ND STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY LOOSELEAF GENETICS: FROM GENES TO GENOMES
ND STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY LOOSELEAF GENETICS: FROM GENES TO GENOMES
6th Edition
ISBN: 9781260406092
Author: HARTWELL, Leland, HOOD, Leroy, Goldberg, Michael
Publisher: Mcgraw-hill Education/stony Brook University
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Chapter 8, Problem 36P

The human gene for ß2 lens crystallin has the components listed below. The numbers represent nucleotide pairs that make up the particular component. Assume for simplicity that no alternative splicing is involved.

5′ UTR 174
1st exon 119
1st intron 532
2nd exon 337
2nd intron 1431
3rd exon 208
3rd intron 380
4th exon 444
4th intron 99
5th exon 546
3′ UTR 715

Answer the following questions about the ß2 lens crystallin gene, primary transcript, and gene product. Questions asking where should be answered with one of the 11 components from the list or with None. Assume poly-A tails contain 150 As.

a How large is the ß2 lens crystallin gene in bp (base pairs)?
b. How large is the primary transcript for ß2 lens crystallin in bases?
c. How large is the mature mRNA for ß2 lens crystallin in bases?
d. Where would you find the base pairs encoding the initiation codon?
e. Where would you find the base pairs encoding the stop codon?
f. Where would you find the base pairs encoding the 5′ cap?
g. Where would you find the base pairs that constitute the promoter?
h. Which intron interrupts the 3′ UTR?
i. Where would you find the sequences encoding the C terminus?
j. Where would you find the sequence encoding the poly-A tail?
k. How large is the coding region of the gene in bp (base pairs)?
l. How many amino acids are in the ß2 lens crystallin protein?
m. Which intron interrupts a codon?
n. Which intron is located between codons?
o. Where would you be likely to find the site specifying poly-A addition?

You find in lens-forming cells from several different people small amounts of a polypeptide that has the same N terminus as the normal ß lens crystallin, but it has a different C terminus. The polypeptide is 114 amino acids long, of which 94 are shared with the normal protein and 20 are unrelated junk. No mutation is involved in the production of this 114-amino acid protein.
p. Outline a hypothesis for the process that would produce this protein. Your hypothesis should explain why 94 amino acids are the same as in the normal ß2 lens crystallin.
q. Explain why you would expect that a polypeptide such as the 114-mer described above would on average have 20 amino acids of junk
Expert Solution
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Summary Introduction

a.

To determine:

The length of the human gene for β2 lens crystallin.

Introduction:

The length of a gene is determined by the total number of base sequences present in the given gene region. Genes consist of coding as well as non-coding regions. Splicing helps in joining the coding sequences for the expression of the gene.

Explanation of Solution

The length of the β2 lens crystalline gene is calculated by adding the total number of nucleotides present in the exons and introns of the gene.

Totalgenelength=119+532+337+1431+208+380+444+99+546=4096bp

Expert Solution
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Summary Introduction

b.

To determine:

The length of the primary transcript of β2 lens crystalline gene.

Introduction:

Exons are the coding regions present on a gene and introns are the non coding regions. Transcription of the entire gene results into pre-mRNA which is also called primary transcript.

Explanation of Solution

The length of primary transcript of β2 lens crystalline gene can be calculated by adding the total number of nucleotides present in the exons and introns of the gene.

Totalgenelength=119+532+337+1431+208+380+444+99+546=4096bp

Expert Solution
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Summary Introduction

c.

To determine:

The length of mature mRNA of β2 lens crystalline gene.

Introduction:

Mature mRNA is formed after the splicing of the introns and joining the exons of the gene. In addition to splicing, mature mRNA is also associated with 5' cap and poly-A tail.

Explanation of Solution

The length of the mature mRNA of β2 lens crystallin gene is calculated by adding all the exons along with the 5' cap and poly-A tail.

LengthofmaturemRNA=119+337+208+444+546+150=1804bp

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Summary Introduction

d.

To determine:

The position of the base pair which encodes for initiation codon.

Introduction:

Initiation codon is called start codon which comprises AUG base pair in eukaryotes. The start codon codes for the amino acid methionine

Explanation of Solution

The base pairs which encode for the initiating codon can be found on the second exon with 337 base pairs.

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Summary Introduction

e.

To determine:

The position of the base pair which encodes for stop codon.

Introduction:

Stop codon present within a gene encodes for the termination of the translation process. There are three stop codons present in eukaryotic cell. These are UAG, UAA, and UGA.

Explanation of Solution

The base pairs which encode for the stop codon can be found on the fourth exon with 444 base pairs.

Expert Solution
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Summary Introduction

f.

To determine:

The position of the base pair which encodes for 5' cap.

