Title: Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids
1Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids
2Learning Objectives
- The types of nucleic acids
- The structure and components of nucleic acids
- The conformations of DNA
- The base composition of DNA
- Function of nucleic acids
3Why learn about Nucleic Acids?
- Knowledge of the anatomy of the gene is as
important in medical practice as knowledge of the
anatomy of the heart
4- There have been numerous advances in the areas of
molecular biology and biotechnology in medicine
but the biggest could be the Human Genome Project
- The information, it is hoped will revolutionize
the detection, prevention and treatment of
conditions from cancer to depression to old age
itself
5The Future Medical Doctors
- will drip droplets of our genes onto a biochip
to figure out if we have the kind of prostrate
cancer that will kill or not, or to figure out if
ours is the kind of leukaemia that respond to
this drug rather than that one - medical records will include the complete
genome - ..treat patients as a biochemical and genetic
individual
6THE STRUCTURE OF NUCLEIC ACIDS
- Both DNA and RNA are known as nucleic acids
- Nucleic acids are high-molecular-weight polymeric
compounds - On complete hydrolysis yields pyrimidine and
purine bases, a sugar component and phosphoric
acid. - Partial hydrolysis yields compounds known as
nucleosides and nucleotides
7Structure of Nucleotide
- A nucleotide consists of three things
- A nitrogenous base, which can be either adenine,
guanine, cytosine, or thymine (in the case of
RNA, thymine is replaced by uracil). - A five-carbon sugar or pentose sugar
- One or more phosphate groups
8Cyclic 5-carbon sugar
-
- D-ribose in RNA
- 2'-deoxyribose in DNA
-
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10Purine Bases
- Adenine Guanine
- Other naturally occurring derivatives
- Hypoxanthine
- Xanthine
- Uric acid
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12Pyrimidine Bases
- Thymine, cytosine and uracil
- 5-methylcytosine
- 5-hydroxymethylcytosine.
- N4-methylcytosine
- N6-methylcytosine
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14Phosphate group
- a molecule of Phosphoric acid, PO43
15Nucleosides
- Purine or a Pyrimidine base ribose or
deoxyribose Nucleoside. - ribose ribonucleosides
- 2-deoxyribose deoxyribonucleosides
16Nucleotides
- Purine or a pyrimidine linked to ribose or
deoxyribose and phosphoric acid Nucleotide
- ribose ribonucleotides
- 2-deoxyribose deoxyribonucleotides
17Nucleotide
18Nucleotide
19Components of Adenosine Triphosphate
20Nucleic Acids
- Nitrogenous base attached to the sugar by
N-glycosidic bonds to carbon 1 of the sugar - Sugar is attached at position N-1 of the
pyrimidine base - Sugar is attached at position N-9 of the purine
base - Phosphate forms a bond with the sugar through
phosphodiester linkages between 5' OH of the
sugar and the negatively charged oxygen group
21Purine Linkage N9 to C1
22Pyrimidine Linkage N1 to C1
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24Primary structure of nucleic acids
- Nucleotides join through phosphodiester linkages
between 5 and 3 carbon atoms to form nucleic
acids -
- When many nucleotides subunits combine, the
result is the large single-stranded
polynucleotide or Nucleic Acid
25Primary structure of DNA
26Secondary structure of DNA
- DNA exists as a double helix
- In April 1953, Watson and Crick proposed the
structure of DNA
27Secondary structure of DNA
- two complementary polymeric chains forming a
regular right-handed double helix - the two stands run in opposite directions
- (antiparallel alpha-helices), and are of
opposite polarity - the rails of the ladder runs in opposite
direction and contain alternating units of
deoxyribose sugar and phosphate.
282 structure of DNA
- the sugar and phosphate groups are always linked
together by 3 - 5 phosphodiester linkages. - the purine and pyrimidine bases are flat
(planar), are relatively water-insoluble and are
stacked tightly on top of one another like a pile
of plates, forming the steps of the helical
ladder. - the bases are arranged at right angles to the
long axis of the polynucleotide chain.
