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Chapter 18: Outline

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Title: Chapter 18: Outline


1
Chapter 18 Outline
  • Genetic Information
  • DNA Replication
  • DNA Repair
  • DNA Recombination
  • Transcription
  • Prokaryotes
  • Eukaryotes
  • Gene Expression
  • Prokaryotes
  • Eukaryotes

2
18.1 Genetic Information
  • All living organisms must be able to
  • Rapidly and accurately synthesize DNA
  • Repair DNA to ensure genetic stability
  • We will focus on the above goals, primarily in
    prokaryotes since the process is better
    understood with them.

3
Information Flow
  • DNA RNA Protein

Translation
Transcription
Replication
Translation Protein is synthesized from AAs and
the three RNAs.
4
DNA Replication General
  • DNA can be double helix, single strand
  • linear, circular
  • To duplicate a double helix
  • 1. Separate strands while protecting
  • single strands formed.
  • 2. Synthesize the DNA always from the
  • 5 to 3 end.
  • 3. Protect against any errors in the
  • replication process.

5
Semiconservative Replication
  • Each separated DNA strand is duplicated to give
    two new double helices.
  • Meselson and Stahl used 15N-labeled DNA as a
    starting point. New DNA was synthesized using
    normal 14N DNA nucleotides as feedstock.
  • Density-gradient centrifugation showed only
    14N-15N new DNA after one generation and a 50-50
    mix of 14N and 14N-15N after two generations.

6
Semiconservative Replication2
  • Diagram shows the N distribution.

7
DNA Synthesis, Prokaryotes
  • DNA unwinding via helicase (Dna B in E. Coli.)
  • Primer synthesis of short RNA segments catalyzed
    by primase, an RNA polymerase. The primosome
    contains primase and several auxiliary proteins.
  • DNA synthesis using a template strand to form
    phosphodiester bonds between nucleotides
    catalyzed by DNA polymerase. Pol III is major.

8
DNA Synthesis-2, Nucleophilic Attack
5
Bases 1 and 2 must be com- plimentary to bases in
template chain of DNA.
9
DNA Synthesis-3
  • DNA polymerase III (pol III) is the major
    synthesis enzyme in prokaryotes and has at least
    10 subunits.
  • Core a, e, and K subunits
  • The t subunit joins two core units to form a
    dimer.
  • b-protein (sliding clamp) of two units forms a
    ring around the template strand.

10
DNA Synthesis-3 (cont.)
  • g complex recognizes single strands with primer
    and transfers the b-protein to the core
    polymerase and prevents frequent dissociation
    (processivity).
  • The DNA replicating machine is called the
    replisome.
  • Pol I is a repair enzyme.
  • Pol II is not well understood.
  • All three Pols are 3?5 exonucleases.

11
DNA Synthesis-3 (cont. sub units Pol III)
12
DNA Synthesis, Prokaryotes (cont.)
  • 4. Joining DNA fragments occurs via DNA ligase.
  • 5. Supercoiling control is via DNA topoisomerases
    which function ahead of the replication machinery
    to relieve torque.
  • Type one topoisomerases cause transient
    single-strand breaks in DNA type two cause
    transient double-strand breaks in DNA.

13
Supercoiling, cont.
  • DNA gyrase (prokaryotes) helps separate
    replication products and creates negative
    supercoils required for genome packaging.

14
Bidirectional Replication
  • The helix begins to unwind at the origin of
    replication (Ori).
  • At each Ori are two replication forks with the
    new DNA chains being synthesized at each fork.
  • Prokaryotes have one Ori in a supercoiled helix,
    eukaryotes have multiple Ori.

15
DNA Replication
The DNA duplex at the replication fork is unwound
by helicase. DNA gyrase introduces negative
supercoils ahead of rep fork. Lagging strand is
looped to allow simultaneous synthesis of both
new strands.
16
DNA Replication
  • Primase copies a short stretch of DNA as an RNA
    primer at the 5 end and serves as an anchor
    point to begin synthesis of DNA.
  • Replisome is a multiprotein complex

Primosome
17
DNA Replication
  • Pol I removes primer and replaces it with
    deoxynucleotides.
  • DNA ligase seals the nicks on the polymer and
    joins the Okazaki fragments.

