Nucleic acidsLECTURE
Nucleic acidsLECTURE
Nucleic acidsLECTURE
Topic Outline:
History of Nucleic Acids
1920s
the tetranucleotide hypothesis was introduced
pentose
phosphate
pentose guanine
cells. Supporters of the tetranucleotide hypothesis did not believe nucleic acid was variable enough to be a molecule of heredity and store genetic information.
separation of DNA hydrolysates. Amount of adenine is equal to amount of thymine and amount of guanine is equal to amount of cytosine.
1969
Entire genetic code determined
Nucleic Acids
Nucleic Acids are very long, thread-like polymers, made up of a linear array of monomers called nucleotides. Nucleic acids vary in size in nature tRNA molecules contain as few as 80 nucleotides Eukaryotic chromosomes contain as many as 100,000,000 nucleotides.
Nucleus
Nucleus
Cytoplasm
3.
4.
Present in all cells and virtually restricted to the nucleus The amount of DNA in somatic cells (body cells) of any given species is constant (like the number of chromosomes) The DNA content of gametes (sex cells) is half that of somatic cells. In cases of polyploidy (multiple sets of chromosomes) the DNA content increases by a proportional factor The mutagenic effect of UV light peaks at 253.7nm. The peak for the absorption of UV light by DNA
NUCLEOTIDE STRUCTURE
PHOSPATE
SUGAR Ribose or Deoxyribose
BASE
PURINES
Adenine (A) Guanine(G)
NUCLEOTIDE
Nucleotide Structure
All nucleotides contain three components: 1. A nitrogen heterocyclic base 2. A pentose sugar 3. A phosphate residue
Ribose is a pentose
C5 O C1
C4
C3
C2
CH2OH
OH
CH2OH
OH
C H
C H
H
C OH
H C OH
H
C OH
H C H
P G
The bases are attached to the 1st Carbon Their order is important It determines the
P C
P A P T
Hydrogen bonds
G
P C P C
C P G P G P
P
A P T P T A P T P
A
P
directions (antiparallel) They are joined by the bases Each base is paired with a specific partner: A is always paired with T G is always paired with C Purine with Pyrimidine The sister strands are complementary but not identical The bases are joined by hydrogen bonds, individually weak but collectively strong
5 End
3 End
DNA to Protein
DNA acts as a manager in the process of making proteins
DNA is the template or starting sequence
that is copied into RNA that is then used to make the protein
Central Dogma
Central Dogma
This is the same for bacteria to humans DNA is the genetic instruction or gene DNA RNA is called Transcription
RNA chain is called a transcript
Expression of Genes
Some genes are transcribed in large quantities because we need large amount of this protein
Some genes are transcribed in small quantities because we need
Nucleotides as Language
We must start to think of the nucleotides A, G, C and T as part of a special language the language of genes that we will see translated
a portion of DNA that codes for a peptide or a functional RNA Sum of all genes = genome
Semiconservative
DNA Replication
strand Found that 1 strand serves as the template for new strand
DNA Template
to make the new daughter strand DNA replication makes 2 new complete double helices each with 1 old and 1 new strand
Replication Origin
Site where replication
begins
1 in E. coli 1,000s in human
Replication Fork
together in particular locations in the cell and may therefore be regarded as a small Replication Factory that manufactures DNA copies.
becomes half of a new DNA double helix. Because each resulting DNA double helix retains one strand of the original DNA, DNA replication is said to be semi-conservative.
ring shape, unwinds the DNA double helix into two individual strands.
the short RNA primers needed to start the strand replication process.
One polymerase complex apparently synthesizes leading/lagging strands simultaneously Even more complicated in eukaryotes
STRAND SEPARATION
To begin the process of DNA replication, the two double
helix strands are unwound and separated from each other by the helicase enzyme.
The point where the DNA is separated into single
strands, and where new DNA will be synthesized, is known as the replication fork.
Single-strand binding proteins, or SSBs, quickly coat the
newly exposed single strands. SSBs maintain the separated strands during DNA replication.
Replication Fork
STRAND SEPARATION
Without the SSBs, the complementary DNA strands
strands.
Remember that the double helix consists of
two antiparallel DNA strands with complementary 5 to 3 strands running in opposite directions.
incoming nucleotide onto the 3 hydroxyl group at the end of the growing nucleic acid chain.
Because the chain grows by extension off the
polymerase called primase first copies a short stretch of the DNA strand.
This creates a complementary RNA segment, up to 60
and, using the original DNA strand as a guide, begins to synthesize a new complementary DNA strand.
Two polymerase enzymes are required, one for each
the polymerase enzymes on the two strands start to move in opposite directions.
strand and slide further upstream to begin extension from another RNA primer.
DNA as the DNA moves through the replication machinery. The sliding clamp makes the polymerase processive.
The continuously synthesized strand is known as the leading
strand, while the strand that is synthesized in short pieces is known as the lagging strand.
The short stretches of DNA that make up the lagging strand
degrades the RNA by hydrolyzing its phosphodiester bonds. Next, the sequence gap created by RNAse H is then filled in by DNA polymerase which extends the 3 end of the neighboring Okazaki fragment.
Finally, the Okazaki fragments are joined together by
DNA ligase that hooks together the 3 end of one fragment to the 5 phosphate group of the neighboring fragment in an ATP- or NAD+-dependent reaction.
REPLICATION IN ACTION
The process begins when the helicase enzyme unwinds the double helix to expose two single DNA strands and create two
replication forks. DNA replication takes place simultaneously at each fork. The mechanism of replication is identical at each fork.
