Protein Synthesis
PROTEIN SYNTHESIS is relevant to the following important functions:
There is no denying the fact that all metabolic reactions are catalyzed by proteins in the form of enzymes, including energy releasing and energy capturing reactions in a significant manner.
- Proteins offer structure to
cells and organisms, such as the cyto skeleton.
- DNA has the stored information
needed to determine the sequence of amino acids in proteins.
- It is essential to understand
how proteins are synthesized in order to fully understand how they work.
- The building of proteins is
called protein synthesis.
- The assembly of proteins occurs
outside the nucleus in the ribosomes.
DNA and RNA
- DNA sends instructions for
building proteins to the ribosomes in the form of messenger RNA (mRNA).
RNA
- RNA is a nucleic acid.
RNA is made up of a chain of nucleotides (phosphate + sugar + nitrogen
base).
- RNA - consists of only a single
strand of nucleotide (Remember DNA is two strands). RNA is half a
ladder or zipper.
- The sugar in RNA differs from
the DNA sugar. The sugar in RNA is ribose.
- The bases found in RNA differ
as well. DNA is made up of adenine, guanine, thymine and
cytosine. Adenine, guanine and cytosine also are found in RNA.
But instead of thymine RNA contains the base uracil.
- In RNA, cytosine bonds to
guanine, and adenine bonds to uracil.
Types of RNA
RNA are the “workers”
for protein synthesis. DNA provides the workers with the instructions for
making the proteins and the workers build the proteins amino acid by amino acid
( we should remember that amino acid + amino acid + amino acid = Protein).
3 Types of RNA that makes proteins (Workers in the protein assembly line)
3 Types of RNA that makes proteins (Workers in the protein assembly line)
- mRNA – RNA messenger – brings
instructions from the DNA in the nucleus to the cells factory floor, the
cytoplasm. Once the mRNA is on the factory floor (cytoplasm) it moves
to the assembly line, a ribosome.
- The ribosome is made up of
ribosomal RNA (rRNA); it binds the mRNA and uses the instructions to
assemble the amino acids in the correct order.
- The transfer RNA (tRNA) is the supplier – tRNA delivers the amino acids to the ribosome to be assembled into a protein.
- Transcription
The process by which
the DNA message is copied into a strand of mRNA is called transcription.
This mRNA is then used for the construction of a protein molecule.
Transcription takes places in the NUCLEUS because DNA cannot leave.
The steps:
Transcription takes places in the NUCLEUS because DNA cannot leave.
The steps:
- The DNA double helix starts to
uncoil.
- Once the two strands of DNA
separate from one another only one strand participates in the synthesis of
a complementary mRNA strand.
- The mRNA strand is synthesized “made”
with the help of an enzyme called RNA polymerase.
- After mRNA synthesis is
complete, the two strands of DNA recouple and the molecules of DNA recoils
to assume its double helix.
- The proceeded mRNA leaves the
nucleus and enters the cytoplasm.
mRNA carries the
instructions that direct the assembly of a specific protein to a designated
area on the ribosome. The instructions are carried in a sequence of three
nitrogen bases called a codon.
Codon Chart
Codon is the code –
needed to convert mRNA into protein language. Each codon (3
nitrogen bases) codes for one amino acid. This is the genetic code.
The genetic code is universal.
64 possible combinations are available for identification of genetic codes. It is noted that some do not use code for an amino acid, but provide instructions for making a protein (UAA is a STOP codon indicating that the protein chain ends at that point).
AUG is a START codon as well as the codon for methionine.
It may be pointed out here that more than one codon can code for the same amino acid.
64 possible combinations are available for identification of genetic codes. It is noted that some do not use code for an amino acid, but provide instructions for making a protein (UAA is a STOP codon indicating that the protein chain ends at that point).
AUG is a START codon as well as the codon for methionine.
It may be pointed out here that more than one codon can code for the same amino acid.
Translation
Once the message has
reached the ribosome, the protein is ready to be assembled. The process
of building the protein from the mRNA instructions is called translation.
The transfer RNA (tRNA) and the ribosomal RNA (rRNA) are involved in translation.
In the cytoplasm, a ribosome attaches to the strand of mRNA like a clothes pin clamped to a close line. tRNA is responsible for carrying the amino acid acids (the building blocks of proteins) to the ribosome so they can be linked in a specific order that makes up a single protein. Each tRNA attaches to only one type of amino acid (correct translation of mRNA depends on the joining of each mRNA codon with the correct tRNA molecule). One end of the tRNA carries a three-base sequence called an anticodon, which matches up with a particular codon on the mRNA. They are complementary to each other.