18
DNA Replication
  • The most common post synthesis modification of
    DNA is methylation.
  • In prokaryotes, adenine and thymine are the bases
    usually metylated. In eukaryotes, cytosine is
    methylated.
  • Methylation serves to protect the DNA of bacteria
    from restriction endonucleases while allowing
    these nucleases to cut and destroy the DNA of
    invading bacteriophages.

19
DNA Replication Eukaryotes
  • Timing is limited to a specific period referred
    to as the S phase.
  • Replication rate is slower, approx-imately 50
    nucleotides/sec per rep fork.
  • Multiple replicons speed overall replication to
    just a few hours.
  • Okazaki fragments are 100-200 nucleotides long.
    (Much shorter)

20
DNA Replication Eukaryotes-2
  • Polymerases a, b, d, e, and g are found in
    eukaryotes.
  • Pol a- e are found in the nucleus and g in the
    mitochondria.
  • The a enzyme is responsible for the initiation of
    synthesis and d for continuation of the chain.
  • Replication protein A (RPA) prevents reforming of
    the helix.
  • FEN1 removes primers.

21
DNA Replication Eukaryotes-3
  • A DNA ligase again seals the nicks.
  • DNA Pol d binds to proliferating cell nuclear
    antigen (PCNA), a sliding clamp (like b in E.
    coli.).
  • Histones must be synthesized concurrently with
    the DNA.

22
DNA Repair
  • Without removal of nucleotides
  • Broken phosphodiester bonds repaired by DNA
    ligase.
  • Pyrimidine dimers restored by photo-reactivation
    repair by DNA photolyase. Many species (e. g.
    humans) do not have the enzyme.

23
DNA Repair
  • With removal of nucleotides
  • In excision repair, mutations are excised by
    enzymes that remove incorrect bases and replace
    them with the correct ones.
  • An exinuclease removes 12-13 bases (27-29 in
    eukaryotes).
  • In E. coli the exinuclease is composed of the
    proteins UvrA, UvrB, and UvrC. See the next
    slide.

24
DNA Repair-3
Fig 18.12
25
DNA Repair
  • Recombinational repair occurs when replication is
    interrupted and a gap occurs opposite a damaged
    site (e. g. pyrimidine dimers).
  • The gap is repaired by exchanging the
    corresponding segment of the homologous DNA
    molecule. The gap in the homologeous molecule
    is repaired by DNA polymerase and ligase.

26
DNA Recombination
  • The two forms are
  • General which occurs between homologous DNA
    molecules.
  • Site-specific in which the exchange of sequences
    from different molecules requires only short
    sequences of DNA homology.
  • Transposition is a variant of site-specific
    recombination in which transposable elements are
    moved from one chromosome or region to another.

27
General Recombination
  • Two homologous DNA molecules pair.
  • One strand in each molecule is cleaved.
  • The strands cross over making a Holliday
    intermediate.
  • DNA ligase seals cut ends.
  • Branch migration leads to transfer of DNA between
    homologs.
  • A second series of strand cuts occurs.
  • DNA polymerase fills any gaps and DNA ligase
    seals the strand cuts.

28
General Recombination, E. coli
  • Initiated by RecBCD (exonuclease and helicase)
    which cleaves strands until reaching
    5-GCTG-GTGG-3 (Chi site).
  • Strand exchange is effected by RecA which helps
    to form a triple helix.
  • Branch migration occurs as RecA binds to the
    Holliday junction.
  • Branch migration is catalyzed by RuvAB.
  • Migration ends at 5-(AorT)TT(GorC)-3
  • RuvC cleaves crossover strands and Holliday
    junction resolves.

29
General Recomb. Gene Transfer
  • In transformation, naked DNA breaches the cell
    wall and is incorporated in the genome.
  • Transduction occurs when a bacteriophage
    inadvertently carries DNA to a recipient cell.
  • With conjugation, a donor bacterial cell forms a
    sex pilus which attaches to the surface of the
    recipient cell. A fragment of the donor DNA is
    transferred via the pilus.

