370 likes | 451 Views
DNA Structure Chapter 16B. AP Biology. NUCLEOTIDES. Monomer of nucleic acids Composed of Base – A, T, C, G Sugar – Deoxyribose Phosphate – PO 4 3- Which elements are found in nucleic acids?. Nucleosides vs. Nucleotides. What energy is needed for polymerization ?.
E N D
DNA Structure Chapter 16B AP Biology
NUCLEOTIDES • Monomer of nucleic acids • Composed of • Base – A, T, C, G • Sugar – Deoxyribose • Phosphate – PO43- • Which elements are found in nucleic acids?
What energy is needed for polymerization? • Energy from coupled reactions drives polymerization • Nucleoside triphosphate • i.e. deoxyadenosine triphosphate • Not ATP!!! • Ribose vs. Deoxyribose • Triphosphate tail is unstable cluster of negative charge • Hydrolysis of the two phosphates(the ones taken off) drives polymerization • See pic on next slide
BASES vs. SUGAR/PHOSPHATE • Outside (backbone) • Sugar – Phosphate – Sugar – Phosphate… • Covalently bonded • Inside (“rungs” of DNA ladder) • Bases • DNA: A = T; C = G • Hydrogen attracted
ANTI-PARALLEL • 3’ – 5’ • 5’ – 3’ • Distinguishes DNA strand for identification, replication, transcription • Complementary strands
Just some figures: • Each E. coli cell has 1 chromosome with 5 million base pairs • Cell replicates DNA and divides in < 1 hour • Each normal, human cell has 46 DNA molecules totaling 68 billion base pairs • Cell replicates DNA and divides in just a few hours So how does DNA replication work?
Meselson and Stahl proved semi-conservative replication
DNA Replication:Steps “in order” Chapter 16B
HELICASE • Enzyme that unwinds double helix, exposing replication fork • Breaks hydrogen attractions between base-pairs
SINGLE-STRAND BINDING PROTEINS • Bind to open DNA single-strands to prevent DNA from sticking back together
RNA PRIMASE • Binds a short piece of RNA nucleotides along the open DNA at origin of replication • Only 1 primer on leading strand • Each fragment needs primer on lagging strand • Jumpstarts DNA polymerase • Primers converted to DNA before fragments are joined by ligase
DNA POLYMERASE • Comes in to join nucleotides together • About 50 bases/sec • Reads template strand from 3’-5’ only • Creates polynucleotide chains from 3’ end • Creates leading and lagging strands • Very specific enzyme • Adenosine triphosphate vs. Deoxyadenosine triphosphate • Sugars!!!!
LEADING and LAGGING STRANDS • Leading Strand • Free nucleotides added easily and very quickly, one after another • In direction that polymerase can work (3’-5’) • Lagging Strand • Free nucleotides added in chunks • Okazaki Fragments • “Backwards” for polymerase
Figure 16.13 Synthesis of leading and lagging strands during DNA replication
LIGASE • Covalently bonds Okazaki fragments together (sugar/phosphate backbone)
TOPOISOMERASES • Cuts and rejoins helix together as replication occurs • Decreases tangling of DNA strands
TERMINATION • When DNA polymerase is at end • Primers are removed • Holes where primers were are now filled in and ligased • What about 5’ end? • Telomeres shortened • What’s a telomere?
What are telomeres? • Noncoding, repetitive segments of DNA • TTAGGG • Prevent genes from being eroded through successive rounds of replication • Associated proteins prevent ends from activating “DNA damage control” • How can we restore telomere lengths? • Telomerase • Catalyzes lengthening of telomeres to original length in gamete formation • But how can it create new DNA segments without a template????
Telomeres cont’d • Prokaryotes have circular DNA, so no problem • Eukaryotes have telomeres 100-1000 repetitions • Want this b/c 5’ end keeps shortening through generations of cells • 5’ → 3’ creation of new strand = no way to complete the 5’ ends….get shorter and shorter
Figure 16.19a Telomeres and telomerase: Telomeres of mouse chromosomes
REPARING and FIXING DNA • What if DNA is incorrect and needs to be fixed? • DNA polymerase is not 100% correct! • Errors every 10,000 bases (on average) • At completion, errors every 1 billion bases (on average) • Also, there are errors caused by • reactive chemicals, x ray, UV light, spontaneous changes • Constant repair is done by 130+ human enzymes • Exonuclease comes in and removes incorrect DNA sequence • DNA polymerase then fills nucleotide gaps • Ligase binds together
Figure 16.15 The main proteins of DNA replication and their functions
Xeroderma pigmentosa faulty repair mechanism
In DNA, all the information there twice! • Correct order and complementary order • What initiates the replication process? • Why does it sometimes go out of control? • Why is DNA so important that we guard it inside nucleus, copy it meticulously, repair it constantly? • DNA SPECIFIES AMINO ACID SEQUENCE IN PROTEINS!!!