Title: Chapt 20 DNA Replication I: Basic Mechanism and Enyzmology
1Chapt 20 DNA Replication IBasic Mechanism and
Enyzmology
- Student learning outcomes
- Describe general features of semi-conservative
DNA replication leading, lagging, strands
requirement for primers bidirectional, rolling
circle - Describe DNA polymerases general enzymology and
comparison of prokaryotes, eukaryotes - Describe major types of DNA damage and repair
- Important Figures 1, 4, 7, 9, 10, 13, 14, 15,
16, 18, 22, 24, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33,
34, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41 - Review problems 8-11, 13-15, 22-24, 27-29,
32-35 AQ4
220.1 General Features of DNA Replication
- Double helical model for DNA complementary
strands - Each strand is template for new partner strand
- Semiconservative model for DNA replication 5 -gt
3 - Leading strand continuous synthesis
- Half-discontinuous (short pieces on lagging
strand are later stitched together) - Requires RNA primers
- Usually bidirectional (bacterial and eukaryotes)
- Origin of replication (ori) fixed starting point
- Replicon DNA under control of one ori
3Semi-discontinuous Replication
- DNA polymerase only synthesizes 5?3 direction
- RNA primers 10-12 nt long in E. coli
- Leading strand replicates continuously in
direction of movement of fork - Lagging strand replicates discontinuously in
direction opposite to fork (as 1-2 kb Okazaki
fragments)
Fig. 7
4Bidirectional Replication
- Replication structure resembles Greek letter, ?
- DNA replication begins with creation of bubble
small region where parental strands separated,
progeny DNA synthesized - As bubble expands, replicating DNA is ? shape
Fig. 9
5Rolling Circle Replication
- Circular DNAs can replicate as rolling circle
- One strand of dsDNA is nicked, 3-end extended
(leading) - Uses intact DNA strand as template
- 5-end gets displaced lagging synthesis fills in
- Phage l leading strand elongates continuously
- displaced strand serves as template for
discontinuous, lagging strand synthesis can get
many genome sized piece
Fig. 20
620.2 Enzymology of DNA Replication
- gt30 different polypeptides to replicate E. coli
DNA - Biochemical purifications, conditional mutants to
examine activities of proteins (essential
activities) - DNA polymerases enzymes that make DNA
- Require primer, Mg, buffer, dNTPs
- 3 DNA polymerases in E. coli
- pol I - repair enzyme
- pol II - non-essential
- pol III the real replication enzyme
7DNA Polymerase I
Fig. 16
- E. coli DNA polymerase I
- first enzyme (1958, Arthur Kornberg)
- Pol I has 3 distinct activities
- DNA polymerase
- 3?5 exonuclease proofreading
- 5?3 exonuclease degrades strand ahead of it
- Can remove primers
- Mild proteolytic treatment -gt2 polypeptides
- Klenow fragment (lacks 5-gt3 exonuclease)
- Can fill in sticky ends left by restriction
enzymes (Fig. 15) - Steitz structure 1987
8Pol III Holoenzyme
Pol III core has 3 subunits catalysis,
proofread, Pol III g complex has 5 subunits
DNA-dependent ATPase Pol III holoenzyme includes
b subunit
Charles McHenry (CU SOM) biochemical studies
9Eukaryotes have multiple DNA Polymerases
- Mammalian cells 5 different DNA polymerases
- Polymerases d and a replicate both DNA strands
- PCNA factor helps with processivity
10Other enzymes for replication E. coli
- Helicase uses ATP to unwind strands
- Creates positive supercoils
- dnaB gene
- Single strand DNA binding protein SSB
- Stimulates polymerization
- DNA gyrase (topoisomerase II)
- Negative supercoils, swivel
1120.3 DNA Damage and Repair
- DNA can be damaged in many different ways
- Cells have many ways to repair damage, easier to
repair before DNA is replicated - if unrepaired, damage can lead to mutation
- DNA damage is not the same as mutation, but it
can lead to mutation - DNA damage is chemical alteration
- Mutation is inherited change in base pair
- Common examples of DNA damage
- Base modifications caused by alkylating agents
- Pyrimidine dimers caused by UV radiation
12Alkylation of Bases Causes Damage
- Alkylation - process where electrophiles
- Attack negative centers
- Add carbon-containing groups (alkyl groups)
- Common targets (red) N7 of G, N3 of A,
phosphodiester bond - O6 of G
Fig. 27
13Alkylation of Bases Causes Damage
- Alkylating agents like ethylmethane sulfonate
(EMS) - Some alkylations dont change base-pairing
innocuous - Others cause DNA replication to stall
- Cytotoxic
- Mutations if cell attempts to replicate without
repair - Others change base-pairing properties, so are
mutagenic - Ethyl O6-G mispairs with T -gt GC -gtAT transition
mutation
Fig. 28
14UV Radiation Damages DNA
- Ultraviolet rays (260 nm)
- Comparatively low energy
- Moderate type of damage
- Result in formation of pyrimidine dimers
- Mostly T-T dimers
- T-T dimers distort DNA, block replication and
transcription
Fig. 29 Thymine dimers have cyclobutane ring
15Ionizing Radiation Damages DNA
- Gamma and x-rays
- Much more energetic
- Ionize molecules around DNA
- Highly reactive free radicals attack DNA
- Alter bases
- Break DNA strands
- Especially double strand
- (useful cancer therapy)
C8-gt
Fig. 30 oxidative damage forms 8-oxo-guanine At
replication, A often is inserted opposite -gt
mutation
16UV DNA Damage can be directly reversed
- Photoreactivation (light repair)
- DNA photolyase uses energy from near-UV to blue