292 structure of DNA
- each step is composed of a pair of nucleotide- a
base pair held together by weak hydrogen bonds. - the order of the purine and pyrimidine bases
along the chain is highly irregular, varying from
one molecule to the other. - the chain is not straight but is wound helically
around a central axis, one full turn ( the pitch)
of the helix extending 3.4 nm (34 Ã…), and there
are 10 bases per turn
302 structure of DNA
- the bases are separated by a spacing of 0.34 nm
(3.4 Ã…). - the width of the double helix is 2 nm (20 Ã…).
- the chains are complementary, the sequence of
bases on one strand is the exact complement of
the other strand. - Adenine always pair with thymine and cytosine
always pair with guanine.
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32Hydrogen bonds
- Essential for 3-D structure of DNA
- Not the main contributor of DNA stability
- Important for the specificity of the helix
- Allow for only complementary strands to pair
- AT GC
- Complementary nature allow DNA to carry
information
33Hydrogen bonds
34Bases pair in a Specific way
- Purines are larger structures than pyrimidine, if
two purine are paired their dimensions are too
great to fit the constant diameter of the double
helix (2 nm) while the dimensions of the two
pyrimidine are too small - The specificity of position of the H atoms that
can participate in bonding. It is essential that
the hydrogen bonds have relatively stable
positions to have the biological functioning of
DNA.
35Tautomeric Shifts
- H-atoms do undergo shift to other positions to
form new pairing interactions - the nitrogen atoms attached to the purine and
pyrimidine rings are usually in the amino (NH2)
form and only rarely assume the imino (NH)
configuration - the oxygen atoms attached to C6 atoms of guanine
and thymine normally have the keto (C-O) form and
rarely take up the enol (COH) configuration.
36Tautomeric Shifts
- if the H-atom normally present at the 6-amino
position in adenine shifts to the N1 position,
Adenine will pair with Cytosine instead of with
Thymine
37Base composition of DNA
- Chargaff described fundamental features of DNA as
revealed by chemical analysis. - Chargaff was the first to draw attention to
certain regularities in the composition of DNA - Chargaffs Rule is true because of the strict
H-bond forming rules
38Chargaffs Rules
- ? purines ? pyrimidines
- ? amino bases (A C) ? keto bases (G T)
- ? between the amounts of A T, and between the
amounts of G and C, ( A T and G C). - Wide variations in the molar proportions of bases
although DNA from different organs and tissues of
any one species are essentially the same. - AT/GC, (base ratio) may vary widely between
species, and remains constant for any one
species.
39Molar Proportion of Bases in DNA from various
sources __________________________________________
__ Source A G C T AT/GC _______________________
______________________ Bovine thymus
28.2 21.5 21.2 27.8 1.3 Bovine spleen 27.9 22.7 20
.8 27.3 1.3 Bovine sperm 28.7 22.2 20.7 27.2 1.3 W
heat germ 27.3 22.7 16.8 27.1 - Yeast 31.2 18.7 1
7.1 32.9 1.8 E. coli 26.0 24.9 25.2 23.9 1.0 E.
