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Title: Welcome Each of You to My Molecular Biology Class


1
Welcome Each of You to My Molecular Biology Class
2
Molecular Biology of the Gene, 5/E --- Watson et
al. (2004)
Part I Chemistry and Genetics Part II
Maintenance of the Genome Part III Expression
of the Genome Part IV Regulation Part V Methods
3
Part II Maintenance of the Genome
Dedicated to the structure of DNA and the
processes that propagate, maintain and alter it
from one cell generation to the next
4
Ch 6 The structures of DNA and RNA Ch 7
Chromosomes, chromatins and the nucleosome Ch 8
The replication of DNA Ch 9 The mutability and
repair of DNA Ch 10 Homologous recombination at
the molecular level Ch 11 Site-specific
recombination and transposition of DNA
5
  • Molecular Biology Course
  • Chapter 11
  • Site-Specific Recombination Transposition of DNA

6
Although DNA replication, repair, homologous
recombination occur with high fidelity to ensure
the genome identity between generations, there
are genetic processes that rearrange DNA
sequences and thus lead to a more dynamic genome
structure
7
  • Two classes of genetic recombination for DNA
    rearrangement
  • Conservative site-specific recombination (CSSR)
    recombination between two defined sequence
    elements
  • Transpositional recombination (Transposition)
    recombination between specific sequences and
    nonspecific DNA sites

8
Figure 11-1
9
OUTLINE
  • Conservative Site-Specific Recombination
  • Biological Roles of Site-Specific Recombination
    (l phage integration/excision, multimeric genome
    resolution)
  • Transposition ( concepts, learning from B.
    McClintock, DNA tranposons. Viral-like
    retrotransposons/retroviruses, poly-A
    retrotransposons)

10
Topic 1 Conservative Site-Specific Recombination
  • Exchange of non-homologous sequences at specific
    DNA sites(what)
  • Mediated by proteins that recognize specific DNA
    sequences. (how)

11
Conservative Site-Specific Recombination
1-1 Site-specific recombination occurs at
specific DNA sequences in the target DNA
  • CSSR (conserved site-specific recombination) is
    responsible for many reactions in which a defined
    segment of DNA is rearranged.

12
CSSR can generate three different types of DNA
rearrangements
  • Figure 11-3

13
If the two sites at which recombination will take
place are oriented oppositely to one another in
the same DNA molecule then the site-specific
reacombination results in inversion of the
segment of DNA between the two recombination sites
recombination at inverted repeats causes an
inversion
14
If the two sites at which recombination will take
place are oriented in the same direction in the
same DNA molecule, then the segment of DNA
between the two recombinogenic sites is deleted
from the rest of the DNA molecule and appears as
a circular molecule. Insertion is the reverse
reaction of the deletion
recombination at direct repeats causes a deletion
15
  • Figure 11-4 Structures involved in CSSR

16
Conservative Site-Specific Recombination
1-2 Site-specific recombinases cleave and rejoin
(join) DNA using a covalent protein-DNA
intermediate
  • Serine Recombinases
  • Tyrosine Recombinases

Figure 11-5
17
The covalent protein-DNA intermediate conserves
the energy of the cleaved phosphodiester bond
within the protein-DNA linkage, which allows the
cleaved DNA strands to be rejoined/resealed by
reversal of the the cleavage process This
mechanistic feature contributes the
conservative to the CSSR name, because every
DNA bond that is broken during the reaction is
resealed by the recombinase without consuming any
external energy.
18
Conservative Site-Specific Recombination
1-3 Serine recombinases introduce double-stranded
breaks in DNA and then swap strands to promote
recombination
19
Conservative Site-Specific Recombination
Figure 11-6
20
Conservative Site-Specific Recombination
1-4 Tyrosine recombinases break and rejoin one
pair of DNA strands at a time
21
Figure 11-7
22
Conservative Site-Specific Recombination
1-5 Structure of tyrosine recombinases bound to
DNA reveal the mechanism of DNA exchange
  • Cre is a tyrosine recombinase
  • Cre is an phage P1-encoded protein, functioning
    to circularize the linear phage genome during
    infection
  • The recombination sites of Cre is lox sites.
    Cre-lox is sufficient for recombination
  • Read Box11-1 for Cre application

