Categories: All - replication - mutation - transcription

by Jasmine Jing 3 years ago

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DMD Gene (Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy gene)

The DMD gene, responsible for coding dystrophin, plays a crucial role in muscle function and is located on the X chromosome. DNA replication is a vital process occurring in the nucleus of eukaryotic cells during interphase.

DMD Gene (Duchenne 
Muscular Dystrophy gene)

DMD Gene (Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy gene)

How the Gene Product is used in the Cell

Function in the Body: - Gene product is dystrophin - Dystrophin mainly located in the muscles and the heart, and located in small quantities in nerve cells of the brain - Dystrophin works with other proteins to protect muscles from harm as they move, contract, and relax
Dystrophin use in Muscles

How DNA is Replicated?

Process: - Occurs in nucleus of eukaryotes - Occurs during interphase of the cell cycle - Helicase: unzips the double stranded DNA and breaks the hydrogen bonds holding the bases together - DNA Polymerase: replicates DNA molecules to construct a new strand of DNA - Primase: makes RNA primers to instruct DNA Polymerase where to construct the DNA - Ligase: secures the newly constructed parts with the DNA strand - After helicase separates the 2 strands, the DNA is broken into the leading strand + the lagging strand -DNA polymerase only builds from 5' to 3', thus creating Okazaki fragments along the lagging strand - Ligase's job is to fill in the fragments - In the end, 2 identical semi-conservative DNA strands are produced
DNA Replication in a Nutshell

Which Chromosome is the Gene Located?

Location + Vulnerability to Mutations: - The DMD/dystrophin gene is located on the short p-arm of the X chromosome - Vulnerable to mutations (mostly frameshift mutations) - Hereditary problems can create problems associated with this gene, and make it unable to properly synthesize dystrophin (this causes rips in the muscles and early death) this disease can be passed as a X-linked recessive disease, and affects mostly males
DMD Gene

How a Gene is Translated?

Process: - Purpose: decodes the mRNA codon by codon using the ribosome with tRNA to create a polypeptide chain - Translation is divided into 3 phases: initiation, elongation, and termination - mRNA is removed of its cap and tail - Initiation: initiation factors assemble the mRNA, ribosomal sub-units, and initiator tRNA for protein synthesis in ribosome - tRNA carrying anti-codons bond to the codons on the mRNA - Each ribosome includes 3 binding sites for the tRNA: P site, A site, and E site - P (peptide) site: contains the tRNA with a growing polypeptide chain behind it - A (amino acid) site: contains the tRNA with the required amino acids to add to the polypeptide chain - E (exit) site: tRNA leaves after using up its amino acid - Elongation: the amino acids bond together via peptide bonds and become longer and longer - Termination: termination is initiated by stop codons (ie. UAA) and release factors cut off the polypeptide chain from the last tRNA - Polypeptide chain now formed and released
Translation in a Nutshell

How a Gene is Transcribed?

Process: - Includes 3 steps: initiation, elongation, termination - Initiation: promoter factors bind to the promoter region within the gene and triggers RNA polymerase to bind to DNA - DNA separated to 2 strands: coding strand, template strand - Elongation: RNA polymerase builds mRNA molecules - In RNA, thymine is replaced by uracil - Termination: a termination sequence is detected and the mRNA detaches from DNA template - Before leaving cell, mRNA is protected through capping and tailing to ensure no harm comes to it - Non-coding regions (introns) are removed from exons via spliceosomes (only in eukaryotes) - Exons are then joined together to form a mature RNA - After process of capping, tailing, and splicing, the mRNA now becomes a mRNA transcript
Transcription in a Nutshell

Gene Expression + Central Dogma

Translation - 2nd part of central dogma - The mRNA produced in transcription is decoded and used to build proteins containing a specific set of amino acids - Broken down into 3 steps: initiation, elongation, termination
Transcription - 1st part of central dogma - Describes the process of a gene's DNA sequence being copied and created into a mRNA molecule - Broken down into 3 steps: initiation, elongation, termination
What Processes are Included? Since central dogma describes the process of how gene expression is achieved, it is broken into several crucial steps: transcription + translation
Processes of Central Dogma
What is 'Gene Expression'? - Is describes how the DNA sequence of a gene is used to synthesize proteins
What is it the 'Central Dogma'? - Describes the relationship and process of how DNA instructions are transferred to RNA and made into proteins