Title: Dr. Attya Bhatti
1DNA Replication
2DNA Replication
- Replication is a complex process in which dozens
of proteins, enzymes, and DNA structures take
part a single defective component, such as DNA
helicase, can disrupt the whole process - Cell doubles its DNA before division
3Proposed Models of Replication
4Semi-conservative Replication
- Each DNA serves as template for the synthesis of
a new DNA template molecule
5Meselson and Stahls Experiment
To determine which of the three models of
replication applied to E. coli cells, Matthew
Meselson and Franklinv Stahl needed a way to
distinguish old and new DNA Two isotopes of
nitrogen, 14N (the common form) and 15N (a rare,
heavy form) were used
6Meselson and Stahl Demonstrated that DNA
Replication is Semiconservative
7Synthesis Phase
- S phase during interphase of the cell cycle
- Nucleus of eukaryotes
DNA replication is take place is S phase
8Modes of Replication
- Individual units of replication are called
replicons, each of which contains a replication
origin - Theta model
- Rolling circle model
- Linear eukaryotic relpication
9Theta replication
- A common type of replication that takes place in
circular DNA. - Generates a structure that resembles the Greek
letter theta. - DNA unwinds at one particular location, the
origin, and a replication bubble is formed.
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11- Replication bubble The unwinding of the double
helix generates a loop - Replication fork The point of unwinding where
the two single nucleotide strands separate from
the double-stranded DNA helix - Bidirectional replication If there are two
replication forks, one at each end of the
replication bubble, the forks proceed outward in
both directions
12Rolling-circle replication
- Takes place in some viruses and in the F factor
(a small circle of extrachromosomal DNA that
controls mating. - Initiated by a break in one of the nucleotide
strands that creates a 3-OH group and a
5-phosphate group. - New nucleotides are added to the 3 end of the
broken strand
13Rolling-circle replication takes place in some
viruses and in the F factor of E. coli
14Linear Eukaryotic Replication
- Large linear chromosomes in eukaryotic cells,
contain far too much DNA to be replicated
speedily from a single origin. - Eukaryotic replication proceeds at a rate ranging
from 500 to 5000 nucleotides per minute at each
replication fork. - At each replication origin the DNA unwinds and
produces a replication bubble. - Replication and fusion of all the replicons leads
to two identical DNA molecules.
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17Requirements of Replication
- Template consisting of single-stranded DNA
- Raw materials (substrates) to be assembled into a
new nucleotide strand - Enzymes and other proteins that read the
template and assemble the substrates into a DNA
molecule
18In replication, new DNA is synthesized
from deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates (dNTPs)
19Direction of Replication
- All DNA synthesis is 5?3
- New nucleotides are always added to the 3 end of
the growing nucleotide strand. - At each replication fork, synthesis of the
leading strand proceeds continuously and that of
the lagging strand proceeds discontinuously
20The Mechanism of Replication
- Replication takes place in four stages
- Initiation
- Unwinding
- Elongation
- Termination