some exons may be removed as well, to produce different protein products from the same gene