23
Figure 11-8
24
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25
Topic 2 Biological roles of site-specific
recombination
26
  • Many phage insert their DNA into the host
    chromosome during infection using this
    recombination mechanism. Example l phage
  • Alter gene expression. Example Salmonella Hin
    recombinase (the details are not discussed in the
    class)
  • Maintain the structural integrity of circular DNA
    molecules during cycles of DNA replication.
    Example resolvase that resolves dimer to monomer

27
The general themes of site-specific recombination
  • All reactions depend critically on the assembly
    of the recombinase protein on the DNA and bring
    together of the two recombination sites
  • Some recombination requires only the recombinase
    and its recognition sequence for such an
    assembly some requires accessory proteins
    including Architectural Proteins that bind
    specific DNA sequences and bend the DNA.

28
2-1 2 l integrase works with IHF and Xis to
integrate/excise the phage genome into/from the
bacterial chromosome
Biological roles of site-specific recombination
  • The outcome of l bacteriophage infection of a
    host bacterium
  • Establishment of the lysogenic state requires
    the integration of phage DNA into host chromosome
  • lytic growth is the growth stage of
    multiplication of the independent phage DNA that
    requires the excision of the integrated phage DNA
    from the host genome.

29
  • Figure 11-2 l genome integration. Recombination
    always occurs at exactly the same sequence within
    two recombination sites, one on the phage DNA,
    and the other on the bacterial DNA.

30
Phage genome
Crossover regions
Bacterial genome
Int (l-encoded integrase) Xis (l-encoded
excisionase)
IHF (integration host factor encoded by bacteria)
Figure 11-9
31
  • l-encoded integrase (Int)
  • catalyzes recombination between two attachment
    (att) sites. attP site is on the phage DNA and
    attB site is on the bacterial genome
  • Is a tyrosine recombinase, and the mechanism of
    strand exchange is similar to that catalyzed by
    Cre recombinase.
  • Requires accessory proteins to assemble the
    integrase on the att sites. Both IHF and Xis are
    architectural proteins. IHF binds to DNA to bring
    together the Int recognition sites. Xis binds to
    the integrated att sites to stimulate excision
    and to inhibit integration (see 2-2).

32
2-5 Recombinase converts multimeric circular DNA
molecules into monomers
Biological roles of site-specific recombination
  • The chromosomes of most bacteria, plasmids and
    some viral genomes are circular.
  • During the process of homologous recombination,
    these circular DNA sometimes form dimers and even
    multimeric forms, which can be can be converted
    back into monomer by site specific recombination.
  • Site-specific recombinases also called resolvases
    catalyze such a process.

33
Figure 11-14 Circular DNA molecules can form
multimers
34
Xer recombinase catalyzes the monomerization of
bacterial chromosomes and of many bacterial
plasmids. Xer recombinase is a member of the
tyrosine recombinase family Xer is a
heterotetramer containing two subunits of XerC
and two subunits of XerD. Both XerC and XerD are
tyrosine recombinases but recognize different DNA
sequence. The recombination sites in bacterial
chromosomes, called dif sites have recognition
sites for both XerC and XerD.
35
Figure 11-15
The dimer only resolves when XerD is activated by
the presence of FtsK
36
Topic 3 Transposition (??)
  • Transposition is a specific form of genetic
    recombination that moves certain genetic elements
    from one DNA site to another.
  • These mobile genetic elements are called
    transposable elements or transposons.
  • Movement occurs through recombination between
    the DNA sequences at the ends of the transposons
    and a sequence in the host DNA with little
    sequence selectivity.

37
  • FIGURE 11-17 Transposition of a mobile genetic
    element to a new site in host DNA, which occurs
    with or without duplication of the element.

38
  • Because transposition has little sequence
    selectivity in their choice of insertion sites,
    the transposons can insert within genes or
    regulatory sequence of a gene, which results in
    the completely disruption of gene function or the
    alteration of the expression of a gene. These
    disruption leads to the discovery of transposable
    elements by Barbara McClintock.

