ENZYMES THAT MODIFY DNA AND RNA - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 22
About This Presentation
Title:

ENZYMES THAT MODIFY DNA AND RNA

Description:

enzymes that modify dna and rna 1. restriction endonucleases and methylases restriction endonucleases exist in nature in prokaryotes prokaryotic cells have ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:189
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 23
Provided by: MSib150
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: ENZYMES THAT MODIFY DNA AND RNA


1
  • ENZYMES THAT MODIFY DNA AND RNA
  • 1. RESTRICTION ENDONUCLEASES AND METHYLASES
  • RESTRICTION ENDONUCLEASES EXIST IN NATURE IN
    PROKARYOTES
  • Prokaryotic cells have restriction modification
    systems and will cleave foreign DNA that enters
    the bacteria cell (e.g. bacteriophage) but not
    host DNA that has been protected or modified by
    methylation
  • source of enzyme reagents, essential for
    generating recombinant DNA molecules
  • Need to understand how they work in order to
    avoid problems when manipulating recombinant DNA

2
  • TYPES OF RESTRICTION ENDONUCLEASES
  • There are 3 types Type I, II and III
  • Types I and III contain the restriction and
    modification activities in the same multiunit
    enzyme complex
  • Require ATP for cleavage
  • cleave DNA a substantial distance from the
    recognition sequence
  • not commonly used
  • Type II
  • RE are not physically associated with methylases
  • do not require ATP for cleavage
  • generally cleave within or very near the
    recognition sequence
  • isolated 100's of different type II REs, many of
    which are available commercially
  • The first type II RE characterised was from
    E.coli and was designated E.coRI
  • EcoRI binds to DNA region with a specific
    palindromic sequence of 6 bp and cuts between the
    G and the A residues on each strand
  • It specifically cleaves the internucleotide bond
    between the oxygen of the 3'C of the sugar of one
    nucleotide and the phosphate group attached to
    the 5' carbon of the sugar of the adjacent
    nucleotide

3
(No Transcript)
4
(No Transcript)
5
  • NAMING R.E.
  • A 3 letter abbreviation based on the genus and
    species of bacteria e.g. Eco E.coli
  • a 4th letter can be used to indicate strain eg
    Hind
  • Roman numerals are used to designate the order of
    characterisation of the different R.E. from the
    same organism
  • e.g. HpaI and HpaII- the first and second R.E.
    isolated from Haemophilus parainfluenzae
  • RECOGNITION SITES
  • The palindromic sequences where most type II R.E.
    bind and cut a DNA molecule are called
    recognition sites
  • Recognition sites of many type II R.E. contain
    4-6 specific nucleotides
  • CLEAVAGE
  • Can result in sticky ends or blunt ends

6
  • Enzymes Practical considerations
  • Expensive
  • Many are cloned recombinant enzymes but still can
    be expensive
  • One unit of a Restriction enzyme is defined as
    the amount that will cut 1ug of a test DNA in 1h
    at optimum temp
  • Rate of cutting is dependent on
  • 1. Number of sites/ug DNA
  • 2. linear, circular or supercoiled DNA
  • 3. R.E. sites near ends may not cut well
  • 4. Contaminated DNA may not cut well
  • 5. More enzyme required if buffer conditions are
    not optimum
  • 6. Ability to cleave depends on surrounding
    sequence

7
  • Enzymes Practical considerations cont
  • Manufacturers catalogues give optimum buffers,
    temps and stabilities
  • If xs enzyme is used may result in non specific
    cutting (called star activity)
  • Contamination of enzyme stocks is disasterous.
    Use clean tips all the time.
  • Enzymes should be stored in -20C freezer(not
    frost free)
  • Enzymes should be placed on ice immediately on
    removal from freezer
  • Enzymes should be used immediately and then
    returned to freezer
  • Diluted enzymes are generally unstable. Do not
    dilute for long term storage
  • Wear gloves to prevent contaminating enzymes with
    proteases and RNases often present on fingers

