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Nucleic acid chemistry and metabolism

Nucleic acid chemistry and metabolism. Andy Howard Biochemistry Lectures, Fall 2010 22 November 2010. Nucleic Acids. We’ll endeavor to recognize the chemical properties of nucleic acid bases, nucleosides, and nucleotides; and the ways that they behave as oligomers and polymers

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Nucleic acid chemistry and metabolism

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  1. Nucleic acid chemistry and metabolism Andy HowardBiochemistry Lectures, Fall 201022 November 2010 Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  2. Nucleic Acids • We’ll endeavor to recognize the chemical properties of nucleic acid bases, nucleosides, and nucleotides; and the ways that they behave as oligomers and polymers • Then we’ll look at their biosynthesis Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  3. Nucleic acid chemistry Purines: A, G Other purines Nucleosides Nucleotides Oligo- and polynucleotides Duplex DNA & Helicity DNA sequencing DNA secondary structure Folding kinetics RNA: structure & types DNA & RNA Hydrolysis RNA, DNA Restriction enzymes What we’ll cover Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  4. Chemistry Nobel Prize 2009 • Structural studies of the ribosome • Venki Ramakrishnan, LMB Cambridge • Thomas Steitz, HHMI Yale University • Ada Yonath, Weizmann Institute Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  5. 7 6 5 1 8 4 Purines 2 9 3 • Derivatives of purine; again, the root molecule isn’t biologically important • Six-membered ring looks a lot like pyrimidine • Numbering works somewhat differently: note that the glycosidic bonds will be to N9, whereas it’s to N1 in pyrimidines Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  6. Adenine • This is 6-aminopurine • Found in RNA and DNA • We’ve seen how important adenosine and its derivatives are in metabolism • Tautomerization happens here too Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  7. Guanine • This is 2-amino-6-oxopurine • Found in RNA, DNA • Lactam, lactim forms Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  8. Other natural purines • Hypoxanthine and xanthine are biosynthetic precursors of A & G • Urate is important in nitrogen excretion pathways Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  9. Tautomerization and H-bonds • Lactam forms predominate at neutral pH • This influences which bases are H-bond donors or acceptors • Amino groups in C, A, G make H-bonds • So do ring nitrogens at 3 in pyrimidines and 1 in purines • … and oxygens at 4 in U,T, 2 in C, 6 in G Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  10. Nucleosides • As mentioned in ch. 8, these are glycosides of the nucleic acid bases • Sugar is always ribose or deoxyribose • Connected nitrogen is: • N1 for pyrimidines (on 6-membered ring) • N9 for purines (on 5-membered ring) Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  11. Pyrimidine nucleosides • Drawn here in amino and lactam forms Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  12. Pyrimidine deoxynucleosides Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  13. A tricky nomenclature issue • Remember that thymidine and its phosphorylated derivatives ordinarily occur associated with deoxyribose, not ribose • Therefore many people leave off the deoxy- prefix in names of thymidine and its derivatives: it’s usually assumed. • Exception: T’s in tRNA TC arm Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  14. Purine nucleosides • Drawn in amino and lactam forms Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  15. Purine deoxynucleosides Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  16. Conformations around the glycosidic bond • Rotation of the base around the glycosidic bond is sterically hindered • In the syn conformation there would be some interference between the base and the 2’-hydroxyl of the sugar • Therefore pyrimidines are always anti, and purines are usually anti • Furanose and base rings are roughly perpendicular Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  17. Glycosidic bonds • This illustrates the roughly perpendicular positionings of the base and sugar rings Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  18. Solubility of nucleosides and lability of glycosidic linkages • The sugar makes nucleosides more soluble than the free bases • Nucleosides are generally stable to basic hydrolysis at the glycosidic bond • Acid hydrolysis: • Purines: glycosidic bond fairly readily hydrolyzed • Pyrimidines: resistant to acid hydrolysis Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  19. Chirality in nucleic acids • Bases themselves are achiral • 3 asymmetric centers in ribose • 2 in deoxyribose • Glycosidic bond gives us 1 more,so there are 4 for ribonucleosides,3 for deoxyribonucleosides • Same for nucleotides:phosphates don’t add asymmetries Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  20. Mono-phosphorylated nucleosides • We have specialized names for the 5’-phospho derivatives of the nucleosides, i.e. the nucleoside monophosphates: • They are nucleotides • Adenosine 5’-monophosphate = AMP = adenylate • GMP = guanylate • CMP = cytidylate • UMP = uridylate Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  21. pKa’s for base N’s and PO4’s Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  22. UV absorbance • These aromatic rings absorb around 260 Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  23. Deoxynucleotides • Similar nomenclature • dAMP = deoxyadenylate • dGMP = deoxyguanylate • dCMP = deoxycytidylate • dTTP (= TTP) = deoxythymidylate = thymidylate Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  24. Di and triphosphates • Phosphoanhydride bonds link second and perhaps third phosphates to the 5’-OH on the ribose moiety Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  25. Cyclic phospho-diesters • 3’ and 5’ hydroxyls are both involvedin -O-P-O bonds • cAMP and cGMP are the important ones(see earlier in the course!) Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  26. Oligomers and Polymers • Monomers are nucleotides or deoxynucleotides • Linkages are phosphodiester linkages between 3’ of one ribose and 5’ of the next ribose • It’s logical to start from the 5’ end for synthetic reasons Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  27. Typical DNA dinucleotide • Various notations: this is pdApdCp • Leave out the p’s if there’s a lot of them! Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  28. DNA structure • Many years of careful experimental work enabled fabrication of double-helical model of double-stranded DNA • Explained [A]=[T], [C]=[G] • Specific H-bonds stabilize double-helical structure: see fig. 19.12 Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  29. What does double-stranded DNA really look like? • Picture on previous slide emphasizes only the H-bond interactions • Fig.19.12 is better: shows the tilt of the sugars • Planes of the bases are almost perpendicular to the helical axes on both sides of the double helix Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  30. Sizes (see fig. 19.14) • Diameter of the double helix: 2.37nm • Length along one full turn:10.4 base pairs = pitch = 3.40nm • Distance between stacked base pairs = rise = 0.33 nm • Major groove is wider and shallower;minor groove is narrower and deeper Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  31. What stabilizes this? • Variety of stabilizing interactions • Stacking of base pairs • Hydrogen bonding between base pairs • Hydrophobic effects (burying bases, which are less polar) • Charge-charge interactions:phosphates with Mg2+ and cationic proteins Courtesy dnareplication.info Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  32. How close to instability is it? • Pretty close. • Heating DNA makes it melt: fig. 19.17 • The more GC pairs, the harder it is to melt • Weaker stacking interactions in A-T • One more H-bond per GC than per AT Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  33. iClicker quiz • 1. What positions of a pair of aromatic rings leads to stabilizing interactions? • (a) Parallel to one another • (b) Perpendicular to one another • (c) At a 45º angle to one another • (d) Both (a) and (b) • (e) All three: (a), (b), and ( c) Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  34. 2nd iClicker question! 2. Which has the highest molecular mass among the compounds listed here? • (a) cytidylate • (b) thymidylate • (c) adenylate • (d) adenosine triphosphate • (e) they’re all the same MW Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  35. iClicker quiz, question 3 What would be a suitable wavelength for spectrophotometric detection of nucleic acids? • (a) 230nm • (b) 260 nm • (c) 280 nm • (d) 340 nm • (e) none of the above. Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  36. iClicker quiz, question 4 Which of these RNA octamers would be the most susceptible to acid hydrolysis of the glycosidic linkages? • (a) AUCGAUGU • (b) CUAUCCUC • (c) GCUAGAUG • (d) CGAUGCUA • (e) None of these are susceptible to acid hydrolysis. Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  37. Base composition for DNA • As noted, [A]=[T], [C]=[G] because of base pairing • [A]/[C] etc. not governed by base pairing • Can vary considerably (table 19.2) • E.coli : [A], [C] about equal • Mycobacterium tuberculosis: [C] > 2*[A] • Mammals: [C] < 0.74*[A] • These rules don’t apply to RNA at all, since it isn’t base-paired Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  38. Supercoiling • Refers to levels of organization of DNA beyond the immediate double-helix • We describe circular DNA as relaxed if the closed double helix could lie flat • It’s underwound or overwound if the ends are broken, twisted, and rejoined. • Supercoils restore 10.4 bp/turn relation upon rejoining: see fig. 19.19. Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  39. Supercoiling and flat DNA Diagram courtesy SIU Carbondale Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  40. Sanger dideoxy method • Incorporates DNA replication as an analytical tool for determining sequence • Uses short primer that attaches to the 3’ end of the ssDNA, after which a specially engineered DNA polymerase operates on the DNA • Each vial includes one dideoxyXTP and 3 ordinary dXTPs; the dideoxyXTP will be incorporated but will halt synthesis because the 3’ position is blocked. • See box 20.1 for details Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  41. Automating dideoxy sequencing • Laser fluorescence detection allows for primer identification in real time • An automated sequencing machine can handle 4500 bases/hour • That’s one of the technologies that has made large-scale sequencing projects like the human genome project possible Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  42. DNA secondary structures • If double-stranded DNA were simply a straight-legged ladder: • Base pairs would be 0.6 nm apart • Watson-Crick base-pairs have very uniform dimensions because the H-bonds are fixed lengths • But water could get to the apolar bases • So, in fact, the ladder gets twisted into a helix. • The most common helix is B-DNA, but there are others. B-DNA’s properties include: • Sugar-sugar distance is still 0.6 nm • Helix repeats itself every 3.4 nm, i.e. 10 bp Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  43. Properties of B-DNA • Spacing between base-pairs along helix axis = 0.34 nm • 10 base-pairs per full turn • So: 3.4 nm per full turn is pitch length • Major and minor grooves, as discussed earlier • Base-pair plane is almost perpendicular to helix axis Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  44. Major groove in B-DNA • H-bond between adenine NH2 and thymine ring C=O • H-bond between cytosine amine and guanine ring C=O • Wide, not very deep Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  45. Minor groove in B-DNA • H-bond between adenine ring N and thymine ring NH • H-bond between guanine amine and cytosine ring C=O • Narrow but deep Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  46. Cartoon of AT pair in B-DNA Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  47. Cartoon of CG pair in B-DNA Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  48. What holds duplex B-DNA together? • H-bonds (but just barely) • Electrostatics: Mg2+ –PO4-2 • van der Waals interactions • - interactions in bases • Solvent exclusion • Recognize role of grooves in defining DNA-protein interactions Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  49. Helical twist • Rotation about the backbone axis • Successive base-pairs rotated with respect to each other by ~ 32º Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

  50. Propeller twist • Improves overlap of hydrophobic surfaces • Makes it harder for water to contact the less hydrophilic parts of the molecule Nucleic Acid chem&hydrolysis

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