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BCB 444544

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BCB 444/544 F08 ISU Terribilini 4 - Biology Background ... Thanks to Drena Dobbs (ISU for many borrowed & modified PPTs ... Online textbooks NCBI bookshelf ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: BCB 444544


1
BCB 444/544
Lecture 4 Biology Background Biological
Databases 4 Sep 3
  • Thanks to Drena Dobbs (ISU for many borrowed
    modified PPTs

2
Required Reading (before lecture)
  • Thurs Sep 4 - Lab 2
  • Databases, ISU Resources, Pairwise Sequence
    Alignment
  • Fri Sep 5 - for Lecture 5
  • Pairwise Sequence Alignment
  • Chp 3 - pp 31-41 Xiong Textbook

3
Last Friday in a nutshell
  • Main molecules we will deal with are DNA, RNA,
    and proteins
  • DNA carries information, made up of 4
    nucleotides
  • RNA involved in all aspects of gene expression,
    also made up of 4 nucleotides
  • Proteins perform most functions and form most
    structures, made up of 20 amino acids
  • Genes have a complex structure

4
RNA and DNA Structures
5
Protein Structure
6
Sequence-Structure-Function
  • Amino acid sequence determines protein structure
  • Protein structure determines function

7
The Central Dogma
Gene expression the whole process of going from
DNA to RNA to Protein
8
Gene structure
  • Genes are fragmented, containing
    non-protein-coding introns between the functional
    exons

9
Gene splicing
Introns are removed before mRNA leaves the nucleus
DNA
Transcribed RNA
Introns removed by splicing
mRNA
10
Regulation of gene expression
  • Genes are regulated transcriptionally by proteins
    that interact with DNA elements around the gene
  • DNA level
  • Promoters
  • Enhancers and repressors
  • Chromatin level (X-inactivation)
  • Genes are also regulated
  • Post-transcriptionally
  • Post-translationally

11
Transcription factor binding sites
  • Promotors, enhancers, and repressors are all
    binding sites for transcription factors (proteins
    that bind DNA and affect transcription)

12
Mutation
  • DNA mutation is any change in DNA sequence

13
Role of mutation in evolution
Mutation is not all bad!
  • Occurs at a high rate in all our cells and does
    NOT always have negative effects

14
Beneficial mutations
Changes in DNA sequence can be beneficial
15
Eukaryotic Cell
Lots of compartments called organelles
16
Prokaryotic Cell
No separate compartments
17
Prokaryotes vs. Eukaryotes
  • All of our gene examples so far have been showing
    eukaryotic genes
  • Prokaryotic genes are not as complex

18
Prokaryotes vs. Eukaryotes
Eukaryotic Gene
Prokaryotic Gene
Important difference no introns!
19
Protein localization
20
Types of RNA
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_RNAs
  • I counted 25 different types of RNAs on listed on
    this page

21
Web resource
  • Online textbooks NCBI bookshelf

22
2- Biological Databases
  • Xiong Chp 2
  • 2 Introduction to Biological Databases
  • What Is a Database?
  • Types of Databases
  • Biological Databases
  • Pitfalls of Biological Databases
  • Information Retrieval from Biological
    Databases
  • Summary
  • Further Reading

23
Types of Databases
  • 3 Major types of electronic databases
  • 1- Flat files - simple text files
  • no organization to facilitate retrieval
  • 2- Relational - data organized as tables
    ("relations")
  • shared features among tables allows rapid search
  • 3- Object-oriented - data organized as "objects"
  • objects associated hierarchically

24
Biological Databases

Currently - all 3 types, but MANY flat
files What are goals of biological
databases? 1- Information retrieval 2-
Knowledge discovery
Important issue Interconnectivity
25
Types of Biological Databases
  • 1- Primary
  • "simple" archives of sequences, structures,
    images, etc.
  • raw data, minimal annotations, not always well
    curated!
  • 2- Secondary
  • enhanced with more complete annotation of
    sequences, structures, images, etc.
  • usually curated!
  • 3- Specialized
  • focused on a particular research interest or
    organism
  • usually - not always - highly curated

26
Examples of Biological Databases
  • 1- Primary
  • DNA sequences
  • GenBank - US
  • European Molecular Biology Lab - EMBL
  • DNA Data Bank of Japan - DDBI
  • Structures (Protein, DNA, RNA)
  • PDB - Protein Data Bank
  • NDB - Nucleic Acid Databank

27
Examples of Biological Databases
  • 2- Secondary
  • Protein sequences
  • Swiss-Prot, TreEMBL, PIR
  • these recently combined into UniProt
  • 3- Specialized
  • Species-specific (or "taxonomic" specific)
  • Flybase, WormBase, AceDB, PlantDB
  • Molecule-specific,disease-specific

28
Pitfalls of Biological Databases
  • Errors!
  • Lack of documentation about quality or
    reliability of data
  • Limited mechanisms for "data checking" or
    preventing propagation of errors (esp.
    annotation errors!!)
  • Redundancy
  • Inconsistency
  • Incompatibility (format, terminology, data
    types, etc.)

29
Information Retrieval from Biological Databases
  • 2 most popular retrieval systems
  • ENTREZ - NCBI
  • will use a LOT - Introduced in Lab 2
  • SRS - Sequence Retrieval Systems - EBI
  • will use less, similar to ENTREZ
  • Both
  • Provide access to multiple databases
  • Allow complex queries

30
WebCT Question
  • Do you know any program or database to find or
    predict the small non-coding RNAs in the
    completely sequenced genome? Specifically, in the
    bacterial genomes?
  • Noncoding RNA database
  • http//biobases.ibch.poznan.pl/ncRNA/

31
SUMMARY 2- Biological Databases
BEWARE!
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