8
  • ENZYMES THAT MODIFY DNA OR RNA cont.
  • 2. Polymerases
  • The purpose of all polymerases is to join single
    nucleotides into a polymer
  • 5 to 3 polymerase activity
  • All DNA polymerases use deoxynucleotide 5
    triphosphates (dNTPs)
  • Removes 2 phosphate groups (releasing a
    pyrophosphate and using the released energy) from
    NTP and attaches the newly exposed 5 phosphate
    to the 3 hydroxyl of another nucleotide,
    generating a phosphodiester bond
  • Most polymerases require a template
  • Most require a primer

9
Polymerases can have other activities as well as
polymerase (building) activity 3 to 5
exonuclease activity Many polymerase have this
activity, useful for proof reading Removes single
mismatches Combination of 5 to 3 polymerase and
3 to 5 exonuclease activity is particularly
useful for making blunt ends and labeling 3
ends 5 to 3 exonuclease activity Only some
polymerases have this activity Useful for
removing RNA templates for nick
translation Ribonuclease H activity Present in a
few polymerases Degrades RNA in RNA/DNA complexes
10
  • Properties of polymerases
  • Turnover number-nucleotides/min
  • Processivity-how many nucleotides added before
    disassociates
  • Error frequency- how frequently generates a
    mismatch(errors/base pair)
  • Errors are dependent on conditions, pH, conc
    dNTP, divalent cations
  • Every polymerase makes a mistake about 1 in
    100000bp. Usually caught and proofread. The
    proofread error frequency is 1/1000000, making an
    overall error frequency of 1 in 10 billion bp)

11
  • Examples
  • 1. DNA dependant DNA polymerase E.coli
    polymerase 1
  • Acts primarily as proofreader (both 3 to 5 and 5
    to 3 exonuc act and polym act.)
  • Has RNase H act to degrade RNA primers
  • Plays role in replication
  • 2. DNA dependant RNA polymerase RNA polymerase
  • Transcribes ssRNA from dsDNA in transcription

12
Polymerase cont.
3. RNA dependant DNA polymerase Reverse
transcriptase Makes DNA from RNA templates also
has RNase H activity and can destroy the RNA in
an RNA DNA hybrid molecule
13
Polymerases cont.
4. Template independent polymerase terminal
deoxynucleotide transferase (TdT) No
template Useful for generating restriction sites
at blunt ends and labelling
14
Polymerases cont
Thermo tolerant polymerases used for PCR
(polymerase chain reactions) reactions The total
error rate of Taq polymerase has been variously
reported between 1 x 10-4 to 2 x 10-5 errors per
base pair. Pfu polymerase appears to have the
lowest error rate at roughly 1.5 x 10-6 error per
base pair Vent is intermediate between Taq and
Pfu.
Polymerase 3'-gt5'Exonuclease Source and Properties
Taq No From Thermus aquaticus. Halflife at 95C is 1.6 hours.
Pfu Yes From Pyrococcus furiosus. Appears to have the lowest error rate of known thermophilic DNA polymerases.
Vent Yes From Thermococcus litoralis also known as Tli polymerase. Halflife at 95 C is approximately 7 hours.
15
Kinase
  • 3. Kinase
  • catalyses the transfer of the gamma phosphate
    group of ATP to the 5 hydroxyl of polynucleotide
    (all phosphates have to be removed from end). By
    combining a Phosphatase with a kinase the 5 end
    of DNA can be labeled with a labeled phosphate
    group.
  • e.g. Polynucleotide Kinase
  • It is a product of the T4 bacteriophage, and
    commercial preparations are usually products of
    the cloned phage gene expressed in E. coli. The
    enzymatic activity of PNK is utilized in two
    types of reactions
  • PNK transfers the gamma phosphate from ATP to the
    5' end of a polynucleotide (DNA or RNA). The
    target nucleotide is lacking a 5' phosphate
    either because it has been dephorphorylated or
    has been synthesized chemically.
  • In the "exchange reaction", target DNA or RNA
    that has a 5' phosphate is incubated with an
    excess of ADP - in this setting, PNK will first
    transfer the phosphate from the nucleic acid onto
    an ADP, forming ATP and leaving a
    dephosphorylated target. PNK will then perform a
    forward reaction and transfer a phosphate from
    ATP onto the target nucleic acid.