30
Site-specific Recombination
  • Depends more on protein-DNA interactions.

31
Transposition
  • McClintock (1940s) reported certain genome
    segments can move from one place to another.
  • Transposable elements (transposons or jumping
    genes) were discovered in E. coli in 1967.
  • Two mechanisms have been observed.

32
Replicative Transposition
  • A replicated copy is inserted in the new
    location.
  • An intermediate called a cointegrate forms.
  • Resolvase catalyzes a site-specific recombination
    allowing resolution of the cointegrate in to two
    separate molecules.

33
Nonreplicative Transposition
  • In nonreplicative transposition the transposable
    element is spliced out of the original site and
    inserted in the target site. The donor site must
    be repaired.
  • With either form of transposition, short
    duplications of target site DNA are generated by
    the staggered cleavage catalyzed by transposase.

34
Eukaryotic Transposons
  • Some resemble those found in bacteria.
  • Many eukaryotic transposons have different
    structures. E. g., the Ty transposon in yeast
    has long terminal repeats, involves an RNA
    intermediate, and bears a resemblance to the
    replicative phase of the retrovirus.

35
Information Flow
  • DNA RNA Protein

36
18.2 Transcription
  • The reaction catalyzed by all RNA polymerases is
  • NTP (NMP)n ? (NMP)n1 PPi
  • The direction of the gene is the same as the
    direction of the coding (-) strand of DNA.
  • 5-TTTGGACAACGTCCAGC-3 () DNA
  • 3-AAACCTGTTGCAGGTCG-5 (-)
  • 5-UUUGGACAACGUCCAGC-3 RNA

37
Transcription in Prokaryotes
  • RNA polymerase from E. coli
  • A multisubunit structure of the form a2bbws
  • The holoenzyme loses the s subunit to give the
    core enzyme.
  • The function of the s unit is to recognize the
    promoter locus.

38
Sigma Units in E. coli.
  • s70 (70 kD) promotes transcription of most genes.
  • s32 promotes transcription of heat shock genes.
  • s32 promotes transcription of the flagellin gene.

39
Initiation Promoter Locus
  • Promoter locus A DNA segment that signals the
    start of RNA synthesis.
  • Is upstream (toward the 3 end) of the DNA
    segment where the gene coding for the RNA
    actually begins.
  • Prokaryote promoter regions contain many
    sequences in common called consensus sequences.
    These are rich in A-T base pairs (two H bonds)

40
Initiation Consensus Sequences
  • In prokaryotes
  • often 25 and 10 base pairs upstream of the start
    of transcription
  • -35 box and 10 (Pribnow) box
  • TTGACA TATAAT
  • In eukaryotes
  • TATA box lies 25 base pairs upstream

41
Elongation
  • The s unit leaves after about 10 nucleotides have
    added to the RNA.
  • Core polymerase binds accessory proteins and RNA
    synthesis continues in the 5-3 direction.
  • The transcription bubble (DNA-RNA hybrid)
    leaves positive supercoils ahead of and negative
    supercoils behind on the DNA as it moves
    downstream.

42
Termination (Prokaryotes)
  • Termination sequences contain palindromes. The
    RNA transcript forms a hairpin turn which
    disrupts the DNA-RNA hybrid.
  • In r-dependent terminmation, the r protein binds
    to RNA and catlayzes dissociation of the
    poylmerase from the DNA-RNA hybrid.
  • mRNA is used immediately.
  • Mature rRNA and tRNA are processed from larger
    transcripts. tRNA bases are frequently modified
    after transcription.

43
Modification of RNAs
  • 1. Leader and trailer sequences are removed.
    (Trimming)
  • 2. Terminal sequences can be added.
  • 3. Base modification can occur.

44
Modification of RNAs tRNA
  • Base modification occurs both before and after
    trimming. Methylation and substitution are
    common.
  • Often several tRNAs are synthesized in one long
    chain which is split into fragments after
    synthesis.
  • RNase P makes 5 ends of all E. coli tRNAs. The
    enzyme consists of both protein and RNA with the
    RNA being catalytically active.

