Title: Lecture 1 DNA Structure
1Lecture 1 - DNA Structure
- DNA composition
- DNA forms
- Chromosomes
2All nucleotides have a common structure
3The five principal bases in nucleic acids
A, G, T, C are present in DNA A, G, U, C are
present in RNA
4The phosphodiester backbone of DNA
5The double helix
Hydrogen bonding between complementary base pairs
(A-T or G-C) holds the two strands together A-T
2 H bonds G-C 3 H bonds
6DNA can adopt different conformations
B-DNA Most common, 10 bp per helical
turn. A-DNA 11 bp per turn, RNA/DNA and RNA/RNA
helices. Z-DNA Left-handed helix. Triple-helix
Poly Pu/poly Py/poly Py All can exist in a
chromosome simultaneously.
7DNA forms
8Disease associations with Z DNA
- Rheumatoid arthritis
- Multiple sclerosis
- Type 1 Diabetes
- Infectious disease susceptibility
- Chronic hepatitis C
- Leukemia
- Lymphoma
9Z-DNA and Disease?
NRAMP1 -- metal transporter on macrophage
surface. NRampI effects macrophage function ?
Expression of chemokine KC, TNf-a, iNOS, MHC
class II expression Hyper-expression --
autoimmune disease? Reduced expression --
infectious disease susceptibility J Med Genet
(1999)36(4)295-9
10NRAMP1-gene promoter
- The promoter contains a Z-DNA stretch with 4
alleles - Allele 2 - t(gt)5ac(gt)5ac(gt)10g
- Allele 3 - t(gt)5ac(gt)5ac(gt)9g
- Allelles differ in expression to external stimuli
- LPS ? expression driven by allele 2
- LPS ? espression driven by allele 3
11Conclusions
- Chronic activation of allele 3 driven expression
of NRAMP linked to autoimmune susceptibility - Increased promoter activity
- Low level expression driven by allele 2
contributes to infectious disease susceptibility - Lower promoter activity
- Allele 3 protects against infectious disease
- Allele 2 protects against autoimmune disease
12Polymorphisms in the Z-DNA-forming motif of the
promoter and disease
- NRAMP1 also referred to as SCL11A1 gene
- Different populations have different frequencies
of alleles - Identification of association with disease
- PCR amplification of promoter regions
- Sequence analysis
- Comparison of diseased population with control
13Role of NRAMP1 gene in MS
- Role of Z-DNA forming repeat polymorphisms
- Comparison of allelic distribution in MS
patients and controls in different populations - Association of allele 5 in comparison of
population matched controls - Populations with low MS allele 5 not detected
- Populations with high prevalence allele 5 more
frequent - Kotze et al 2001 Blood, Cells, Molec Dis 2744
14SLC11A1 promoter and type 1 diabetes
- SCLC11A1 found in region of chromosome important
in susceptibility to Type 1 diabetes - Protective effect of allele 2
- Low expression of SCL11A1 protein
- Allele 3 more frequent in Type 1 diabetes (NS)
Nishino et al. 2005. Metabolism54628
15Z- DNA and disease
- Alzheimers disease
- Severely infected Z DNA conformation
- Moderate - probable B-Z intermediate form
- Normal - B-DNA conformation
- Amyloid Beta and aluminum (an etiologic factor)
can modulate helical alterations in vivo
Suram et al. Neuromolecular Medicine
20022289-97 Hegde ML et al. J. Mol. Neurosci.
2004 2219-31.
16A role of Z-DNA binding in poxvirus pathogenesis
- E3L gene product is essential for virulence
- N-terminal domain has sequence similarity to Za
family (binds Z-DNA) - Tested virulence of E3L with decreased Z-DNA
binding and chimeric viruses with different Z-DNA
binding abilities - Kim et al. 2003. PNAS. 1006974
17Fig. 2. Kim et al. 2003. PNAS. 1006974
18Fig. 3a. Kim et al. 2003. PNAS. 1006974
19Other ramifications of Z-DNA
- Z-DNA forming sequences induce genetic
instability - In mammalian cells
- Z-DNA induces nearby double-stranded breaks over
regions consistent with dsb in human disease - Can result in large scale deletions or
rearrangements - Replication independent and due to repair
mechanisms - Relevancy to carcinogenesis
- ds breaks and gene translocations map near Z-DNA
forming sequences in leukemia and lymphomas
Wang et al. 2006. PNAS 1031677
20DNA can undergo reversible strand separation
21UV absorption and DNA denaturation
22GC content and DNA denaturation
23Genome complexity and Cot½
Cot½ (Concentration)(time for one-half
reassociation)
24Simple-sequence DNAs are concentrated in specific
chromosomal locations
Human metaphase chromosomes
25Simple sequence DNA and neurodegenerative disease
(CCG)n fragile X syndrome. (CAG)n
Huntingtons/Kennedys diseases. Myotonic
dystrophy spinocerebellar ataxia (AAG)n
Friedrichs ataxia. (CGA)n -- 4 different
conformations (CAG)n -- exclusively
Z-DNA Biochim Biophys Acta (2001) 1527
73-80
26DNA supercoiling
supercoiled
relaxed
27DNA forms separate on agarose gels
Your typical plasmid prep...
UNCUT LINEAR
KB
9
FORM
6
5
II
III
4
3
I
2
1
28Types of cellular DNA
Plasmid 1 - 200 kb. Replicon (origin of
replicationORI) defines copy and
incompatibility. Narrow host range spread within
that range. Usually circular Chromosome (more
later)
29Organizing cellular DNA into chromosomes
- Most bacterial chromosomes are circular with one
replication origin. - But Borrelia, Rhodococcus have multiple, linear
chromosomes. - Eukaryotic chromosomes each contain one linear
DNA molecule and multiple origins of replication. - But the S. pombe genome may be circular.
- Bacterial DNA is usually associated with
polyamines. - Eukaryotic DNA usually associates with histones
to form chromatin.
30Chromatin exists in extended and condensed forms
Nucleosome, beads on a string
30 nm fibers
31The solenoid model of condensed chromatin
Histones H2A, H2B, H3, H4
32Core histones are extensively modified
P phosphorylation Ac acetylation Me
methylation U ubiquitination
33The histone code hypothesis
34Nonhistone proteins provide a structural scaffold
for long chromatin loops
35Chromatin packing in metaphase chromosomes
36Chromosome number, size and shape at metaphase
are species-specific
Indian muntjac
Reeves muntjac
37Heterochromatin chromosome regions that do not
uncoil
38Three functional elements for stable inheritance
of eukaryotic chromosomes
- Origin for initiation of DNA replication.
- The centromere (point of spindle fiber
attachment). - The two ends (telomeres).
39Experimental evidence for the importance of the
origin of replication
40Experimental evidence for the importance of the
centromere
41Experimental evidence for the importance of
telomeres