Introduction:

5' cap comprises altered nucleotides which are present on the 5' end of the mRNA. 5' cap protects the nascent mRNA from degradation.

Explanation of Solution

None of the base pairs encodes for 5' cap because the ends of the pre-mRNA are modified into a group of nucleotides through some chemicals. There are no base pairs which encodes for these nucleotides.

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Summary Introduction

g.

To determine:

The position of the base pair which comprises the promoter.

Introduction:

The promoter region is present on the DNA, which specifies the initiation of transcription. These are located upstream on the DNA towards the 5' end of the sense strand.

Explanation of Solution

None of the base pairs encodes for promoter site because the promoter site is present in the DNA to initiate the process of transcription. Promoter site is not present in case of primary transcript or mature mRNA.

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Summary Introduction

h.

To determine:

The intron which interrupts the 3' UTR.

Introduction:

The three prime UTR stands for the untranslated region, which is a part of mRNA present after the termination codon. These regions contain some regulatory regions which influence gene expression.

Explanation of Solution

The 3' UTR is found immediately after the stop codon is translated. In the given gene, the stop codon is the 4th exon. Therefore, the 3' UTR must be present after that, but the fourth intron present after the stop codon interrupts the 3' UTR.

Expert Solution
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Summary Introduction

i.

To determine:

The position of the sequence which encodes for C terminus.

Introduction:

Protein structure consists of two terminals, the N terminus, which consists of a free amino group and C terminus, which consists of a carboxyl group (COOH).

Explanation of Solution

The C terminus of the polypeptide chain is present at the 3' end of the amino acid chain. The codon which is present near the 3' end of the mRNA will code for C terminus of the polypeptide chain. In the given gene, the 4th exon is nearest to the 3' end. Hence it will code for C terminus.

Expert Solution
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Summary Introduction

j.

To determine:

The position of the sequence which encodes for poly-A tail.

Introduction:

Poly-A tail of a messenger RNA is made of a stretch of adenine base which is attached at the 3' end of the mRNA. The poly-A tail helps in protection of mRNA from degradation and also helps in the termination of translation.

Explanation of Solution

None of the base pairs encodes for poly-A tail of the mRNA because poly-A tail is synthesized by a series of reactions called polyadenylation. The adenine bases are synthesized by polyadenylate polymerase at the 3' end of the mRNA; they are not encoded by base pairs.

Expert Solution
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Summary Introduction

k.

To determine:

The length of the coding region of the gene.

Introduction:

Coding region consisting of nucleotide bases as a part of a gene that codes for protein. The coding region on DNA or RNA begins from start codon and ends at the stop codon.

Explanation of Solution

The coding region in the given gene can be calculated by adding the base pairs in the exons starting from start codon to stop codon.

Lengthofcodingregion=337+208+444=989bp

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Summary Introduction

l.

To determine:

The number of amino acids present in the β2 lens crystalline protein.

Introduction:

Three DNA or RNA nucleotides in a sequence form a codon. Each codon corresponds with an amino acid during the translation process. There are 64 total codons present in the genome of the eukaryotes. Out of these, 61 codons codes for the amino acids.

Explanation of Solution

Three base-pair combines to form a codon which corresponds to a particular amino acid. In the case of β2 lens crystalline gene, the length of the coding sequence on the gene is 989 bp. Therefore the number of amino acids can be calculated by dividing the total number by 3.

Numberofaminoacid=9893=329

Expert Solution
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Summary Introduction

m.

To determine:

The intron which interrupts a codon.

Introduction:

Introns are considered as intervening sequences that are present on a gene. These sequences are removed from the mature mRNA because they are considered as non-coding regions of a gene.

Explanation of Solution

The coding region of a gene is considered from the start codon to stop codon. In the β2 lens crystalline gene, the 4th exon is the stop codon, so the intron before the 4th exon interrupts the codon. Therefore, the 3rd intron interrupts the codon of the β2 lens crystalline gene.

Expert Solution
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Summary Introduction

n.

To determine:

The intron which is located between a codon.

Introduction:

Introns and exons are the nucleotide sequences present on the DNA, whereas codon is the feature of RNA. Reading of codon is based on the genetic code or the RNA code.

Explanation of Solution

Codons on mRNA are equivalent to the exons on a DNA. In the β2 lens crystalline gene, the codons are the 2nd exon which is start codon, and 4th exon is the stop codon. The protein-coding codons are 2nd and 3rd. Therefore, the intron which is present between these codons is 2nd intron.

Expert Solution
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Summary Introduction

o.

To determine:

The region where site specifying poly-A-addition is present.

Introduction:

Poly-A tail of a messenger RNA is made of a stretch of adenine base which is attached at the 3' end of the mRNA. The poly-A tail helps in protection of mRNA from degradation and also helps in the termination of translation.