45
Modification of RNAs tRNA
  • All tRNAs have a CCA sequence at the 3 end.
    This end is where the amino acid to be
    transferred to the ribosome is attached.
  • tRNAs have a three-dimensional L shape

46
Modification of RNAs rRNA
  • rRNA processing consists mainly of methylation
    and trimming to proper size.
  • There are three rRNAs in a prokaryotic ribosome
    and five in eukaryotic ribosomes. See the
    section on nucleic acid structure for a review of
    ribosome substructure.

47
Modification of RNAs rRNA-2
  • Individual Rnases are identified by
  • letters/numbers, e. g. M5, X and III.

48
Modification of RNAs mRNA
  • Prokaryotic mRNA is used as synthesized.
  • Eukaryotic mRNA is processed extensively
  • 1. Capping occurs at the 5 end.
  • 2. Polyadenylation occurs at the 3 end.
  • 3. Splicing of code sequences (called exons)
    occurs and noncoding sequences (introns) are
    removed.

49
Transcription (Eukaryotes)
  • The three RNA polymerases differ in the type of
    RNA synthesized, subunit structure, and relative
    amounts.
  • RNA Pol I transcribes large rRNA.
  • RNA Pol II transcribes precursors to mRNA and
    most snRNAs.
  • RNA Pol III transcribes precursors of tRNAs and
    5S rRNA.

50
Transcription (Eukaryotes)
  • 2. Promoters are larger and more complex.
  • Often the TATA box 25-30 bp upstream promotes
    transcription by Pol II.
  • Various complexes form, the DNA strands unwind at
    the TATA region, and the process begins.

51
Transcription (Eukaryotes)-3
  • 3. Processing is more complex for eukaryotic
    mRNA. hnRNA is associated with nuclear proteins
    in ribonuclearprotein particles (hnRNP).
  • Cap structure protects 5 end from exo-nucleases.
    (Next slide)
  • The 3 end is chopped and 100-250 adenylate
    residues are added to protect the end and promote
    export of mRNAs.

52
Eukaryotic 5 cap (mRNA)
53
Exons, Introns, and Splicing
  • Eukaryotic genes often contain base sequences
    that do not appear in the mRNA expressed by the
    gene. These sequences are called introns. They
    are cut from the RNA nucleotide chain and the
    exons (the bases that are expressed) are spliced
    together.
  • The number of introns in a gene can vary from
    none to many (gt50).

54
Exons, Introns, and Splicing
  • Introns are removed in the nucleus by small
    nuclear ribonuclearproteins, snRNPs. (pronounced
    snurps)
  • snRNPs function by cutting the mRNA, forming a
    lariat (loop) of the introns, and joining the two
    pieces of exon as the loop is cleaved. See the
    next slide.
  • Some RNAs catalyze their own self-splicing.
  • Lupus results from antibodies to a snRNP.

55
Exons, Introns, and Splicing
  • Splicing begins with nucleophillic attack of the
    2-OH on A on the 5 splice site.
  • A 2-5 phospho-diester bond forms the lariat.
  • The 3-OH attacks the phosphate next to the
    lariat.

56
Ribozymes
  • RNAs with catalytic activity are called
    ribozymes. The first ribozymes discovered
    catalyzed their own splicing.
  • Group I ribozymes require a guanosine which is
    covalently bonded at the splice site.
  • Group II ribozymes use a lariat mechanism and do
    not require a guanosine.

57
18.3 Gene Expression (Intro)
  • Regulation of gene transcription is a result of a
    complex hierarchy of control elements.
  • Constituitive genes are routinely transcribed as
    their products are required for function.
  • Inducible genes are expressed only under certain
    circumstances, e. g. the ones for lactose
    metabolism in E. coli.

