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The Genetic Code and Gene Expression

Biology
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The Genetic Code and Gene Expression

Biology
05 Apr 2025

The Genetic Code and Gene Expression

1. The Genetic Code: A Universal Triplet Code

  • The genetic code is the set of rules by which information encoded within genetic material (DNA or RNA sequences) is translated into proteins (amino acid sequences) by living cells.
  • It is a universal code, meaning that virtually all organisms use the same code. This provides evidence for a common ancestor of all life.
  • It is a triplet code: Each codon, which specifies an amino acid, consists of a sequence of three nucleotides (bases).
    • There are 4 possible bases (A, T/U, C, G).
    • Therefore, there are \(4^3 = 64\) possible codons.
  • The genetic code is degenerate (or redundant):
    • Most amino acids are encoded by more than one codon.
    • This reduces the impact of mutations, as a change in a single base may still code for the same amino acid (silent mutation).
  • Start codon: AUG (methionine) signals the start of translation.
  • Stop codons: UAA, UAG, and UGA signal the end of translation. These codons do not code for an amino acid.
  • The code is non-overlapping: Each nucleotide is part of only one codon.
  • The code is read in a sequential manner.

KEY TAKEAWAY: The genetic code is a universal, triplet, degenerate code that dictates how DNA sequences are translated into proteins.

2. Gene Expression: From DNA to Protein

Gene expression is the process by which information encoded in a gene is used to synthesize a functional gene product (protein). It involves two main steps: transcription and translation. In eukaryotic cells, RNA processing is an essential intermediary step.

2.1 Transcription

  • Transcription is the process of copying the genetic information from a DNA template into a messenger RNA (mRNA) molecule.
  • Occurs in the nucleus (in eukaryotes).
  • Enzyme involved: RNA polymerase.
  • Steps:
    1. Initiation: RNA polymerase binds to the promoter region of the gene. The promoter is a specific DNA sequence that signals the start of the gene.
    2. Elongation: RNA polymerase moves along the DNA template strand, synthesizing a complementary mRNA molecule by adding RNA nucleotides. Uracil (U) is used instead of thymine (T) in RNA.
    3. Termination: RNA polymerase reaches a termination sequence on the DNA, signaling the end of the gene. The mRNA molecule is released.

2.2 RNA Processing (Eukaryotic Cells)

  • Before mRNA can be translated in eukaryotes, it undergoes RNA processing in the nucleus.
  • Three main steps:
    1. Capping: A modified guanine nucleotide (the “cap”) is added to the 5’ end of the mRNA. This protects the mRNA from degradation and helps ribosomes bind to it.
    2. Splicing: Introns (non-coding regions) are removed from the pre-mRNA, and exons (coding regions) are joined together. This process is carried out by a complex called the spliceosome.
    3. Polyadenylation: A poly(A) tail (a string of adenine nucleotides) is added to the 3’ end of the mRNA. This protects the mRNA from degradation and helps with export from the nucleus.
  • The processed mRNA is now mature and ready to be translated.

2.3 Translation

  • Translation is the process of synthesizing a polypeptide (protein) from the information encoded in mRNA.
  • Occurs on ribosomes in the cytoplasm.
  • Requires:
    • mRNA (messenger RNA): Carries the genetic code from DNA to the ribosome.
    • tRNA (transfer RNA): Brings the correct amino acid to the ribosome, according to the mRNA codon. Each tRNA has an anticodon complementary to a specific mRNA codon and carries the corresponding amino acid.
    • Ribosomes: Complexes of rRNA (ribosomal RNA) and proteins that facilitate the binding of mRNA and tRNA and catalyze the formation of peptide bonds between amino acids.
  • Steps:
    1. Initiation: The ribosome binds to the mRNA at the start codon (AUG). The initiator tRNA carrying methionine binds to the start codon.
    2. Elongation: The ribosome moves along the mRNA, one codon at a time. For each codon:
      • A tRNA with the complementary anticodon binds to the mRNA.
      • The amino acid carried by the tRNA is added to the growing polypeptide chain via a peptide bond.
      • The ribosome translocates (moves) to the next codon.
    3. Termination: The ribosome reaches a stop codon (UAA, UAG, or UGA). There is no tRNA that corresponds to these codons.
      • A release factor binds to the stop codon, causing the polypeptide chain to be released from the ribosome.
      • The ribosome disassembles.
  • The resulting polypeptide chain may then undergo further folding and modifications to become a functional protein.

EXAM TIP: Be able to describe the steps of transcription and translation in detail, including the roles of the key molecules involved (DNA, mRNA, tRNA, ribosomes, RNA polymerase).

3. Summary Table: Transcription vs. Translation

Feature Transcription Translation
Location Nucleus (Eukaryotes) Cytoplasm (Ribosomes)
Template DNA mRNA
Product mRNA (pre-mRNA in eukaryotes) Polypeptide (protein)
Enzyme RNA polymerase Ribosome (no single enzyme equivalent)
Input DNA nucleotides (A, T, C, G) mRNA codons, tRNA, amino acids
Key molecules RNA polymerase, promoter, terminator mRNA, tRNA, ribosomes, start/stop codons

STUDY HINT: Create flowcharts to visualize the processes of transcription and translation. This will help you remember the sequence of events.

VCAA FOCUS: VCAA often asks questions about the roles of different molecules in transcription and translation and about the differences between these two processes.

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