16
Kinase reactions
17
Phosphatases
  • 4. Phosphatase- catalyses the hydrolysis of 5
    phosphate groups from DNA or RNA or single
    nucleotides. Often used to prevent relegation of
    plasmids once they have been opened by
    restriction digest (since ligase requires a 5
    phosphate for ligation )
  • e.g. Alkaline phosphatase removes 5' phosphate
    groups from DNA and RNA. It will also remove
    phosphates from nucleotides and proteins. These
    enzymes are most active at alkaline pH
  • There are several sources of alkaline phosphatase
    that differ in how easily they can be
    inactivated
  • Bacterial alkaline phosphatase (BAP) is the most
    active of the enzymes, but also the most
    difficult to
  • Calf intestinal alkaline phosphatase (CIP) most
    widely used in molecular, less active than BAP,
    but it can be effectively destroyed by protease
    digestion or heat
  • Shrimp alkaline is readily destroyed by heat (65C
    for 15 minutes).
  • Primary uses for alkaline phosphatase in DNA
    manipulations
  • Removing 5' phosphates from plasmid and
    bacteriophage vectors and preventing
    self-ligation
  • Removing 5' phosphates from fragments of DNA
    prior to labeling with labelled phosphate.

18
Ligase
  • 5. DNA ligases catalyze formation of a
    phosphodiester bond between the 5' phosphate of
    one strand of DNA and the 3' hydroxyl of the
    another to permit joining of 2 DNA molecules
    together
  • e.g. The most widely used DNA ligase is derived
    from the T4 bacteriophage. T4 DNA ligase requires
    ATP as a cofactor. It also requires ds DNA.
  • T4 RNA ligase can use ssRNA or ssDNA substrates

1- Ligation of DNA with complementary cohesive
termini
19
Ligase continued
  • 2- Repair reaction
  • H bonds are not enough to hold sticky ends
    together. A means of reforming the
    internucleotide linkage between 3OH and
    5phosphate groups is required and ligase does
    this

20
(No Transcript)
21
Nucleases
  • 6. Nucleases DNase and RNase
  • Most of the time nucleases are evil when you are
    trying to preserve the integrity of RNA or DNA
    samples.
  • Many types differing in substrate specificity,
    cofactor requirements, and whether they cleave
    nucleic acids internally (endonucleases), chew in
    from the ends (exonucleases) or attack in both of
    these modes.
  • The most widely used nucleases are DNase I and
    RNase A
  • Deoxyribonuclease I cleaves double-stranded or
    single stranded DNA.
  • Cleavage preferentially occurs adjacent to
    pyrimidine (C or T) residues
  • an endonuclease.
  • Major products are 5'-phosphorylated di, tri and
    tetranucleotides.
  • In the presence of magnesium ions, DNase I
    hydrolyzes each strand of duplex DNA
    independently, generating random cleavages.
  • In the presence of manganese ions, the enzyme
    cleaves both strands of DNA at approximately the
    same site, producing blunt ends or fragments with
    1-2 base overhangs.
  • DNase I does not cleave RNA
  • Some of the common applications of DNase I are
  • Eliminating DNA (e.g. plasmid) from preparations
    of RNA.
  • Analyzing DNA-protein interactions via DNase
    footprinting.
  • Nicking DNA prior to labeling by nick
    translation.

22
Nucleases cont.
  • Ribonuclease A is an endoribonuclease that
    cleaves single-stranded RNA at the 3' end of
    pyrimidine residues.
  • It degrades the RNA into 3'-phosphorylated
    mononucleotides and oligonucleotides.
  • Some of the major use of RNase A are
  • Eliminating or reducing RNA contamination in
    preparations of plasmid DNA.
  • Mapping mutations in DNA or RNA by mismatch
    cleavage. RNase will cleave the RNA in RNADNA
    hybrids at sites of single base mismatches, and
    the cleavage products can be analyzed.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com