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Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What is the “bridge” between DNA and protein synthesis? 4. What is the process by which one gene is copied into an mRNA strand? 5. How many mRNA nucleotide bases equal a “codon”?

Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

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Page 1: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

Chapter 17 RQ

1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins?

2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called?

3. What is the “bridge” between DNA and protein synthesis?

4. What is the process by which one gene is copied into an mRNA strand?

5. How many mRNA nucleotide bases equal a “codon”?

Page 2: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

1. Give early experimental evidence that implicated proteins as the links between genotype and phenotype.

Inherited instructions in DNA direct protein synthesis, thus proteins are the links between genotype and phenotype

Garrod suggested that genes dictate phenotypes through enzymes that catalyze reactions

Page 3: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

2. Describe Beadle and Tatum’s experiments with Neurospora, and explain the contribution they made to our understanding of how genes control metabolism.

Relationship between genes and enzymesWild type (bread mold) can survive on minimal medium looked for mutants or auxotrophs that could not live because they can’t synthesize moleculesResults one gene – one enzyme hypothesis the function of a gene is to dictate the production of a specific enzyme

Page 4: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What
Page 5: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

3. Distinguish between “one gene-one enzyme” hypothesis and “one gene-one polypeptide”, and explain why the original hypothesis was changed.

One gene – one enzyme

Gene codes for a specific enzyme

One gene – one polypeptide

Most enzymes are proteinsMany proteins are not enzymesProteins that are not enzymes are still gene productsMany proteins are comprised of 2 or more polypeptide chains, each chain specified by a different gene

Page 6: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

4. Explain how RNA differs from DNA.

Both are nucleic acids; polymers of nucleotidesRNA is different from DNA:- the 5 carbon sugar is ribose not deoxyribose- the nitrogen base is uracil not thymine

Page 7: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

5. Briefly overview, in your own words, how information flows from gene to protein.

Two processes: transcription and translation

Transcription the synthesis of RNA using DNA as a template

Translation the synthesis of a polypeptide which is directed by mRNA

DNA RNA protein

Page 8: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

6. Distinguish between transcription and translation.

Transcription is the synthesis of RNA under the direction of DNATranslation the actual synthesis of a polypeptide, which occurs under the direction of mRNA

Page 9: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

7. Describe where transcription and translation occur in prokaryotes and in eukaryotes; explain why it is significant that in eukaryotes, transcription and translation are separated in space and time.

Prokaryotes lack nuclei so DNA is not segregated from ribosomes or the protein – synthesizing machinery (occurs in rapid succession)Eukaryotes have nuclear envelopes that segregate transcription in the nucleus from translation in the cytoplasm; mRNA (the intermediary) is modified before it moves from the nucleus to the cytoplasm where translation occurs

Page 10: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What
Page 11: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

8. Define codon, and explain what relationship exists between the linear sequence of codons on mRNA and the linear sequence of amino acids in a polypeptide.

Codon a 3-nucleotide sequence in mRNA that specifies which amino acid will be added to a growing polypeptide or that signals termination the basic unit of the genetic codeGenes are not directly translated into amino acids but are first transcribed as codons into mRNA

Page 12: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What
Page 13: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

9. List the three stop codons and the one start codon.

StartAUGStopUAA

UAG UGA

Page 14: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

10. Explain in what way the genetic code is redundant and unambiguous.

Redundant two or more codons differing only in their 3rd base can code for the same amino acids (UUU & UUC = phenylalanine)Unambiguous codons code for only ONE amino acid(UUU ONLY codes for phenylalanine)

Page 15: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

11. Explain the evolutionary significance of a nearly universal genetic code.

It indicates that the code was established very early in life’s history

Page 16: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

12. Explain the process of transcription including the three major steps of initiation, elongation, and termination.

Initiation a RNA polymerase attaches at a specific region of DNA called the promoter, and begins transcription (often called the TATA box)

Elongation as RNA polymerase moves along the DNA, 10 – 20 bases are exposed at a time for pairing with RNA nucleotides

Termination transcription proceeds until RNA polymerase transcribes the termination sequence

Page 17: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What
Page 18: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

13. Describe the general role of RNA polymerase in transcription and explain how it recognizes where to begin.

RNA polymerases bind at the promoter and in eukaryotes they need transcription factors to recognize themThe enzyme separates the 2 DNA strands at the initiation site and transcription begins

Page 19: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What
Page 20: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

14. Specifically, describe the primary functions of RNA polymerase II.

1. It untwists and opens a short segment of DNA exposing about 10 nucleotide bases one of the exposed DNA strands is the template for base-pairing with RNA nucleotides

2. It links incoming RNA nucleotides to the 3’ end of the elongating strand, thus, RNA grows one nucleotide at a time in the 5’ to 3’ direction

Page 21: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What
Page 22: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

15. Distinguish among mRNA, tRNA, and rRNA.

mRNA messenger RNA; what the DNA nucleotide sequence is transcribed intotRNA transfer RNArRNA ribosomal RNA; translation occurs on ribosomes, complex particles composed of rRNA and protein that facilitate the orderly linking of amino acids into polypeptide chains

Page 23: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

16. Describe the structure of tRNA and explain how the structure is related to the function.

tRNA is transcribed from DNA templates, made in the nucleus and travels out into the cytoplasmUsed repeatedly – picks up its designated amino acid in the cytosol, deposits it at the ribosome, and leaves to pick up anotherConsists of a single RNA strand that is only about 80 nucleotides long, has a protruding end which serves as the attachment site for the amino acid

Page 24: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What
Page 25: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

17. Given the sequence of bases in DNA, predict the corresponding codons transcribed on mRNA and the corresponding anticodons of tRNA.

