Title: Biochemistry 441 Lecture 12 Ted Young March 6, 2000
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2Arts and science are not cast into a mould, but
are formed and perfected by degrees, by often
handling and polishing, as bears leisurely lick
their cubs into form. Michel de Montaigne
3Biochemistry 441 Lecture 8Ted YoungJanuary 25,
2008
- Topic DNA replication enzymes
4Six enzymes to know-substrates, products,
co-factors, and function in DNA metabolism
- DNA polymerase
- b-clamp/processivity factor
- DNA ligase
- DNA helicase
- Single-strand binding protein
- Telomerase
5Finding genes/proteins involved in DNA replication
Biochemical approach 1. Devise an assay (what
function are you looking for?) 2. Break open
cells and apply assay 3. Demonstrate that
the protein identified plays an important role in
vivo.
- Genetic approach-
- 1. isolate temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants.
- 2. screen for DNA synthesis at the restrictive
temperature - 3. characterize mutants defective in DNA
synthesis - 4. Identify biochemical defect
6Deoxyribonucleotide polymerization
Note that Mg plays an essential Role in
catalysis.
7DNA pol I
E. coli
- Genetic evidence that pol I is not the DNA
replicating enzyme in bacteria
mutagenesis
make crude cell-free extracts from
2000 survivors (most have a mutation in some
gene)
Measure DNA poly- merase activity in crude cell
extracts
Colony 1856 no DNA polymerase activity! But it
grows normally.
8Comparison of bacterial DNA polymerases
9E. Coli DNA pol III is a complex enzyme!
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11The b-clamp-a processivity factor for polIII
12DNA replication occurs in stages .
- Initiation at a specific site called the
- origin of replication (oriC in E. coli)
oriC region
Initiation consists of several steps -binding of
dnaA protein to 9 bp repeats -binding of HU
protein to dnaA and DNA -with ATP present this
causes unwinding of the AT-rich 13 bp
repeats -DNA helicase B is loaded onto the
unwound region on both strands and begins
unwinding the helix, creating two replication
origins.
13DNA helicase
DNA helicases are directional
- DNA helicases unwind duplex DNA in the presence
of ATP, producing single stranded DNA, AMP, and
pyrophosphate.
5
ATP
5
AMP PPi
What, if anything, keeps the two complementary
strands from reforming the duplex? Essential to
unwind DNA at the origin.
14DNA single-strand binding proteins
- DNA single-strand binding proteins keep
complementary single-strands of DNA from
re-annealing. No energy is required.
denature
ss binding protein-
15Cooperative binding of ss DNA binding proteins
(SSBs)
Sigmoidal shape of the binding curve
indicates that binding of one molecule makes it
easier to bind the next, and so on...
- ss DNA binding proteins have a high degree of
cooperativity binding of one protein makes it
easier to bind a second protein.
Binding
protein
Essential function is to bind to the lagging
strand template.
16Cooperative binding (cont)
- Cooperativity requires a conformational change in
the shape of the protein that only occurs upon
DNA binding.
17Synthesis of Okazaki fragments
18Simultaneous continuous and discontinuous
synthesis at a replication fork by a dimeric DNA
pol III
19DNA ligase
ligase
- DNA ligase becomes activated during the reaction,
conserving the energy of ATP or NAD as a high
energy enzyme-adenylate intermediate.
Nicked DNA Substrate.
The reaction requires an activated- phosphorylated
-intermediate, an enzyme adenylate complex, and a
5phosphate on the DNA. RNA ligases also exist.
DNA-nick-adenylate.
ligase
Essential to link Okazaki primers to make a
continuous DNA strand
20Termination of replication in bacteria
21Termination of replication
- Circular chromosomes decatenation by
topoisomerase(s) is required. - Linear chromosomes a special enzyme called
telomerase replicates the linear ends. Why is
this necessary? Because RNA primers are at the 5
ends. After their removal, no DNA polymerase can
add dNTP to these ends.
The end problem in replication of linear
chromosomes
replication
5 3
Rt
RNA
Chromosomal termini, or telomeres
Left
RNA
5 ends of last Okazaki fragments
22Replication of chromosome ends by telomerase
Note that the 3 end of the chromosome is not
base-paired to DNA
(the template)
(5TTGGG-3)n N300-500
- Telomerase consists of an RNA template-telomerase
RNA-and several proteins. The RNA acts as a
template for the polymerase activity. The
polymerase copies RNA into DNA, as does viral
reverse transcriptase, extending the G-rich
strand. The protein component of telomerase has
homology to viral reverse transcriptases
Ch 26.3 Fig 26.35
Telomerase extends the single-stranded 3 end,
allowing Primase and DNA pol. to copy the
extended 3 end. The 3 end has redundant
sequence information so even if some is lost at
each replication, unique genetic information
isnt lost until all redundant sequence
information is lost.
23Telomeric sequences can form unique structures
- G-quartets can form both intra- and interstrand.
- Do they form in the cell??
Intra-strand G-quartet
Dimeric G-quartet
24Unique telomere structures at the ends of
chromosomes
2. Lariats can be formed from telomere-like
DNA duplexes made in the test tube in the
presence of a protein, Trf2, that is found at the
telomeres and they and are observed in the EM
after treatment of cells with psoralen (an agent
that forms inter- strand crosslinks), isolating
the DNA, and fragmenting it with restriction
endonucleases.
25Summary
- DNA replication is very complex!
- Four distinct operations must occur
- initiation of the leading strand
- initiation of the lagging strand
- elongation
- termination
- Enzyme complexes are involved at each step of the
process - Termination of replication by telomerase requires
a novel type of enzyme composed of both RNA and
protein. - Replication is tightly coupled to the cell cycle
and only occurs in S phase.