nucleic acids: cell overview and core topics

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Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

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Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics. DNA and RNA in the Cell. Cellular Overview. Classes of Nucleic Acids: DNA . DNA is usually found in the nucleus Small amounts are also found in: mitochondria of eukaryotes chloroplasts of plants Packing of DNA: 2-3 meters long - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Page 2: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Cellular OverviewDNA and RNA in the Cell

Page 3: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Classes of Nucleic Acids: DNA

DNA is usually found in the nucleus

Small amounts are also found in:• mitochondria of eukaryotes• chloroplasts of plants

Packing of DNA:• 2-3 meters long• histones

genome = complete collection of hereditary information of an organism

Page 4: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Classes of Nucleic Acids: RNA

FOUR TYPES OF RNA

• mRNA - Messenger RNA

• tRNA - Transfer RNA

• rRNA - Ribosomal RNA

• snRNA - Small nuclear RNA

Page 5: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Anatomy of Nucleic Acids

THE BUILDING BLOCKS

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Nucleic acids are linear polymers.

Each monomer consists of:1. a sugar2. a phosphate3. a nitrogenous base

Page 7: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Nitrogenous Bases

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Nitrogenous Bases

DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid):adenine (A) guanine (G)cytosine (C) thymine (T)

RNA (ribonucleic acid):adenine (A) guanine (G)cytosine (C) uracil (U)

Why ?

Page 9: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Pentoses of Nucleic Acids

This difference in structure affects secondary structure and stability.

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Nucleosideslinkage of a base and a sugar.

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Nucleotides- nucleoside + phosphate

- monomers of nucleic acids - NA are formed by 3’-to-5’ phosphodiester linkages

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Shorthand notation:

- sequence is read from 5’ to 3’- corresponds to the N to C terminal of

proteins

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Nucleic Acids: Structure

DNA

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Primary Structure• nucleotide sequences

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DNA Double Helix

• Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin

• James Watson and Francis Crick Features:

• two helical polynucleotides coiled around an axis

• chains run in opposite directions• sugar-phosphate backbone on

the outside, bases on the inside

• bases nearly perpendicular to the axis

• repeats every 34 Å• 10 bases per turn of the helix• diameter of the helix is 20 Å

Secondary Structure

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Double helix stabilized by hydrogen bonds.

Which is more stable?

ATCTGGCATTAGACCGTA

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Axial view of DNA

Page 19: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

A and B forms are both right-handed double helix.

A-DNA has different characteristics from the more common B-DNA.

Page 20: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

• left-handed• backbone phosphates zigzag

Z-DNA

Page 21: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Comparison Between A, B, and Z DNA: A-DNA: right-handed, short and broad, 11 bp per turn

B-DNA: right-handed, longer, thinner, 10 bp per turn

Z-DNA: left-handed, longest, thinnest, 12 bp per turn

Page 22: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Supercoiling

relaxed DNA

supercoiled DNA

Tertiary Structure

Page 23: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Consequences of double helical structure:

1. Facilitates accurate hereditary information transmission

2.Reversible melting• melting: dissociation of the double helix• melting temperature (Tm)• hypochromism• annealing

Page 24: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Structure of Single-stranded DNA

Stem Loop

Page 25: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Nucleic Acids: Structure

RNA

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Secondary Structure

transfer RNA (tRNA) : Brings amino acids to

ribosomes during translation

Page 27: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

ribosomal RNA (rRNA) : Makes up the ribosomes, together with ribosomal proteins.

Page 28: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

messenger RNA (mRNA) : Encodes amino acid sequence of a polypeptide

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small nuclear RNA (snRNA) :With proteins, forms complexes that are used in RNA processing in eukaryotes. (Not found in prokaryotes.)

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Central Dogma

DNA Replication, Recombination, and Repair

Page 31: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Central Dogma

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DNA Replication – process of producing identical copies of original DNA

• strand separation followed by copying of each strand

• fixed by base-pairing rules

Page 33: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

DNA replication is bidirectional. involves two replication forks that move in opposite

direction

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DNA replication requires unwinding of the DNA helix.

expose single-stranded templates

DNA gyrase – acts to overcome torsional stress imposed upon unwinding

helicases – catalyze unwinding of double helix- disrupts H-bonding of the two strands

SSB (single-stranded DNA-binding proteins) – binds to the unwound strands, preventing re-annealing

Page 43: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Primer

RNA primes the synthesis of DNA.

Primase synthesizes short RNA.

Page 44: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

DNA replication is semidiscontinuous

DNA polymerase synthesizes the new DNA strand only in a 5’3’ direction. Dilemma: how is 5’ 3’ copied?

The leading strand copies continuously

The lagging strand copies in segments called Okazaki fragments (about 1000 nucleotides at a time) which will then be joined by DNA ligase

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DNA Ligase = seals the nicks between Okazaki fragments

DNA ligase seals breaks in the double stranded DNA

DNA ligases use an energy source (ATP in eukaryotes and archaea, NAD+ in bacteria) to form a phosphodiester bond between the 3’ hydroxyl group at the end of one DNA chain and 5’-phosphate group at the end of the other.

