25/11/2020 Protein Synthesis (Higher only) 1. What part of a DNA strand contains the instructions for a protein? 2. What are the letters of the bases that form the DNA code? 3. How do these bases pair up in DNA? 4. Apart from bases, what other parts are needed in a DNA molecule? 5. What is one phosphate group, one sugar and one base called? 6. Why is DNA a polymer? 7. Why are proteins polymers? 8. Give an example of a protein. 9. How is the active site of an enzyme formed? 25/11/2020 Answers 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. What part of a DNA strand contains the instructions for a protein? (gene) What are the letters of the bases that form the DNA code? (A, C, T and G) How do these bases pair up in DNA? (A with T, C with G) Apart from bases, what other parts are needed in a DNA molecule? (phosphate group, sugar) What is one phosphate group, one sugar and one base called? (nucleotide) Why is DNA a polymer? (It is made of many nucleotides joined in a chain.) Why are proteins polymers? (They are made of many amino acids joined in a chain.) Give an example of a protein. (any example, e.g. an enzyme) How is the active site of an enzyme formed? (by folding of protein/polypeptide/amino acid chains) L/O Recall where proteins are made. Describe how the shape of a protein is determined. Explain how the order of amino acids in a protein is determined. Describe what happens during the transcription stage of protein synthesis. Describe what happens during the translation stage of protein synthesis. Compare and Contrast • What similarities and differences do you notice? Why do you think those similarities and differences are there? DNA mRNA tRNA Suggested Answers • DNA is double stranded and mRNA and tRNA are both single stranded • The bases in DNA are ATCG but in RNA are AUCG • RNAs are shorter than DNA • tRNA has an anticodon binding site Protein Synthesis There are two stages to building a protein. 1. Transcription, which is copying the code for the protein from DNA 2. Translation, which is making the protein, using the copy from DNA (mRNA) Transcription 1. RNA polymerase attaches to a non-coding region on the DNA molecule. 2. The enzyme separates the two DNA strands. 3. The enzyme then moves along the template strand adding complementary RNA nucleotides. 4. They contain the same bases as DNA except Uracil (U) which replaces Thymine (T) 5. The nucleotides link to form a strand of mRNA Quick Check 1. 2. 3. 4. Where does transcription take place? What is meant by non coding region? Which enzyme is used to build a mRNA? What base is found in RNA, but is not found in DNA? Translation 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. The mRNA travels out of the nucleus through the nuclear pores (small holes in the nuclear membrane). It then enters the cytoplasm and attaches to a ribosome. A ribosome moves along the mRNA, three bases at a time. (Each triplet base is called a codon). At each codon, a molecule of transfer RNA (tRNA), lines up with complementary bases. Each tRNA carries a specific amino acid. As the ribosome moves along it joins the amino acids from the tRNA molecules together, form a polypeptide chain. Summary • In table groups complete the sort card Answers Task Need help? Complete the protein synthesis cut and stick activity. Add in the extra keywords used during this lesson. E.g DNA polymerase Confident? Complete sb3d.3 Start with the harder section if you are very confident or with strengthen if you want more consolidation. Answer E1 in the textbook (pages 58-59) Answers Words in order: Double, helix, mRNA, Transcription, mRNA, nucleus, mRNA ribosome, mRNA, tRNA, Translation, Amino acids, tRNA, amino acids, polypeptide, polypeptide, protein Answers Bingo • Pick six words from the list below: Codon, nuclear pore, RNA polymerase, DNA, tRNA, mRNA, Transcription, Translation, genetic code, polypeptide, protein, ribosome, template uracil, hydrogen bonds, amino acids