The Translation Process
In the cytoplasm, a ribosome attaches to the strand of mRNA like a clothes pin clamped to a close line. tRNA is responsible for carrying the amino acid acids (the building blocks of proteins) to the ribosome so they can be linked in a specific order that makes up a single protein. Each tRNA attaches to only one type of amino acid (correct translation of mRNA depends on the joining of each mRNA codon with the correct tRNA molecule). One end of the tRNA carries a three-base sequence called an anticodon, which matches up with a particular codon on the mRNA. They are complementary to each other.
The Translation Process
- The tRNA carries the first
amino acid to the mRNA strand.
- The anticodon forms as base
pair with codon mRNA . This places the amino acid
in the correct position for forming a peptide bond with the next amino
acid (Remember peptide bonds bond amino acids together in proteins).
- The ribosome slides down the
mRNA chain top the next codon and a new tRNA molecule bring another
molecule.
- The amino acids bond, the first
tRNA releases its amino acid and detaches from the mRNA. The tRNA molecule is now free to pick up and deliver another
molecule of its specific amino acid to a ribosome. Again the
ribosome slides down to the next codon; a new tRNA molecule arrives and
its amino acid bonds with the previous one. rRNA helps bond
the amino acids together to form the final protein.
- When the STOP codon is reached on the mRNA strand translation ends and amino acid strand is released from the ribosome.
- Amino acid chains become
proteins when they are released from the ribosome.
The Central Dogma
Crick and Watson had a
model for the flow of information in cells. This model incorporates DNA,
RNA, and proteins.
DNA may replicate itself
DNA may be transcribed to RNA
RNA may be translated into proteins
RNA and DNA are NOT made from protein
DNA is NOT made from RNA
Called the Central Dogma of Molecular Biology – DNA to RNA to protein
DNA may replicate itself
DNA may be transcribed to RNA
RNA may be translated into proteins
RNA and DNA are NOT made from protein
DNA is NOT made from RNA
Called the Central Dogma of Molecular Biology – DNA to RNA to protein
Summing It All Up!
The genetic code
between DNA and protein is in the sequence of nucleotides in DNA within genes.
DNA is transcribed into mRNA
mRNA is translated into a polypeptide with the help of tRNA
tRNA with a specific sequence that matches mRNA, carries the specific amino acid to the ribosome to help form a polypeptide
Ribosomes are the site of protein synthesis.
Transcription involves making a strand of RNA complementary to DNA.
RNA is single stranded-only one strand of DNA is transcribed.
RNA produced is messenger RNA (mRNA) because it carries the genetic message from DNA to the site of protein production.
DNA does not leave the nucleus!!!
this information is used to code for a protein made up of amino acids
if there are 4 letters in DNA language, and there are 20 amino acids that make up proteins
Amino acids are coded for by groups of 3 nucleotides, called CODONS.
DNA is transcribed into mRNA
mRNA is translated into a polypeptide with the help of tRNA
tRNA with a specific sequence that matches mRNA, carries the specific amino acid to the ribosome to help form a polypeptide
Ribosomes are the site of protein synthesis.
Transcription involves making a strand of RNA complementary to DNA.
RNA is single stranded-only one strand of DNA is transcribed.
RNA produced is messenger RNA (mRNA) because it carries the genetic message from DNA to the site of protein production.
DNA does not leave the nucleus!!!
this information is used to code for a protein made up of amino acids
if there are 4 letters in DNA language, and there are 20 amino acids that make up proteins
Amino acids are coded for by groups of 3 nucleotides, called CODONS.
- There are 4x4x4 = 64 codons.
- With these and only 20 amino
acids, there are extra codons.
- Each amino acid is coded by
more than 1 codon.
- NO codon codes for more than 1
amino acid
Four codons have special functions in the genetic code
- one start AUG codes for
methionine
- 3 stop codons you do not have to memorize these.These determine the beginning and end of the polypeptide production.
In view of the above it is evident that the ribosome will translate
the mRNA molecule until it reaches a termination codon on the mRNA. When this
happens, the growing protein called a polypeptide chain is released
from the tRNA molecule and the ribosome splits back into large and small
subunits.
The newly formed polypeptide
chain undergoes several modifications before becoming a fully functioning
protein. Proteins have a variety of functions. Some will be used in the cell membrane, while others will remain in the cytoplasm or be transported out of the cell. Many copies of a protein can be made from
one mRNA molecule. This is because several ribosomes
can translate the same mRNA molecule at the same time. These clusters of
ribosomes that translate a single mRNA sequence are called polyribosomes or
polysomes.
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