Dna Replication Lecture Notes 2011
Dna Replication Lecture Notes 2011
G0
Quiescent cells
G1
phase
The S (for synthesis) phase of the cell cycle is when chromosomes are replicated. This requires DNA synthesis and histone synthesis (the latter to make the proteins that will package the newly replicated DNA).
phase
phase
G2
Mitosis
DNA replication is said to be "semi-conservative" because each strand of the DNA double helix serves as a template for the synthesis of a new complementary DNA strand. Hence, the newly replicated chromosome consists of one old and one new DNA strand
Sequential actions
Initiation: recognize the starting point, separate dsDNA, primer synthesis, Elongation: add dNTPs to the existing strand, form phosphoester bonds, correct the mismatch bases, extending the DNA strand,
bidirectional replication
5 3
5 3
daughter chromosomes
3 5
3 5
5 3
3 5
A A A
A
A
A
A A
A
A
B C
As further unwinding occurs, which displaces the dnaA proteins, the dnaG protein binds. This protein is a "primase" and synthesizes a short RNA primer of about 5 nucleotides. Because the primase synthesizes an RNA strand, it is an RNA polymerase. The primer provides a free 3' OH end to initiate DNA synthesis. As a rule, DNA polymerases cannot initiate DNA synthesis de novo, but can only add onto an existing 3' OH. Hence, the need for the RNA primer. In contrast to DNA polymerases, RNA polymerases can initiatate synthesis de novo.
A A A
B C
A
A A A A A A
G
RNA primer
B C
B C
b. Elongation
dNTPs are continuously connected to the primer or the nascent DNA chain by DNA-pol III.
The nature of the chain elongation is the series formation of the phosphodiester bonds.
DNA polymerase
5 5 RNA primer 3
Once the RNA primer has been synthesized, DNA polymerase can then bind and begin to synthesize DNA. DNA polymerase catalyzes an attack by the 3' OH on the alpha phosphate of the dGTP, forming a 3', 5'-phosphodiester bond, and releasing pyrophosphate, which is then hydrolyzed to two molecules of inorganic phosphate. All DNA polymerases require a primer (or a growing DNA chain) with a free 3' OH. The new strand of DNA grows in a 5' to 3' direction; however, some DNA polymerases also have a 3' to 5' proofreading activity, which can remove the 3' terminal nucleotide in case the polymerase makes a mistake.
5 3
3 5
5 3
3 5
5 3
3 5
replication fork 5 3 3 5
replication fork
5 3
3 5
5 3
3 5
The small pieces of DNA that comprise the lagging strand are called "Okazaki fragments." They are eventually ligated together forming a continuous DNA strand.
lagging strand (synthesized discontinuously) The leading and lagging strand arrows show the direction of DNA chain elongation in a 5 to 3 direction The small DNA pieces on the lagging strand are called Okazaki fragments (100-1000 bases in length)
The synthesis direction of the leading strand is the same as that of the replication fork.
The synthesis direction of the latest Okazaki fragment is also the same as that of the replication fork.
3 5
Strand separation at the replication fork causes positive supercoiling of the downstream double helix
The strand separation process (unwinding the complementary WatsonCrick DNA strands) causes overwinding ahead of the fork. Any DNA that is overwound (or underwound) is said to be supercoiled. Overwound DNA is positively supercoiled. The increasing torsional stress needs to be dissipated in order for the fork to continue to unwind so that replication can proceed. This is accomplished by DNA topoisomerases, which cut the DNA strands, unwind them and reseal the strands. As they do so they introduce negative supercoiling into the DNA to compensate for the positive supercoiling. Gram-negative bacteria, such as E. coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, can be killed by fluoroquinolone antibiotics, which inhibit DNA gyrase, a topoisomerase II. Topoisomerase II cuts both strands of DNA, swivels them and rejoins them. Topoisomerase I cuts only one strand, and relaxes negative supercoils.
Strand separation at the replication fork causes positive supercoiling of the downstream double helix 3 5 5 3 3 5
DNA gyrase is a topoisomerase II, which breaks and reseals the DNA to introduce negative supercoils ahead of the fork Fluoroquinolone antibiotics target DNA gyrases in many gram-negative bacteria: ciprofloxacin and levofloxacin (Levaquin)
5 3
As the replication fork moves further to the left, opening up more DNA, another RNA primer has to be synthesized.