Box 11-3 Example of corn cob showing color
variegation due to transposition
39
  • It was actually the ability of transposable
    elements to break chromosomes that first came to
    McClintock attention (late 1940s). She found that
    some maize (??) strains experienced frequent
    chromosome-broken, and the hotspots for
    chromosome breaks varied among different strains
    and among different chromosomal locations in the
    descendents (??) of an individual plant, which
    leads to the concept that genetic elements could
    move/transpose

plant genomes are very rich in functional
transposons
40
Discovery of Transposition Barbara McClintock
In the fall of 1921 I attended the only
course in genetics open to undergraduate students
at Cornell University. It was conducted by C. B.
Hutchison, then a professor in the Department of
Plant Breeding, College of Agriculture, who soon
left Cornell to become Chancellor of the
University of California at Davis, California.
Relatively few students took this course and most
of them were interested in pursuing agriculture
as a profession. Genetics as a discipline had not
yet received general acceptance. Only twenty-one
years had passed since the rediscovery of
Mendel's principles of heredity. Genetic
experiments, guided by these principles, expanded
rapidly in the years between 1900 and 1921.
41
The results of these studies provided a solid
conceptual framework into which subsequent
results could be fitted. Nevertheless, there was
reluctance on the part of some professional
biologists to accept the revolutionary concepts
that were surfacing. This reluctance was soon
dispelled as the logic underlying genetic
investigations became increasingly evident. When
the undergraduate genetics course was completed
in January 1922, I received a telephone call from
Dr. Hutchison. He must have sensed my intense
interest in the content of his course because the
purpose of his call was to invite me to
participate in the only other genetics course
given at Cornell. It was scheduled for graduate
students. His invitation was accepted with
pleasure and great anticipations. Obviously, this
telephone call cast the die for my future. I
remained with genetics thereafter.
42
At the time I was taking the undergraduate
genetics course, I was enrolled in a cytology
course given by Lester W. Sharp of the Department
of Botany. His interests focused on the structure
of chromosomes and their behaviors at mitosis and
meiosis. Chromosomes then became a source of
fascination as they were known to be the bearers
of "heritable factors". By the time of
graduation, I had no doubts about the direction I
wished to follow for an advanced degree. It would
involve chromosomes and their genetic content and
expressions, in short, cytogenetics. This field
had just begun to reveal its potentials. I have
pursued it ever since and with as much pleasure
over the years as I had experienced in my
undergraduate days.
43
After completing requirements for the Ph.D.
degree in the spring of 1927, I remained at
Cornell to initiate studies aimed at associating
each of the ten chromosomes comprising the maize
complement with the genes each carries. With the
participation of others, particularly that of Dr.
Charles R. Burnham, this task was finally
accomplished. In the meantime, however, a
sequence of events occurred of great significance
to me. It began with the appearance in the fall
of 1927 of George W. Beadle (a Nobel Laureate) at
the Department of Plant Breeding to start studies
for his Ph.D. degree with Professor Rollins A.
Emerson. Emerson was an eminent geneticist whose
conduct of the affairs of graduate students was
notably successful, thus attracting many of the
brightest minds. In the following fall, Marcus M.
Rhoades arrived at the Department of Plant
Breeding to continue his graduate studies for a
Ph.D. degree, also with Professor Emerson.
44
Rhoades had taken a Masters degree at the
California Institute of Technology and was well
versed in the newest findings of members of the
Morgan group working with Drosophila. Both Beadle
and Rhoades recognized the need and the
significance of exploring the relation between
chromosomes and genes as well as other aspects of
cytogenetics. The initial association of the
three of us, followed subsequently by inclusion
of any interested graduate student, formed a
close-knit group eager to discuss all phases of
genetics, including those being revealed or
suggested by our own efforts. The group was
self-sustaining in all ways. For each of us this
was an extraordinary period. Credit for its
success rests with Professor Emerson who quietly
ignored some of our seemingly strange behaviors.
45
Over the years, members of this group have
retained the warm personal relationship that our
early association generated. The communal
experience profoundly affected each one of
us. The events recounted above were, by far, the
most influential in directing my scientific life.
46
  • Born 1902, Brooklyn, New York
  • B.A. 1923, Cornell University
  • Ph.D. 1927, Cornell University, Botany
  • 1927-1931, Instructor in Botany, Cornell
    University
  • 1931-1933, Fellow, National Research Council
  • 1933-1934, Fellow, Guggenheim Foundation
  • 1934-1936, Research Associate, Cornell University
  • 1936-1941, Assistant Professor, University of
    Missouri
  • 1942-1967, Staff member, Carnegie Institution of
    Washington's Department of Genetics, Cold Spring
    Harbor, NY
  • 1967-1992, Distinguished Service Member, CIW
    Department of Genetics, Cold Spring Harbor
  • 1944, Member, National Academy of Sciences
  • 1945, President, Genetics Society of America
  • 1967, Kimber Medal
  • 1970, National Medal of Science
  • 1981, Lasker Award
  • 1983, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine

47
You, CLS students of Wuhan University, get to
learn to enjoy science/to be interested in
science, but not to enjoy good scores.
48
The biological relevance of transposons
  • Transposons are present in the genomes of all
    life-forms. (1) transposon-related sequences can
    make up huge fractions of the genome of an
    organism (50 of human and maize genome). (2) the
    transposon content in different genomes is highly
    variable (Fig 11-18).

49
2. The genetic recombination mechanisms of
transposition are also used for other functions
than the movement of transposons, such as
integration of some virus into the host genome
and some DNA rearrangement to alter gene
expression V(D)J recombination.
50
3-(1-6) There are three principle classes of
transposable elements
  • DNA transposons
  • Viral-like retrotransposons including the
    retrovirus, which are also called LTR
    retrotransposons
  • Poly-A retrotransposons, also called nonviral
    retrotransposons.

Transposition
51
FIGURE 11-19 Genetic organization of the three
classes of transposable elements
52
3-2 DNA transposons carry a transposase gene,
flanked by recombination sites
  • Recombination sites are at the two ends of the
    transposon and are inverted repeated sequences
    varying in length from 25 to a few hundred bp.
  • The recombinase responsible for transposition are
    usually called transposases or integrases.
  • Sometimes they carry a few additional genes.
    Example, many bacterial DNA transposons carry
    antibiotic resistance gene.

Transposition
53
3-3 Transposons exist as both autonomous and
nonautonomous elements
Transposition
  • Autonomous transposons carry a pair of terminal
    inverted repeats and a transposase gene function
    independently
  • Nonautonomous transposons carry the terminal
    inverted repeats but not the functional
    transposase need the transposase encoded by
    autonomous transposons to enable transposition

54
3-4 Viral-like retrotransposons and retroviruses
carry terminal repeat sequences and two genes
important for recombination
Transposition
  • Inverted terminal repeat sequences for
    recombinase binding are embedded within long
    terminal repeats (LTRs), being organized on the
    two ends of the elements as direct repeats.
  • reverse transcriptase (RT), using an RNA template
    to synthesize DNA.
  • integrase (the transposase)

55
3-5 Poly-A retrotransposons look like genes
Transposition
  • Do not have the terminal inverted repeats.
  • On end is called 5 UTR (untranslated region),
    the other end is 3 UTR followed by a stretch of
    A-T base pairs called the poly-A sequence.
    Flanked by short target site duplication.
  • Carry two genes. ORF1 encodes an RNA-binding
    proteins. ORF2 encodes a protein with both
    reverse transcriptase (RT) and endonuclease
    activity. Truncated elements lacking complete 5
    UTR??

56
3-(7-9) DNA transposition by a cut-and-paste
mechanism (non-replicative mechanism)
  • Multimers of transposase binds to the terminal
    inverted repeats of the transposons, and bring
    two ends together to form a stable protein-DNA
    complex called the synaptic complex/transpososome.
  • This complex ensures the DNA cleavage and joining
    reaction, which is called strand transfer and is
    similar to the recombinase

Transposition
57
  • The transposase first cleaves one DNA strand at
    each end of the transposon, resulting in free
    3-OH groups
  • Different transposons use different mechanism to
    cleave the second strands, resulting in 5 ends
    at the transposons. The mechanism including using
    a secondary enzyme (Tn7), using an unusual DNA
    transesterification mechanism to generate a DNA
    hairpin structure subsequently resolved by
    transposases (Tn10, Tn5) (3-9, Fig 11-21)