aerogenes 21.0 28.0 29.0 22.0 0.7 C. perifringens
34.0 15.0 16.0 35.0 2.2 M. tubercolosis
15.1 34.9 35.4 14.6 0.4 ?X174 24.3 24.5 18.2 32.3
- _____________________________________________
40DNA Conformations
- The major forms of DNA are
- the B-form, basically describes the Watson and
Crick model - the A-form DNA
41B-form DNA
- Represent the conformation of most DNA found in
cells - Exists under most physiological conditions
- The main features are the pitch, the angle of
tilt, the distinct major and minor grooves - Pitch 3.4 nm
- 10 bases/full turn
- Long and thin
42B-form DNA
43Major and Minor Grooves
- Two asymmetrical groves
- Larger Major Minor Minor
- Arise because of the geometrical configurations
of the bonds - The groves expose the bases
- Recognised by proteins
44A-form DNA
- The base pairs tilt some 30? so that successive
base pairs occur every 0.28 nm - Adopted by DNA under low humidity
- 11 bases/full turn
- Is short and broad and has deeper and narrow
major grooves - he 2-OH of ribose prevents RNA from forming the
classic B-helix
45Z-form DNA
- Alternating purine and pyrimidine residues
(dinucleotides CGCGCGCGCGC) can fold up into
left-handed as well as right handed helices. - Â
- One deep helical groove
4650 Yrs after the discovery of DNA
- Deciphering of the human genome
- Genetic engineering of animals and crops
- Use of gene therapy to treat human diseases
- Designing better drugs
- Admissibility in courts in criminal cases
- DNA chips
47Properties of DNA
- Denaturation Renaturation of DNA
- The DNA double helix can unwind to form
- single strands when subjected to
- Â extremes of pH
- increased temperature
- decreased dielectric constant by alcohols,
ketone, etc. - exposure to amides or urea
48DNA denaturation
- denature when the DNA changes from a double helix
to a random coil - melting or transition temperature Tm
- measured at 260 nm
- hyperchromic effect
49Denaturation of DNA
- The nature of the melting transition is affected
by 3 factors - The GC content of the DNA
- The nature of the solvent.
- The nature of the DNA.
50GC Content
- DNA with higher GC is more stable and have a
higher melting temperature - G?C
- AT
51Relative GC content of DNA from various sources
________________________________________ Source
of DNA GC ___________________________________
_____ Bacillus cereus 37 Haemophilus
influenzae 39 Rat liver 40 Chicken
liver 43 E. coli 51 Herpes simplex
virus 72
52Nature of the solvent
- Low conc of ions, denaturation occurs a
relatively low temperatures over a broad range - High conc of ions, the Tm is raised and the
transition is sharp
53Nature of the DNA
- Most DNA are mosaics of varying regions of GC and
AT rich regions - AT regions will melt abut GC regions will be held
together - On cooling the GC regions will allow for rapid
re-annealing
54Renaturation of DNA
55Secondary Tertiary Structure of RNA
- RNA are single stranded molecules
- Contains ribose instead of de-oxyribose
- Contains the base uracil instead of thymine
- Retains all the information of the DNA sequence
- Has base pairing properties of DNA
56RNA
- RNA performs a variety of functions within the
cell and for each function a specific type of RNA
is required - RNA differ in chain length and secondary and
tertiary structures
57Types of RNA
- mRNA carry genetic information
- rRNA the site for protein synthesis
- tRNA carriers specific amino acids to the
ribosomes - Small RNA molecules enzymatic activities
58Secondary Structure -RNA
- Do not possess regular H-bonded structure
- In some RNA molecules about 70 of the bases are
involved in secondary structure interactions e.g.
tRNA - Structure similar to A-form of DNA
59tRNA
60Triple standed regions
- Occurs in RNA in which two chains run in parallel
with one another - Third strand anti parallel with one strand
- Unusual arrangement found in myxobacterium
61RNA triple structure
Hoogsteen Base pairs
62Functions of Nucleic Acids
- To direct its own replication during cell
division - To direct transcription of complementary
molecules or RNA
63Functional requirements
- The genetic material is the blueprint for the
cell and carries the information necessary to
direct all its specific activities. The
information necessary is coded in the 4 bases
ATGC - The genetic material replicates, reproduces
itself, so that the information it carries is
inherited in a very precise way by daughter
cells. The two intertwining strands of
complementary bases suggests that one strand
serves as a template upon which the other strand
is synthesized. - The genetic material can undergo mutations so
that the message is altered in a specific
heritable way.
64Functions of RNA
- mRNA formed by DNA transcription, directs
ribosomal synthesis of polypeptides in a process
known as translation. - RNAs of the ribosomes have functional as well as
structural roles rRNA is composed of about 2/3
RNA and 1/3 protein. - During protein synthesis a.a are delivered to the
ribosome by molecules of transfer RNA. - Certain RNAs are associated with specific
proteins to form ribonucleoproteins that
participate in post-transcriptional processing of
other RNAs. - In many viruses, RNA, and not DNA is the carrier
of genetic information
65Cricks Central Dogma