Page 55: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

DNA replication terminates at the Ter region.

• the oppositely moving replication forks meet here and replication is terminated

• contain core elements 5’-GTGTGTTGT

• binds termination protein (Tus protein)

Page 56: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Eukaryotic DNA Replication Like E. coli, but more complex

Human cell: 6 billion base pairs of DNA to copy

Multiple origins of replication: 1 per 3000-30000 base pairs

E.coli 1 chromosomeHuman 23E.coli circular chromosome; Human linear

Page 57: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Mutations1. Substitution of base

paira. transitionb. transversion

2. Deletion of base pair/s

3. Insertion/Addition of base pair/s

DNA replication error rate: 3 bp during copying of 6 billion bp

Macrolesions: Mutations involving changes in large portions of the genome

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Agents of Mutations1. Physical Agents

a) UV Lightb) Ionizing Radiation

2. Chemical AgentsSome chemical agents can be

classified further intoa) Alkylatingb) Intercalatingc) Deaminating

3. Viral

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DNA Repair

Direct repairPhotolyase cleave pyrimidine dimers

Base excision repairE. coli enzyme AlkA removes modified bases

such as 3-methyladenine (glycosylase activity is present)

Nucleotide excision repairExcision of pyrimidine dimers (need different

enzymes for detection, excision, and repair synthesis)

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Page 61: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Central DogmaRNA Transcription

Page 62: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Process of Transcription has four stages:

1. Binding of RNA polymerase at promoter sites2. Initiation of RNA polymerization3. Chain elongation4. Chain termination

Page 63: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Transcription (RNA Synthesis)

RNA PolymerasesTemplate (DNA)Activated precursors (NTP)Divalent metal ion (Mg2+ or Mn2+)

Mechanism is similar to DNA Synthesis

Page 64: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Start of TranscriptionPromoter Sites

Where RNA Polymerase can indirectly bind

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Termination of Transcription

Terminator SequenceEncodes the

termination signalIn E. coli – base

paired hair pin (rich in GC) followed by UUU…

1. Intrinsic termination = termination sites

causes the RNAP to pause

causes the RNA strand to detach from the DNA template

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Termination of Transcription

2. Rho termination = Rho protein, ρ

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prokaryotes: transcription and translation happen in cytoplasm

eukaryotes: transcription (nucleus); translation (ribosome in cytoplasm)

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In eukaryotes, mRNA is modified after transcriptionCapping, methylationPoly-(A) tail, splicing

capping: guanylyl residue

capping and methylation ensure stability of the mRNA template; resistance to exonuclease activity

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Eukaryotic genes are split genes: coding regions (exons) and noncoding regions (introns)

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Introns & Exons

IntronsIntervening

sequencesExons

Expressed sequences

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Splicing

Spliceosome: multicomponent complex of small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs)

splicing occurs in the spliceosome!

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Central DogmaTranslation: Protein Synthesis

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TranslationStarring three types of RNA

1.mRNA

2.tRNA

3.rRNA

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Properties of mRNA1. In translation, mRNA is read in groups of bases called “codons”

2. One codon is made up of 3 nucleotides from 5’ to 3’ of mRNA

3. There are 64 possible codons

4. Each codon stands for a specific amino acid, corresponding to the genetic code

5. However, one amino acid has many possible codons. This property is termed degeneracy

6. 3 of the 64 codons are terminator codons, which signal the end of translation

Page 81: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Genetic Code

3 nucleotides (codon) encode an amino acid

The code is nonoverlappingThe code has no punctuation

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Synonyms

Different codons, same amino acidMost differ by the last base

XYC & XYU XYG & XYA

Minimizes the deleterious effect of mutation

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tRNA as Adaptor Molecules

Amino acid attachment site

Template recognition siteAnticodon

Recognizes codon in mRNA

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tRNA as Adaptor Molecules

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Mechanics of Protein Synthesis All protein synthesis involves three

phases: initiation, elongation, termination Initiation involves binding of mRNA and

initiator aminoacyl-tRNA to small subunit(30S), followed by binding of large subunit (50S) of the ribosome

Elongation: synthesis of all peptide bonds - with tRNAs bound to acceptor (A) and peptidyl (P) sites.

Termination occurs when "stop codon" reached

Page 88: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

TranslationOccurs in the ribosomeProkaryote START

fMet (formylmethionine) bound to initiator tRNA

Recognizes AUG and sometimes GUG (but they also code for Met and Val respectively)

AUG (or GUG) only part of the initiation signal; preceded by a purine-rich sequence

Page 89: Nucleic Acids: Cell Overview and Core Topics

Translation

Eukaryote START

AUG nearest the 5’ end is usually the start signal

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Termination

Stop signals (UAA, UGA, UAG):• recognized by release factors (RFs)• hydrolysis of ester bond between polypeptide and

tRNA

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Reference:

Garrett, R. and C. Grisham. Biochemistry. 3rd edition. 2005.

Berg, JM, Tymoczko, JL and L. Stryer. Biochemistry. 5th edition. 2002.