58
  • The 3OH ends of the transposon attack the DNA
    phosphodiester bonds at the sites of the new
    insertion/target DNA, resulting in transposon
    insertion. This DNA rejoining reactions occurs by
    a one-step transesterification reaction called
    DNA strand transfer.
  • The intermediate with two nicks is finished by
    gap repair. The old insertion site having a
    double-stranded break are repaired by DSB repair
    (3-8)

59
FIGURE 11-20 The cut-and-paste mechanism of
transposition
One-step transesterification
60
3-10 DNA transposition by a replicative
mechanism/replicative transposition
  • The mechanism is similar to the cut-and-paste
    transposition.
  • The assembly of the transposase protein on the
    two ends of the transposon DNA to generate the
    transpososome.
  • The transposase first cleaves one DNA strand at
    each end of the transposon, resulting in two 3OH
    ends. BUT NO cleavage occurs at the second strand.

Transposition
61
  • The 3OH ends of the transposon DNA are then
    joined to the target sites by the DNA strand
    transfer reaction, resulting in a doubly branched
    DNA molecule.
  • The two branches within this intermediate have
    the structure of a replication fork, which
    recruits the replication proteins for strand
    synthesis. As a result, the donor DNA is
    duplicated in the host DNA.
  • Replicative transposition frequently causes
    chromosomal inversions and deletions that can be
    highly detrimental (???) to the host cell.

62
FIGURE 11-22 Replicative transposition
63
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64
3-11 Viral-like Retrotransposons Retroviruses
move using an RNA intermediate
  • The mechanism is similar to the DNA transposons
    (Cut-and-Paste). The major difference is the
    involvement of an RNA intermediate.
  • Transcription of the retrotransposon (or
    retroviral) DNA sequence into RNA by cellular RNA
    polymerase, which is initiated at a promoter
    sequence within one of the LTRs.

Transposition
65
  • The RNA is then reverse transcribed to cDNA
    (dsDNA) that is free from any flanking host DNA
    sequences, resulting in the excised form of
    transposon
  • Integrase assembles on the ends of cDNA and
    cleaves a few nucleotides off the 3ends,
    generating 3OHs.
  • Integrase inserts the transposon into target site
    using the DNA strand transfer reaction.
  • Gap repair and ligation complete the
    recombination and generate target-site
    duplications.

66
Figure 11-23 Mechanism of retroviral integration
and transposition of viral-like retrotransposons.
67
3-12 DNA transposases and retroviral integrases
are members of a protein superfamily
Transposition
MuA
Tn5
RSV integrase
FIGURE 11-24 Similarity of catalytic domains of
transposases and integrases. (a) structure of the
conserved core domains of three transposases and
intergrase
68
FIGURE 11-24 Similarity of catalytic domains of
transposases and integrases. (b) Scematic of the
domain organization of the above three proteins
69
3-13 Poly-A Retrotransposition move by a reverse
splicing mechanism
  • Using an RNA intermediate but a different
    mechanism from that of the viral-like
    retrotransposons
  • The mechanism used is called target site primed
    reverse transcription.
  • Transcription of the integrated DNA
  • The newly synthesized RNA is exported to
    cytoplasm to produce ORF1 and ORF2 proteins,
    which remain to bind the RNA

Transposition
70
  • The protein-RNA complex reenters the nuclease and
    associate with the chromosomal DNA
  • The endonuclease activity of ORF2 introduce a
    nick on the chromosomal DNA at the T-rich sites.
  • The 3OH generated on the target DNA serves as
    the primer for reverse transcription of the
    element RNA (ORF2)

71
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72
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73
Key points
  • Conservative Site-Specific Recombination
    (concept, three types, mechanisms-serine and
    tyrosine recombinases)
  • Biological Roles of Site-Specific Recombination
    (l phage integration/excision, multimeric genome
    resolution)
  • Transposition ( concepts, learning from B.
    McClintock, DNA tranposons. Viral-like
    retrotransposons/retroviruses, poly-A
    retrotransposons)
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