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DNA as the Genetic Material

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Title: DNA as the Genetic Material


1
DNA as the Genetic Material
  • Genetic information is defined as information
    contained in genes which, when passed to a new
    generation, influences the form and
    characteristics of the offspring
  • Genetic material must be capable of replication,
    information storage, information expression and
    variation (mutation)
  • Until 1944 it was not known which component of
    chromosomes was the genetic material
  • Until 1953 it was not known how DNA could encode
    genetic information

2
Central Dogma of Molecular Genetics
3
Early Studies
  • Beginning with the earliest observations
    concerning heredity, genetic material was assumed
    to exist
  • Until the 1940s proteins were considered by
    geneticists to be the best candidates
  • Very abundant in cells and did nifty things
  • Nucleic acids were similar, boring and just a
    couple of nucleotides connected to each other

4
Discovery of DNA
  • 1868 by Friedrick Miescher, a Swiss chemist
  • Called in nuclein since it was from the nucleus
  • Had large amounts of phosphorous and no sulfur so
    was very different than protein

5
First Structure
  • By 1910 actual components known (nucleotides)
  • Phoebus Levene proposed a tetranucleotide
    structure for DNA
  • Tetranucleotide repeat of ATCG
  • Own data showed nucleotides not in 1111 ratio
  • Differences probably experimental error

6
So
  • If DNA was a single covalently bonded
    tetranucleotide structure then it couldnt easily
    encode information
  • Proteins, on the other hand, had 20 different
    amino acids and could have lots of variation
  • Most geneticists focused on transmission
    genetics and passively accepted proteins as
    being the likely genetic material

7
First Real Break
  • 1927, Frederick Griffith
  • Studied Pneumococcus (then became Diplococcus
    pneumoniae, then became Streptococcus pneumoniae)
  • IIR strain was avirulent and lacked a
    lipopolysaccharide (LPS) capsule, growing in
    rough-shaped colonies on a plate
  • IIIS strain was virulent, possessed a
    lipopolysaccharide capsule and could kill mice,
    and made round colonies

8
Frederick Griffith
  • The Experiment
  • Inject mouse with strain S ? mouse dies
  • Inject mouse with strain R? mouse lives
  • Inject with heat-killed strain S? mouse lives
  • Inject with h-k S and live R ? mouse dies, and
    live S strain can be recovered from dead mouse
  • Griffith concluded that the live R had been
    transformed to S by picking up the genetic
    material encoding the LPS from the dead S and
    using that material to repair the damaged/lost
    gene in the R strain

9
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10
Griffiths Experiment
  • Called the material in the dead S cells that
    allowed for the R?S transformation the
    transforming principle
  • First assay for the genetic material

11
Avery, McCarty and MacLeod
  • After 10 yrs of effort published work using
    Griffiths approach to assay for the genetic
    material
  • Used
  • Cell-free extract of S cells
  • From 75 liters of cell culture obtained 10-25 mg
    of active factor
  • Proteases, RNases, DNases, etc.
  • The evidence presented supports the belief that
    a nucleic acid of the desoxyribose type is the
    fundamental unit of the transforming principle of
    Pneumococcus Type III

12
Avery, McCarty and MacLeod
13
Harriet Taylor
  • 1949 follow-up
  • Studied strain R and strain ER (extremely rough)
  • Showed DNA from R could convert ER strains to R
    strains
  • and then DNA from S strains could convert R to S
    strains
  • Conclusion R strains could be both donor and
    recipients in transformation experiments

14
Hershey Chase Experiment
  • Alfred Hershey and Martha Chase, 1952
  • Evidence that DNA is the genetic material
  • Simple model system using T2 bacteriophage and
    radioactive materials

15
Life Cycle of T-Even Phage
  • Phage made of DNA and protein
  • What enters cell and allows production of new
    phage?