58
Gene Expression (Intro)-2
  • Most mechanisms use the interactions between the
    base pairs in the major groove and proteins.
  • 20 or more contacts involving hydrogen bonding,
    hydrophobic interactions, and ionic bonds result
    in highly specific DNA-protein interactions.
  • Helix-turn-helix, helix-loop-helix, leucine
    zipper, and zinc finger motifs of proteins bind
    to DNA. (Next slide.)

59
Gene Expression (Intro)-3
Gene regulatory proteins
60
Gene Expression (Prokaryotes)
  • Operons are groups of linked structural and
    regulatory genes.
  • The lac operon (below) controls lactose
    metabolism.

Fig 18.28
61
Jacob and Monod Theory
  • The inducible protein (b-galactosidase) is coded
    by a structural gene (Z).
  • A regulatory gene (i) produces a repressor
    protein (RP) which binds at a site called the
    operon (O) and thereby inhibits synthesis of
    b-galactosidase because the promotor site is
    blocked to RNA polymerase.
  • Next slide.

62
  • Repressor protein binds to operator site and
    prevents RNA polymerase from initiating synthesis.

Allolactose inactivates the repressor protein.
63
Gene Expression (Eukaryotes)
  • Changes in amount and activities of gene products
    regulated by
  • Genomic control
  • Transcriptional control
  • RNA processing
  • RNA transport
  • Translational control

64
Gene Expression (Eukaryotes)
  • Genomic control may involve methylation and
    histone acetylation.
  • Histone acetylation generally promotes gene
    expression.
  • Gene rearrangements and gene amplification are
    less common examples of genomic control.

65
Gene Expression (Eukaryotes)
  • RNA processing takes a variety of forms.
  • Alternative splicing-the joining of different
    combinations of exons-results in different mRNAs.
  • Different sites for polyadenylation can affect
    mRNA function.
  • With RNA editing, bases are chemically modified,
    deleted, or added. E. g. the C of a CAA codon
    may be converted to a UAA and a shorter protein
    results.

66
Gene Expression (Eukaryotes)
  • RNA transport through nuclear pore complexes is
    regulated by, for example, capping and by binding
    of the 5 end of mRNA within hnRNP to cap-binding
    protein.
  • Covalent modification of several translational
    factors (nonribosomal proteins) enhances the
    translation of specific mRNAs.

67
Signal Transduction
  • In most cases changes in gene expression are
    initiated by the binding of a ligand to either a
    cell surface receptor or an intercellular
    receptor.
  • Cell division is the most studied example of
    signal transduction because faulty cell division
    results in cancer.

68
Signal Transduction
  • Complicating features of intracellular signal
    transduction include
  • 1. Each type of transduction signal may activate
    one or more pathways.
  • 2. Signal transduction pathways may converge or
    diverge.

69
Signal Transduction
  • Progression through the four phases of cell
    growth (M, G1, S, and G2) is regulated by
    alternating synthesis and degradation of a group
    of proteins called the cyclins, a group of
    regulatory proteins that bind to and activate the
    cyclin-dependent protein kinases (Cdks).
  • Cdks are a class of kinases that trigger passage
    of a cell through a checkpoint to the next phases
    of mitosis.

70
Signal Transduction
  • Positive control of cell growth is exerted by
    growth factors that specifically overcome
    inhibitions at cell cycle checkpoints, especially
    G1.
  • Binding of growth factors to their cell surface
    receptors initiates a cascade of reactions that
    induces two class of genes.

71
Signal Transduction
  • Early response genes (e. g. protooncogenes jun,
    fos, myc) are rapidly activated (15 min).
  • Protooncogene genes are genes that if mutated,
    can promote carcinogenesis.
  • Each of the jun and fos families codes for a
    series of transcription factors containing
    leucine zipper domains.
  • The function of the myc family is not understood
    but is critically important in normal cell
    function.

72
Signal Transduction
  • Delayed response genes are induced by activities
    of the early response phase.
  • Among the products are the Cdks, the cyclins, and
    other factors needed for cell division.
  • Epidermal growth factor (EGF) is an example.
    Its role in the activation of the transcription
    factor AP-1 is shown on the next slide.

73
Fig 18.33
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