Each RNA primer (dashed red line) on the lagging strand then serves as a starting point for the initiation of DNA synthesis (Okazaki fragment; solid red line).
RNA primer
E. coli DNA polymerase III initiates at the RNA primer, synthsizing DNA to fill in the gap up to the next RNA primer. However, it falls off the template DNA once it reaches the next RNA primer. At this point, DNA polymerase I takes over. It contains a 5' to 3' exonuclease activity that can remove the RNA primer while it simultaneously adds DNA nucleotides to the 3' end of the Okazaki fragment.
RNA primer 5
pol III 5 DNA polymerase III initiates at the primer and elongates DNA up to the next RNA primer
pol I
DNA polymerase I inititates at the end of the Okazaki fragment and further elongates the DNA chain while simultaneously removing the RNA primer with its 5 to 3 exonuclease activity
DNA ligase seals the gap by catalyzing the formation of a 3, 5-phosphodiester bond in an ATP-dependent reaction 3
5
However, DNA polymerase I cannot seal the gap between the two adjacent Okazaki fragments. This job is carried out by DNA ligase, which catalyzes the formation of a 3', 5'-phosphodiester bond in an ATP-dependent reaction. Thus, it takes one RNA polymerase (primase), two DNA polymerases (III and I), and DNA ligase to synthesize the lagging strand. Once initiation occurs on the RNA primer, the leading strand only requires DNA polymerase III for its synthesis.
5 3
G
Single-strand binding protein (SSB)
Primasome
DNA ligase
C B
pol III
DNA gyrase - this is a topoisomerase II, which breaks and reseals double-stranded DNA to introduce negative supercoils ahead of the fork
pol I
c. Termination
The replication of E. coli is bidirectional from one origin, and the two replication forks must meet at one point called ter at 32.
All the primers will be removed, and all the fragments will be connected by DNA-pol I and ligase.
Rep protein SSB DNA pol III DNA pol I DNA ligase
This table lists the proteins required for replication of the E. coli chromosome, and their activities.
Properties of DNA polymerases DNA polymerases of E. coli_ Polymerization: 5 to 3 Proofreading exonuclease: 3 to 5 Repair exonuclease: 5 to 3 pol I yes yes yes pol II yes yes no pol III (core) yes yes no
DNA polymerase III is the main replicating enzyme DNA polymerase I has a role in replication to fill gaps and excise primers on the lagging strand, and it is also a repair enzyme and is used in making recombinant DNA molecules
DNA-pol of eukaryotes
DNA-pol : initiate replication and synthesize primers DNA-pol : replication with low fidelity DNA-pol : polymerization in mitochondria DNA-pol : elongation DnaG, primase repairing
Replication of Eukaryotes
DNA replication is closely related with cell cycle. Multiple origins on one chromosome, and replications are activated in a sequential order rather than simultaneously.
Cell cycle
Initiation
The eukaryotic origins are shorter than that of E. coli. Requires DNA-pol (primase activity) and DNA-pol (polymerase activity and helicase activity).
b. Elongation
DNA replication and nucleosome assembling occur simultaneously.
c. Termination
3' 5' 3' 5' 5' 3' 5' 3'
connection of discontinuous segment 5' 3' 5' 3'
Telomere
The terminal structure of eukaryotic DNA of chromosomes is called telomere. Telomere is composed of terminal DNA sequence and protein. The sequence of typical telomeres is rich in T and G. The telomere structure is crucial to keep the termini of chromosomes in the cell from becoming entangled and sticking to each other.
Telomerase
The eukaryotic cells use telomerase to maintain the integrity of DNA telomere. The telomerase is composed of telomerase RNA telomerase association protein telomerase reverse transcriptase It is able to synthesize DNA using RNA as the template.
Significance of Telomerase
Telomerase may play important roles is cancer cell biology and in cell aging.