16
Hershey Chase Experiment
  • T2 Phage, E. coli, and 35S, Waring blender
  • 32P04 goes into DNA
  • 35S04 goes into proteins
  • Experiment
  • Grow phage on cells cultured in 32P04 and 35S04
  • Infect new cells (not radioactive) with
    radioactive phage
  • After various times place in Waring blender,
    centrifuge and measure radioactivity in cells
    plus plate them out to determine whether
    successfully infected by phage
  • Allow some to complete life cycle and measure
    radioactivity levels of progeny phage

17
Hershey-Chase Experiment
  • Time course also reveals that entry of 32P into
    cells correlates with successful infection

18
Indirect Evidence for Eukaryotes
  • DNA found only in nucleus, proteins all over
    cell
  • DNA in chromosomes
  • Ploidy correlated with DNA content

19
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20
More Indirect Evidence Mutagenesis
  • Action spectrum of UV light for mutagenesis
    correlates well with the absorption spectrum of
    DNA
  • UV light of 260 nm most mutagenic
  • DNA absorption maximum is 260 nm
  • Protein absorption maximum is 280 nm

21
Action and Absorption Spectra
22
RNA as Genetic Material
  • Fraenkel-Conrat and Singer, 1956
  • Tobacco Mosaic Virus (TMV) and Holmes Ribgrass
    Virus (HRV)
  • Closely related plant viruses made of an RNA
    molecule encased in a spiral of protein
  • One coat protein could encapsulate the other RNA
    and still function properly during infection

23
RNA as Genetic Material
24
RNA Can Replicate
  • Pace and Spiegelman, 1965, 1966
  • Phage Qb
  • Isolated an RNA replicase enzyme that could
    replicate the Qb chromosome in vitro
  • No DNA involved

25
Reverse Transcription
  • Retroviruses (e.g. HIV, RSV)
  • RNA chromosomes
  • Convert to DNA by reverse transcriptase
  • Insert DNA into host chromosome
  • Transcribe new RNA copies

26
Nucleic Acid Structure
  • DNA is a nucleic acid composed of nucleotides
  • Nucleotides have a nitrogenous base, a pentose
    sugar and a phosphate group
  • Bases are either pyrimidines (cytosine and
    thymine in DNA or C and uracil in RNA) or purines
    (adenine and guanine)
  • Pentose sugar is either deoxyribose (DNA) or
    ribose (RNA)
  • A base plus a sugar is a nucleoside, add
    phosphate for a nucleotide (nucleotides named by
    nucleoside plus number of phosphates adenosine
    diphosphate)
  • Sugar on C-1 position, phosphate commonly on C-5

27
Components of Nucleic Acids
  • Purines
  • Pyrimidines
  • 5-carbon sugar
  • phosphate

28
Nucleosides and Nucleotides
29
Nucleoside Diphosphates and Triphosphates
30
Polynucleotides
  • Nucleotides of a single strand connected by
    covalent 5-3 phosphodiester bond
  • Following Levenes tetranucleotide hypothesis it
    was clearly shown that bases were not present in
    equimolar quantities and that DNA molecules were
    in fact quite large

31
Phosphodiester Bonds
  • Phosphate is from phosphoric acid
  • Hydroxyl groups on sugars represent alcohol
  • Acid plus alcohol given ester
  • Phosphate reacts with two OH groups

32
Structure of DNA
  • Structure of DNA should reveal how it works as
    the genetic material
  • Intense study from 1940-1953
  • Chargaff, Wilkins, Franklin, Pauling, Watson,
    Crick and more
  • First to elucidate the correct structure gets the
    big one

33
Erwin Chargaff
  • 1949-1953
  • Digested many DNAs and subjected products to
    chromatographic separation
  • Results
  • A T, C G
  • A G C T (purine pyrimidine)
  • A T does not equal C G
  • Members of a species similar but different
    species vary in AT/CG ratio

34
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35
Franklin and Wilkins
  • X-ray diffraction analysis of DNA crystals
  • Originally by William Astbury (1938)who detected
    a periodicity of 3.4 angstroms (1947)
  • Pauling used data to propose a triple helix
  • 1950-1953 Franklin (in Wilkins lab) confirmed
    3.4 periodicity and noted uniform diameter of 20
    angstroms (2 nm)
  • Proposed no definitive model

36
X-ray Crystallography of DNA
  • Franklin and Wilkins

37
Watson and Crick
  • 1953 propose double helix model
  • Right-handed double helix
  • Chains antiparallel
  • Bases lie flat, perpendicular to long axis of
    chain
  • Bases pair by hydrogen bonds, A with T and C with
    G
  • Two strands are complementary
  • 10 bases per turn (34 angstroms)
  • Now known to be 10.4 or 34.6 degrees turn per bp)
  • Has a major and minor groove
  • Is 20 angstroms in diameter

38
DNA Double Helix
39
Right vs. Left Handed Helices
40
Base Pairing
  • Hydrogen bonds
  • reversible
  • Individually weak electrostatic bonds but
    collectively can be strong