Original theory
Begin adding nucleotides at origin
Add subsequent bases following pairing rules
expected
Called the leading strand DNA polymerase reads 3 5 along the leading strand from the RNA primer Synthesis proceeds 5 3 with respect to the new daughter strand
5 3
on daughter cells
Only correct pairings fit in the polymerase active site If wrong nucleotide is included
Polymerase uses its proofreading ability to cleave the
Proofreading
DNA Repair
For the rare mutations occurring during
replication that isnt caught by DNA polymerase proofreading For mutations occurring with daily assault If no repair
In germ (sex) cells inherited diseases In somatic (regular) cells cancer
Types of Mutation
1. Induced
viruses, UV radiation, some chemicals
(nitric acid changes cytosine to uracil) or mutagens (or carcinogens - benzene, cigarette smoke).
Types of Mutation
2. Spontaneous
Proofreading mistakes during DNA replication
Types of Mutation
A 3 letter code or codon is analogous to three letter words in a
sentence.
Original sequence
THE BAT SAW THE DOG THE CAT SAW THE HOG
Types of Mutation
Deletions
THE CAT SAW THE ZDO G THE CMA TAS WTH EDO G
Types of Mutation
3. Jumping genes, transposable elements, or transposons. Discovered by Barbara McClintok (1956) while studying color variation in Indian corn. Won Nobel prize in 1983.
Types of Mutation
3. Jumping genes, transposable elements, or transposons. Patches of yellow sometimes occur among the purple grains of Indian corn. She explain this by assuming that the gene was being interrupted by a foreign sequence of DNA. These foreign bits of DNA could insert or remove themselves from a stretch of DNA causing the genes that they affected to be turned on or off. Such "jumping genes" could copy themselves and move about within the genome of the organism they occupied.
Types of Mutation
4. Chromosomal mutations (disruption in chromosomal morphology - inversions and translocations).
5. Homeotic genes master genes that regulate suites of other genes and may affect developmental pathways especially during embryogenesis. Mutations in these master genes can cause genetic anomalies. For example, a fruit fly that possesses legs where antennae should be, or a mosquito that has its mouth parts transformed into legs.
Effect of Mutation
Mismatch repair
Enzyme complex recognizes mistake and excises newly-
old
Chemical Modifications
Thymine Dimers
Repair Mechanisms
Different enzymes recognize, excise different mistakes
DNA polymerase synthesizes proper strand DNA ligase joins new fragment with the polymer
STEP 2 - TRANSCRIPTION
Transcription
The region of the double-stranded DNA
corresponding to a specific gene is copied into an RNA molecule, called messenger RNA (mRNA). RNA differs from DNA
Ribose is the sugar rather than deoxyribose
RNA Differences
RNA Differences
Transcription
Similarities to DNA replication
Open and unwind a portion of the DNA 1 strand of the DNA acts as a template Complementary base-pairing with DNA
Differences
RNA strand does not stay paired with DNA DNA re-coils and RNA is single stranded RNA is shorter than DNA RNA is several 1000 bp or shorter whereas DNA is 250 million bp long
of the phosphodiester bonds between the nucleotides (sugar to phosphate) Uncoils the DNA, adds the nucleotide one at a time in the 5 to 3 fashion Uses the energy trapped in the nucleotides themselves to form the new bonds
RNA Polymerase
Template to Transcripts
RNA Elongation
Reads template 3
to 5 Adds nucleotides 5 to 3 (5 phosphate to 3 hydroxyl) Synthesis is the same as the leading strand of DNA
Types of RNA
messenger RNA (mRNA) codes for proteins ribosomal RNA (rRNA) forms the core of the ribosomes, machinery for making proteins transfer RNA (tRNA) matches code for amino acid on mRNA and positions the right amino acid in place during protein synthesis
an enzyme called RNA polymerase read and connect together the sequence of nucleotides in the proper order.
STEP 3 TRANSLATION
RNA to Protein
Translation is the process of turning mRNA into protein Translate from one language (mRNA
nucleotides) to a second language (amino acids) Genetic code nucleotide sequence that is translated to amino acids of the protein
DNA Code
Nucleotides read 3 at a time meaning that there are 64 combinations for a codon (set of 3
Reading Frames
Translation can occur in 1 of 3 possible reading frames, dependent on where decoding starts in the mRNA
mRNA and at a distant site carries the appropriate amino acid Intra-strand base pairing allows for this characteristic shape Anticodon is opposite from where the amino acid is attached
Due to degenerate code for amino acids some tRNA can recognize several codons because the 3rd
spot can wobble or be mismatched Allows for there only being 31 tRNA for the 61 codons
Attachment of AA to tRNA
Aminoacyl-tRNA synthase is the enzyme responsible for linking the amino acid to the tRNA
A specific enzyme for each amino acid and
Ribosomes
activity
Folded structure is highly conserved
Ribosome Structures
May be free in cytoplasm or attached to the ER Subunits made in the nucleus in the nucleolus and transported to the cytoplasm
Ribosomal Subunits
1 large subunit catalyzes the formation of the peptide bond 1 small subunit matches the tRNA to the mRNA Moves along the mRNA adding amino acids to growing protein
chain
Ribosomal Movement
E-site
4 binding sites
mRNA binding site Peptidyl-tRNA binding site (P-site)
Holds tRNA attached to growing end of the peptide
Summary