VEDIO.TELOMERASE
Control of Replication
In order to be replicated, each origin of replication must be bound by: 1. an Origin Recognition Complex of proteins (ORC). These remain on the DNA throughout the process. 2. Accessory proteins called licensing factors (Cdc-6 and Cdt-1. These accumulate in the nucleus during G1 of the cell cycle., which
3. bind to the ORC and are essential for coating the DNA with MCM proteins. Only DNA coated with MCM proteins (there are 6 of them) can be replicated.
Once replication begins in S phase: 1. Cdc-6 and Cdt-1 leave the ORCs (the latter by ubiquination and destruction in proteasomes). 2. The MCM proteins leave in front of the advancing replication fork.
1. G2 nuclei also contain at least one protein called geminin that prevents assembly of MCM proteins on freshly-synthesized DNA (probably by blocking the actions of Cdt1). 2. As the cell completes mitosis, geminin is degraded so the DNA of the two daughter cells will be able to respond to licensing factors and be able to replicate their DNA at the next S phase.
Mutation
Chromosome mutation
Gene mutation
10-10 per base pair per cell division or 10-5 - 10-6 per locus per generation
Achondroplasia Aniridia Duchenne muscular dystrophy Hemophilia A Hemophilia B Neurofibromatosis -1 Polycystic kidney disease Retinoblastoma
*mutation rates (mutations / locus / generation) can vary from 10-4 to 10-7 depending on gene size and whether there are hot spots for mutation (the frequency at most loci is 10-5 to 10-6).
Many polymorphisms exist in the genome the number of existing polymorphisms is ~1 per 500 bp there are ~5.8 million differences per haploid genome polymorphisms were caused by mutations over time polymorphisms called single nucleotide polymorphisms (or SNPs) are being catalogued by the Human Genome Project as an ongoing project
CATTCACCTGTACCA GTAAGTGGACATGGT
normal sequence
CATCCACCTGTACCA GTAGGTGGACATGGT
CATGCACCTGTACCA GTACGTGGACATGGT
CATCACCTGTACCA GTAGTGGACATGGT
deletion
CATGTCACCTGTACCA GTACAGTGGACATGGT
insertion
Spontaneous mutations can be caused by tautomers Tautomeric forms of the DNA bases
Adenine
Cytosine
AMINO
IMINO
Guanine
Thymine
KETO
ENOL
Guanine
Cytosine
Adenine
C G
C G C A
C G
C A
tautomer formation C during replication will result in mispairing and insertion of an improper A in one of the daughter strands
T A
which could result in a C-G to T-A transition mutation in the next round of replication, or if improperly repaired
Chemical mutagens
Deamination by nitrous acid
O
N NH NH N NH2
guanine
8-oxyguanine (8-oxyG)
the MTH1 protein degrades 8-oxy-dGTP preventing misincorporation mutation of the MTH1 gene causes increased tumor formation in mice
Deletion-insertion
Dimer formation Strand breaks Interstrand cross-links Tautomer formation
Mechanisms of Repair
Mutations that occur during DNA replication are repaired when possible by proofreading by the DNA polymerases
Mutations that are not repaired by proofreading are repaired by mismatch (post-replication) repair followed by excision repair Mutations that occur spontaneously any time are repaired by excision repair (base excision or nucleotide excision)
CH3
5 3
CH3
mutations on the newly replicated strand are identified by scanning for mismatches prior to methylation of the newly replicated DNA
the mutations are repaired by excision repair mechanisms after repair, the newly replicated strand is methylated
CH3
deamination
Excision repair
ATGCUGCATTGA TACGGCGTAACT
uracil DNA glycosylase thymine dimer
ATGCUGCATTGATAG TACGGCGTAACTATC
excinuclease
AT GCATTGA TACGGCGTAACT
DNA polymerase
ATGCCGCATTGA TACGGCGTAACT
DNA ligase
ATGCCGCATTGATAG TACGGCGTAACTATC
DNA ligase
ATGCCGCATTGA TACGGCGTAACT
Base excision repair
ATGCCGCATTGATAG TACGGCGTAACTATC
Nucleotide excision repair
cytosine
uracil
5-methylcytosine
thymine
More than 30% of all single base changes that have been detected as a cause of genetic disease have occurred at 5-mCpG-3 sites
Correlation between DNA repair activity in fibroblast cells from various mammalian species and the life span of the organism 100
human
elephant
cow Life span
10