41
Impact
  • Article in Nature
  • It has not escaped our notice that the specific
    pairing we have postulated immediately suggests a
    possible copy mechanism for the genetic material
  • Second paper 2 months later describes
    semiconservative replication and that mutations
    must change bases in DNA (information encoded in
    the bases and their order)
  • DNA became the genetic material

42
Alternative Forms of DNA
  • DNA can exist in several conformational isomers
  • B form is the normal conformation
  • A form is found in high salt
  • Probably not biologically relevant
  • D and E forms (8 and 7 bp/turn respectively)
  • DNA segments lacking guanine
  • Z form
  • Left-handed helix and 12 bp/turn (Z for zigzag)
  • C-G base pairs only
  • P form
  • Phosphates to inside and bases more to outside
  • Are P and/or Z biologically relevant???

43
Conformational Forms of DNA
44
Structure of RNA
  • Ribose for deoxyribose, uracil for thymine
  • RNA tends to be single stranded
  • Can fold back to have secondary structure
  • Can be double stranded in some phage/viruses
  • Major classes of RNA
  • Ribosomal RNA
  • tRNA
  • mRNA
  • But there are several others

45
Major Classes of RNAbut there are more
  • S is for the Svedberg sedimentation coefficient

46
Other RNAs
  • To be discussed in later chapters
  • snRNAs
  • Telomerase RNA
  • siRNAs
  • Antisense RNAs

47
Nucleic Acid Characterization
  • Absorption Spectra
  • Absorb light in ultraviolet range, most strongly
    in the 254-260 nm range
  • Due to the purine and pyrimidine bases
  • Useful for localization, characterization and
    quantification of samples

48
Nucleic Acid Characterization
  • Sedimentation and density
  • Can be characterized by sedimentation velocity
    (Svedberg coefficient, S)
  • Sedimentation velocity centrifugation
  • Related to MW and shape
  • Or by buoyant density
  • CsCl (DNA) or CsSO4 for RNA
  • Sedimentation equilibrium centrifugation

49
Buoyant Density Centrifugation
50
Base Composition vs. Density
  • G-C base pairs are more dense than A-T pairs

51
Denaturation of Nucleic Acids
  • Denaturation involves the breaking of hydrogen
    bonds
  • Disrupts the base stacking in the helix and lead
    to increased absorbance at 260 nm
  • Hyperchomic shift
  • By increasing temperature slowly and measuring
    absorbance at 260 nm as melting profile can be
    generated
  • Temperature for midpoint of denaturation is
    called the Tm

52
Thermal Denaturation
  • Increased GC gives increased Tm
  • 3 vs. 2 hydrogen bonds
  • Increased ionic strength also increases Tm

53
Hybridization
  • After nucleic acids are denatured they can be
    allowed to reform base pairs with complementary
    molecules
  • Molecular hybridization
  • Close but not perfect match required
  • stringency
  • Can involve DNADNA or DNARNA
  • FISH, Southern transfer (blotting) and DNA
    microarray analyses involve hybridization

54
Hybridization
55
Fluorescent in situ Hybridization
  • FISH
  • Use DNA or RNA probes for hybridization
  • Originally radioactive
  • Now biotin and fluorescent dyes
  • Cells/chromosomes fixed to slide before
    hybridization
  • Can detect single copy genes

56
Reassociation Kinetics
  • Denatured DNA duplexes can reassociate with
    complementary strands to reform duplex
  • Chemical reaction, rate depends upon conditions
  • including substrate concentration

57
Reassociation Kinetics
58
Reassociation Kinetics
  • DNA concentration is routinely measured in
    micrograms per ml (mass/volume)
  • But here the relevant concentration is copies of
    complementary DNA (not mass) per unit volume
  • And this depends upon both the mass per volume
    and the size of the genome being studied

59
Reassociation Curves of Different DNAs
60
Genome Size vs. C0t1/2
61
C0t Analyses
  • Previous curves were for genomes generally
    lacking repetitive sequence regions
  • Al or nearly all sequences present at one copy
    per genome
  • What happens to the C0t analyses when genomes
    have repetitive sequences?
  • Single copy, middle and highly repetitive

62
C0t Analyses
63
Gel Electrophoresis
  • Agarose or polyacrylamide gels
  • DNA is negatively charged and migrates toward
    positive pole when placed in an electric field
  • Smaller fragments move through the gel matrix
    more quickly and therefore migrate faster per
    unit of time
  • Extremely common method for characterizing and
    purifying DNA fragments
  • Including DNA sequencing procedures

64
Gel Electrophoresis
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