Explanation of Solution

Site specifying poly-A-addition can be found in the region of 5th exon and 3' UTR because poly-A tail is synthesized at the 3' end of the mRNA. The region nearest to the 3' end is 3' UTR and 5th exon.

Expert Solution
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Summary Introduction

p.

To determine:

A hypothesis for the process of production of protein.

Introduction:

There are 64 total codons present in the genome of the eukaryotes. Out of these, 61 codons codes for the amino acids. A codon is formed from three DNA or RNA nucleotides in a sequence. Each codon corresponds with an amino acid during the translation process.

Explanation of Solution

Alternate splicing is a process during gene expression in which a single gene code for multiple proteins. This condition arises when a particular exon is either included or excluded from the final mature mRNA. It is given that the polypeptide obtained from β2 lens crystalline cell collected from different people had the same N terminus but different C terminus. 94 amino acids were shared with the normal proteins, and 20 were junk. This is because of alternate splicing which could occur if the 2nd exon is connected either to the 4th or 5th exon.

Expert Solution
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Summary Introduction

q.

To determine:

The explanation for the presence of 20 junk amino acids in a polypeptide of 114 amino acids.

Introduction:

The non-functional or the unfolded proteins are considered as junk proteins, and the amino acids which code for these proteins are called junk amino acids.

Explanation of Solution

In the genetic code, approx 1/20 codons are the stop codons, which cause termination of the translation process. Therefore, approximately 1/20 triplets will be stop codons in the case of a random DNA sequence. In the given case, out of the total coding sequence, the 4th exon is stopped codon so; it is out of the reading frame with respect to the 2nd exon. The 5th exon of the β2 lens crystalline gene does not code for any protein. This results in improper processing of the mRNA and 20 junk amino acids are expected to be produced.

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Chapter 8 Solutions

ND STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY LOOSELEAF GENETICS: FROM GENES TO GENOMES

Ch. 8 - Before the technology existed to synthesize RNA...Ch. 8 - A particular protein has the amino acid sequence...Ch. 8 - How many possible open reading frames frames...Ch. 8 - Prob. 14PCh. 8 - Charles Yanofsky isolated many different trpA-...Ch. 8 - The sequence of a segment of mRNA, beginning with...Ch. 8 - You identify a proflavin-generated allele of a...Ch. 8 - Using recombinant DNA techniques which will be...Ch. 8 - Describe the steps in transcription that require...Ch. 8 - Chapters 6 and 7 explained that mistakes made by...Ch. 8 - The coding sequence for gene F is read from left...Ch. 8 - If you mixed the mRNA of a human gene with the...Ch. 8 - Prob. 23PCh. 8 - The Drosophila gene Dscam1 encodes proteins on the...Ch. 8 - Describe the steps in translation that require...Ch. 8 - Locate as accurately as possible the listed items...Ch. 8 - Concerning the figure for Problem 26: a. Which...Ch. 8 - a. Can a tRNA exist that has the anticodon...Ch. 8 - For parts a and b of Problem 28, consider the DNA...Ch. 8 - Remembering that the wobble base of the tRNA is...Ch. 8 - Prob. 31PCh. 8 - The yeast gene encoding a protein found in the...Ch. 8 - The sequence of a complete eukaryotic gene...Ch. 8 - Arrange the following list of eukaryotic gene...Ch. 8 - Prob. 35PCh. 8 - The human gene for 2 lens crystallin has the...Ch. 8 - In prokaryotes, a search for genes in a DNA...Ch. 8 - a. The genetic code table shown in Fig. 8.2...Ch. 8 - a. Very few if any eukaryotic genes contain tracts...Ch. 8 - Explain how differences in the initiation of...Ch. 8 - Do you think each of the following types of...Ch. 8 - Null mutations are valuable genetic resources...Ch. 8 - The following is a list of mutations that have...Ch. 8 - Considering further the mutations described in...Ch. 8 - Adermatoglyphia described previously in Problem 18...Ch. 8 - Prob. 46PCh. 8 - You learned in Problem 21 in Chapter 7 that the...Ch. 8 - When 1 million cells of a culture of haploid yeast...Ch. 8 - Why is a nonsense suppressor tRNATyr, even though...Ch. 8 - A mutant B. adonis bacterium has a nonsense...Ch. 8 - You are studying mutations in a bacterial gene...Ch. 8 - Another class of suppressor mutations, not...Ch. 8 - Yet another class of suppressor mutations not...Ch. 8 - At least one nonsense suppressing tRNA is known...Ch. 8 - An investigator was interested in studying UAG...Ch. 8 - Prob. 56PCh. 8 - In certain bacterial species, pyrrolysine Pyl,...Ch. 8 - Canavanine is an amino acid similar to arginine...
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