light to break bonds holding 2 pyrimidines
together - Enzyme in most organisms (not placental mammals)
Fig. 31
17Reversing High Energy DNA Damage
- O6 alkylations on G residues directly reversed by
enzyme O6-methylguanine methyltransferase - Enzyme accepts alkyl group onto SH of Cys - and
is inactivated (suicide enzyme) - In E. coli, enzyme is induced by DNA alkylation
Fig. 32
18Excision Repair
- Only small percentage of DNA damage products are
directly reversed - Excision repair removes most damaged nucleotides
- Damaged DNA is removed
- Replaced with fresh DNA
- Both base and nucleotide excision repair
19Base Excision Repair (BER) specific enzymes
remove damaged base
- DNA glycosylase
- Extrudes base in damaged base pair, and clips out
- Leaves apurinic or apyrimidinic (AP) site that
attracts DNA repair enzymes - DNA repair enzymes
- Remove remaining deoxyribose phosphate
- Replace with normal nucleotide, ligate
Fig. 33
20Eukaryotic BER
Fig. 34
- DNA polymerase b fills in
- missing nucleotide
- Makes mistakes, not proofread
- APE1 proofreads
- (AP endonuclease)
- Repair of 8-oxoG sites is special case of BER
- After replication, A often is inserted A can be
removed by specialized adenine DNA glycosylase - Before replication, oxoG paired with C the oxoG
is removed by oxoG DNA glycoslyase (hOGG1)
21Nucleotide Excision Repair (NER)
- NER handles bulky damage that distorts DNA
- Including Thymine dimers, large adducts
- Specific endonucleases clip DNA strand on either
side of lesion, remove single strand,
resynthesize and rejoin. - Xeroderma pigmentosum
- (XP) people have hereditary
- increased skin cancer
- lack NER enzymes
22NER in E. coli
Fig. 36
- Excinuclease (UvrABC) cuts either side of damage
- Remove 12-13 nt oligonucleotide
- Pol I fills in using top strand as template
- DNA ligase seals nick
23Eukaryotic NER uses 2 paths
- GG-NER
- Complex of XPC and hHR23B initiates repair, binds
lesion - limited DNA melting
- XPA and RPA recruited
- TFIIH joins, helicase expands melted region
- RPA binds 2 excinucleases (XPF, XPG) cleaves
- Releases damage 24-32 nt
- Transcription-Coupled (TC-NER) resembles GG-NER
Except - RNA polymerase plays role of XPC in damage
sensing and initial DNA melting
24Human Global Genome NER
- Complex of XPC and hHR23B initiates repair, binds
lesion - Limited DNA melting
- XPA RPA recruited
- TFIIH joins, helicase expands melted region
- RPA binds 2 excinucleases (XPF, XPG),
- Cleaves, releases damage 24-32 nt
Fig. 37
25Transcription-Coupled (TC)-NER
- Resembles GG-NER
- RNA polymerase plays role of XPC in damage
sensing and initial DNA melting - RNAP stalls
Fig. 37
26Double-Strand Break (DSB) Repair in Eukaryotes
- dsDNA breaks in eukaryotes are very dangerous
- Broken chromosomes
- If not repaired, lead to cell death
- In vertebrates, also leads to cancer
- Eukaryotes deal with dsDNA breaks in 2 ways
- Homologous recombination with good chromsome
- Nonhomologous end-joining (NHEJ) has errors
- Chromatin remodeling has role in dsDNA break
repair
27Model for Nonhomologous End-Joining
- Ku and DNA-PKcs bind at DNA ends and let ends
find microhomology - 2 DNA-PK complexes phosphorylate each other
- Catalytic subunit dissociates
- DNA helicase activity of Ku unwinds DNA ends
- Extra flaps of DNA removed, gaps filled, ends
ligated - Inaccurate process, DNA is lost
Fig. 38
28Mismatch Repair
- Recognizes parental DNA by its methylated A in
GATC sequence (E. coli) - Corrects mismatch in progeny strand
- Eukaryotes use part of repair system unclear
how distinguish strands at mismatch - HNPCC colon cancer- defects in repair of mismatch
damage cause instability of microsatellite
regions, many mutations
Fig. 39
29Coping with DNA Damage Without Repairing It
- Direct reversal and excision repair are true
repair processes - accurate - Eliminate defective DNA entirely
- Cells also copes with damage by skirting it
- Not true repair mechanism
- Damage bypass mechanism
- gives time to repair
- cell can replicate, fix damage later
30Recombination Repair
- Gapped DNA strand across from damaged strand
recombines with normal strand in other daughter
DNA duplex after replication - Must occur before segregation
- Solves gap problem
- Leaves original damage unrepaired fix later
Fig. 40
31Error-Prone Bypass (SOS)
- Induce SOS response
- Activates recA protease
- UmuC/D dimer is DNA pol V
- Causes DNA to replicate even though damaged
region not read correctly - Errors in newly made DNA, but cell lives
- Mutants of umu genes die, but do not have
mutations
Fig. 41
Recall, UV damage to cell can induce SOS path,
which causes cleavage of lambda repressor, return
of prophage to lytic cycle
32Error-Prone Bypass in Humans
- Humans have relatively error-free bypass system
that inserts dAMPs across from pyrimidine dimer - Specialized DNA polymerases are activated
- Replicate thymine dimers correctly
- Uses DNA polymerase ? plus another enzyme to
replicate a few bases beyond lesion - Polymerase is not really error-free
- If DNA polymerase ? gene is defective, DNA
polymerase ? and others take over, more errors
33Review questions
- 8. Diagram rolling circle replication of lambda
- 12, 16. List the different DNA polymerases in E.
coli and eukaryotes and explain their roles. - 24. Compare/ contrast base excision repair and
nucleotide excision. - 33. Diagram recombination repair in E.coli.