DNACTAGGATGCAAATGC

mRNAGAUCCUACGUUUACG

tRNA CUAGGAUGCAAAUGC

Page 26: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

18. Describe the wobble effect.

It is a relaxation of the base-pairing rulesIf one tRNA variety existed for each of the mRNA codons that specifies an amino acid, there would be 61 tRNAs, there are only 45- this is because some tRNAs can recognize two or more codons

Page 27: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

19. Explain how an aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase matches a specific amino acid to its appropriate tRNA; describe the energy source that drives this endergonic process.

There are 20 types of these enzymes in a cell, each specific for an amino acidThe active site of each enzyme fits only a specific combination of amino acid and tRNAThe synthetase catalyzes the covalent attachment of the amino acid to its tRNA in a process driven by the hydrolysis of ATP (which loses 2 phosphates!)

Page 28: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

20. Describe the structure of a ribosome and explain how this structure relates to function.

A ribosome is made up of 2 subunits (large and small) – these are constructed of proteins and ribosomal RNA molecules, and are made in the nucleolusFunction is to bring mRNA together with the amino acid-bearing tRNAs, therefore they have binding sites for mRNA and tRNA

Page 29: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What
Page 30: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

21. Describe the process of translation including initiation, elongation, and termination and explain what enzymes, protein factors, and energy sources are needed for each stage.

Initiation when mRNA, tRNA and the first amino acid come together with the ribosome- protein initiation factors bring everything together to begin (GTP provides energy)

Page 31: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

Elongation…

Elongation amino acids are added one by one, helped by protein elongation factors1. Codon recognition – mRNA codon makes a hydrogen bond with the tRNA anticodon (requires GTP hydrolysis)2. Peptide bond formation – a ribozyme catalyzes the peptide bond creating a polypeptide which then separates from it’s tRNA3. Translocation – the tRNA moves to another part of the ribosome, and the next codon to be translated steps up; finally the tRNA leaves (requires hydrolysis of GTP)

Page 32: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

Termination…

Termination elongation continues until there is a stop codon; a protein release factor binds and adds a water to finish the polypeptide

Page 33: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What
Page 34: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

22. Explain what determines the primary structure of a protein and describe how a polypeptide must be modified before it becomes fully functional.

A gene determines the protein’s primary structure (it’s amino acid sequence)Primary structure then determines conformation changesPosttranslational modifications chemical modification by adding sugars, lipids, phosphates, or others

Page 35: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

23. Describe what determines whether a ribosome will be free in the cytosol or attached to rough ER.

Free suspended in cytosol and mostly synthesize proteins that dissolve in the cytosol and function thereBound attached to the cytosol side of the ER and make proteins which are secreted from the cell (ex: insulin)- occurs if the growing polypeptide ITSELF

cues the ribosome to attach to the ER – marked by a signal peptide, which targets the protein to the ER

Page 36: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

24. Explain how proteins can be targeted for specific sites within the cell.

A signal peptide is recognized by the SRP (signal-recognition particle), and this dictates where that particular protein will be headed for work. - as the polypeptide is being synthesized, it begins to snake around to where it will be located within the cell (ER, mitochondria, chloroplast, etc.)

Page 37: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What
Page 38: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

25. Describe the difference between prokaryotic and eukaryotic mRNA.

ProkaryoticA transcription unit can contain several genes, so the resulting mRNA code may code for different, but functionally related, proteins

EukaryoticA transcription unit contains a single gene, so the resulting mRNA codes for synthesis of only one polypeptide

Page 39: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

26. Explain how eukaryotic mRNA is processed before it leaves the nucleus.

In eukaryotes, RNA transcripts are modified before leaving the nucleus to make functional mRNAThis can happen in two ways:1. Covalent alteration of both the 3’ and 5’ ends2. Removal of intervening sequences“Pre-mRNA” is what the molecule is called prior to this alteration

Page 40: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What
Page 41: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What
Page 42: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

27. Describe some biological functions of introns and gene splicing.

Introns – the noncoding segments of nucleic acid that lie between coding regionsExons – segments which are eventually expressed through amino acid sequencesSplicing – occurs when the introns are cut out of the initial length to transcribe and translate the portion that will code for used information

Page 43: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

28. Explain why base-pair insertions or deletions usually have a greater effect than base-pair substitutions.

Substitutions the replacement of one nucleotide and its partner in the complementary DNA strand with another pair of nucleotidesInsertions and deletions the additions or losses of one or more nucleotide pairs in a gene

Page 44: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What
Page 45: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What

29. Describe how mutagenesis can occur.

Mutagenesis the creation of mutations- due to: errors in DNA replication, repair, or recombinations that result in base-pair substitutions, insertions, or deletions

The End!

Page 46: Chapter 17 RQ 1. Why do dwarf peas fail to make their own gibberellins? 2. What did the “one gene – one polypeptide” hypothesis used to be called? 3. What