Genes, Genetic Code and DNA Replication
Genes, Genetic Code and DNA Replication
1. Genes
- Definition: A gene is a segment of a DNA molecule that carries genetic information encoding for a polypeptide chain or an RNA molecule.
- Structure of a structural gene:
- Consists of 3 regions:
- Regulatory region: Located at the 3′ end of the template strand, containing specific nucleotide sequences that enable RNA polymerase to recognize and bind for initiating transcription.
- Coding region: Carries the information encoding for amino acids. There are two types:
- SVNS: Continuous coding region (non-fragmented gene).
- SVNT: Discontinuous coding region (fragmented gene) because it has exons (coding segments for aa) alternating with introns (non-coding segments for aa).
- Terminator region: Located at the 5′ end of the template strand, carrying the transcription termination signal.
- Number of strands: A gene has 2 strands:
- Template strand: Serves as the template for transcription.
- Complementary strand: Complementary to the template strand.
- Strand direction:
- Template strand: 3′?5′
- Complementary strand: 5′?3′
2. Genetic Code
- Codon: A triplet code for aa on mRNA.
- Anti-codon: A triplet code complementary to tRNA.
- Triplet: A triplet code for aa on DNA.
- Stop codon: UAG, UGA, UAA (on mRNA). Specifies the termination signal for transcription.
- Start codon: AUG. Initiates translation, encoding for methionine (NT) and formylmethionine (NS).
Characteristics of the genetic code:
- Continuity: The genetic code is read from a specific point in triplets, without overlapping.
- Specificity: Each triplet codes for a unique amino acid.
- Universality: All species share the same genetic code.
- Degeneracy: Multiple different triplets can specify the same amino acid (except for AUG and UGG).
3. DNA Replication
- Stage in the cell cycle: S phase of interphase.
- Application: Creating countless copies in a short time for research and practical applications.
- Process:
- Step 1: Unwinding the DNA molecule:
- The unwinding enzyme separates the two single strands of DNA to create a Y-shaped fork, exposing the template strand.
- Step 2: Synthesizing new DNA strands:
- DNA polymerase uses one strand as a template to synthesize the new strand according to the complementary principle (A=T, G?X).
- DNA polymerase synthesizes the new strand in the 5′-3′ direction. Therefore:
- Template strand 3′-5′: The new strand is synthesized continuously.
- Template strand 5′-3′: The new strand is synthesized discontinuously, creating short segments (Okazaki fragments), which are then joined together by ligase.
- Step 3: Two DNA molecules are formed:
- Each DNA molecule formed consists of one newly synthesized strand and one old strand from the original DNA molecule (semi-conservative principle).
Purpose of DNA replication:
- Transmit genetic information to the next generation.
- Underlies cell duplication.
Location of replication:
- Prokaryotes: Nucleoid region.
- Eukaryotes:
- Nucleus: DNAs with the same replication frequency.
- Organelles (mitochondria, chloroplasts): Different replication frequencies and different from nuclear DNA.
Direction of new strand synthesis: 5′-3′.
Capabilities of DNA polymerase:
- Unable to unwind DNA.
- Unable to self-synthesize nucleotides/starting sequences.
Ligase (joining enzyme):
- Joins Okazaki fragments together, forming phosphodiester bonds.
- Works on both new single strands (because both have Okazaki fragments).
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