Title: I' Multiple Replication Forks During Eukaryotic DNA Synthesis
1I. Multiple Replication Forks During Eukaryotic
DNA Synthesis
2When, during the cell cycle, can new replication
origins be formed?
G1 S G2 Pre-replication replica
tion post replication ARSs complex DNA
synthesis DNA synthesis Into ORCs completed P
re-RCs can form No new pre-RCs No new pre-RCs
ARS autonomously replicating sequence
origin ORC origin recognition complex Pre-RC
pre-replication complex
3Eukaryotic DNA Polymerases
- Enzyme Location Function
- Pol ? (alpha) Nucleus DNA replication
- includes RNA primase activity, starts DNA strand
- Pol ? (gamma) Nucleus DNA replication
- replaces Pol ? to extend DNA strand, proofreads
- Pol ? (epsilon) Nucleus DNA replication
- similar to Pol ?, shown to be required by yeast
mutants - Pol ? (beta) Nucleus DNA repair
- Pol ? (zeta) Nucleus DNA repair
- Pol ? (gamma) Mitochondria DNA replication
4II. The Eukaryotic Problem of Telomere Replication
RNA primer near end of the chromosome on lagging
strand cant be replaced with DNA since DNA
polymerase must add to a primer sequence.
Do chromosomes get shorter with each
replication???
5Solution to Problem Telomerase
- Telomerase enzyme adds TTGGGG repeats to end of
lagging strand template. - Forms hairpin turn primer with free 3-OH end on
lagging strand that polymerase can extend from
it is later removed. - Age-dependent decline in telomere length in
somatic cells, not in stem cells, cancer cells.
6III. Recombination at the Molecular Level
- Breakage and joining also directed by enzymes.
- Homologous recombination occurs during synapsis
in meiosis I, general recombination in bacteria,
and viral genetic exchange. - Molecular mechanism proposed by Holliday and
Whitehouse (1964). - Depends on complementary base pairing.
7DNA Recombination (12.20a-f)
A B
Heteroduplex DNA
Branch migration
a b
Can occur all the way to the end or second pair
of nicks can create internal recombinant fragment.
Nicking
Displacement
Holliday structure
Ligation
8DNA Recombination (12-20f-g)
EM Evidence for Mechanism
9DNA Recombination (12.20h-i)
A
B
Recombinant duplexes formed
b
a
Nicks here would create noncrossover duplexes
Exonuclease nicking
10IV. Early Evidence for the Genetic Code
- 1940s Beadle and Tatum noted correlation
between gene mutation and nonfunctional enzyme - First direct evidence sickle-cell hemoglobin
- single nucleotide change gt change in amino acid
- 1961 Jacob and Monod proposed that mRNA is an
unstable intermediate between DNA and protein - How could four letters (A, T, G, C) spell out 20
words (the amino acids)?
11Theoretical Evidence
- Sidney Brenner (early 1960s) argued that code
must be triplet theoretically. - If a two letter code, how many amino acid words
could be made from A, U, G, C? 42 16 - If a three letter code, how many words could be
made? 43 64, more than enough for the 20 amino
acids.
12Genetic Evidence Frameshift Mutations
- 1961 Francis Crick, Barnett, Brenner, and
Watts-Tobin - Created insertion and deletion mutants in cistron
B of rII locus of phage T4 - A cistron codes for a single polypeptide chain
within a gene - Proflavin (a DNA dye) was used as a mutagen.
- Proflavin caused insertion or deletion of one or
more nucleotides in the cistron, usually causing
a frameshift of the putative genetic code.
13Frameshift Mutations Garble the Code, Leading to
Mutant Protein
Produces normal protein
Produces mutant protein
May or may not produce a normal protein.
14Wildtype, Single Insertion and Deletion
5 UGC GAA AAC ACA AGA GCA UUA U 3 WT C
E N T R A L Functional Site
? 5 UGC GAA AAC GAC
AAG AGC AUU AU 3 MUT C E N N K S
I A 5 UGC GAA AAC?CAA GAG CAU
UAU 3 - MUT C E N Q Q H Y
15Insertion/Deletion, Triple Deletion, Triple
Insertion
?A 5 UGC GAA AAC G?CA AGA GCA UUA U 3 /-
WT C E N A R A L GAA 5
UGC ??? AAC ACA AGA GCA UUA U 3 -/-/- WT C
N T R A L ??? 5 UGC GAA
GAA AAC ACA AGA GCA UUA U 3 // WT C E
E N T R A L
16Biochemical Evidence
- 1961 Nirenberg, Matthaei used synthetic mRNAs
and an in vitro translation system to decipher
the code. - Polynucleotide Phosphorylase enzyme links NTPs to
make RNA without a template - Homopolymers
- poly(U) codes for Phe-Phe-Phe-Phe-
- poly(A) codes for Lys-Lys-Lys-Lys-
- poly(C) codes for Pro-Pro-Pro-Pro-...
17Repeating Copolymers
- Khorana, early 1960s
- UGUGUGUGUGUGUGUGU...
- Cys-Val-Cys-Val-Cys-Val-...
- Therefore GUG or UGU codes for either Cys or Val
- UUCUUCUUCUUCUUC
- Phe-Phe-Phe-Phe-... or
- Ser-Ser-Ser-Ser- or
- Leu-Leu-Leu-Leu-...
18In Vitro Triplet Binding Assay
- Nirenberg and Leder (1964) mixed all 20 amino
acids with ribosomes, different RNA triplets - Ribosomes UAU -gt Tyr binds
- Ribosomes AUA -gt Ile binds
- Ribosomes UUU -gt Phe binds, etc.
19Nucleic Acid to Protein
- How does the information in codons of mRNA get
translated into amino acids in polypeptides? - Through adapter molecules tRNA
- tRNA has anticodon that base pairs with the codon
in mRNA and carries an amino acid corresponding
to that codon.
20Note that 3rd Base Position is Variable
21Degeneracy and the Wobble Hypothesis
- Codon in mRNA
- Anticodon in tRNA
- Codon 5-1-2-3-3
- Anticodon 3-3-2-1-5
- First two bases of codon are more critical than
3rd base - Base-pairing rules are relaxed between 3rd base
of codon and 1st base of anticodon (third base
wobble)
22Special Anticodon-Codon Base-Pairing Rules