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2.4 Cell Processes
(cells minus their native DNA genetic material) were also used in generating the first self-
replicating artificial cell (Gibson et al., 2010). The longest cells known are nerve cells, which
in some animals can be several meters in length.
The way that the number, or ultimately the concentration, of each type of protein molecule
in a cell is controlled is through dynamic fine-tuning of the rate of production of proteins
and the rate at which they are removed, or degraded, from the cell. There are mechanisms to
controllably degrade proteins in cells, for example, eukaryotes have a mechanism of tagging
proteins (with another protein called “ubiquitin”), leading to their being ultimately captured
inside subcellular organelles and subsequently degraded by the action of the so-called proteo
lytic enzymes, with other similar mechanisms existing for prokaryotes but with the absence
of dedicated subcellular organelles. However, the most control that is imparted by cells for
regulating the equilibrium concentration of cellular proteins is through the direct regulation
of the rate at which they are manufactured by the cell from the genes. The fine-tuning of the
rate of production of proteins in a cell is done through a process called gene regulation, and
to understand how this is achieved, we must explore the concept of the central dogma of
molecular biology.
2.4.1 CENTRAL DOGMA OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
For reasons that arguably are more metaphysical than scientific, the process, which is
considered by many expert biologists to be the most important of all biology, which governs
how the DNA genetic code is ultimately read out and transformed into different proteins, is
referred to as a central dogma as opposed to a law. Either way, the process itself is ubiqui
tous across all domains of life, and essential, summarized in its simplest form in Figure 2.7. In
essence, the following applies:
1 The genetic code of each cell is encapsulated in its DNA, into a series of genes.
2 Genes can be transcribed by molecular machinery to generate molecules of mRNA.
3 mRNA molecules can be translated by other molecular machinery involving the
binding of molecules of tRNA to the mRNA to generate peptides and proteins.
This is an enormous simplification of what is a very complex process requiring the efficient
coordination of multiple different molecular machine components. The principal flow
of information from the genes incorporated into DNA molecules to the rest of the organism
is through the route DNA → mRNA → protein. The proteins that are then generated can
FIGURE 2.7 Central dogma of molecular biology, (a) Schematic of the flow of information
between nucleic acids and proteins. (b) Structure of tRNA. (c) Interaction of tRNA with ribosome
during peptide manufacture.