Title: The Dogma
1The Dogma
- Nucleic acid (DNA/RNA) is importantWhy?
- The central dogma of Molecular Biology
- DNA (genes, chromosomes) begets itself
(replication), as well as RNA (transcription)) - RNA begets protein (translation)
- Which proteins a cell expresses (and how much),
dictates what a cell does
2DNA structure
- DNA an ideal molecule for storage of
information. - Made of simple, stable(?) bits of information
(the nucleotide) (metaphor letters) - Easily assembled/disassembled (metabolism)
(metaphor words, sentences, books) - The information is easily read (replication,
transcription)
3The nucleotide Pentose sugar
4
1
Pentose Sugar (2 OHribose, 2Hdeoxyribose)
4The nucleotide Nitrogenous bases
Pyrimidines (small)
Purines (BIG)
From Kimballs biology pages http//users.rcn.com
/jkimball.ma.ultranet/BiologyPages/N/Nucleotides.h
tml
5The nucleotide
Phosphate
Base
Sugar (2 OHribose, 2Hdeoxyribose)
Nucleotide sugarphosphatebase
6The chain has polarity
DNA chains are connected by a phosphate between
sugar carbons
The chain has polarity the phosphate bridges
between 5 and 3 carbons (almost never 5 and
5, or 3 and 3)
7DNA metabolism
- Making phosphodiester bonds
- Synthesis (Nucleotide addition, nucleotide by
nucleotide) - Ligation (joining two polynucleotide chains
together) - Breaking phosphodiester bonds.
- Cleavage, or hydrolysis
8Synthesis
Chemistry dictates addition is always to 3 end
of chain. In other words synthesis is always 5
to 3
9DNA synthesis
- Synthesis requires...
- Substrates
- 3 OH of existing chain (primer strand)
- template strand (see replication lecture)
- deoxynucleotide triphosphate (dNTP)
- Cofactors
- Mg2 (metal cofactor)
- Enzyme (DNA polymerase)
- Products are
- Chain that is longer by one nucleotide
- Pyrophosphate (PPi)
10Cleavage Exonuclease
11Cleavage (hydrolysis)
- Chain is broken between phosphate and sugar (5
carbon usually retains phosphate) - Requires.
- Substrate
- DNA chain, usually double stranded
- Water
- Enzyme (nuclease)
- Co-factors usually Mg2
- Product broken chain
- If chain broken from end, enzyme is exonuclease
- Exonucleases can chew from 3 end (3 to 5 exo)
or 5 end (5 to 3 exo) - If chain broken in middle, enzyme is endonuclease
12Cleavage Endonuclease
Restriction enzymes are endonucleases (see Lee
lecture)
13Ligation
14Ligation
- Requires
- Substrates
- two DNA chains
- ATP
- Cofactors
- Mg2 (metal cofactor)
- Enzyme ligase
- Products are
- Two chains joined together into one chain
- AMP
- Pyrophosphate (PPi)
15DNA chains form helices
- Single DNA chains will form a helix (spiraling
line like threads on screw) because of. - Hydrophobic interactions between bases
- Bases are carbon rich rings that hide from water,
and therefore stack on top of each other - Ionic interactions
- Phosphates are highly negatively charged, thus
repel each other
16The double helix
- A single stranded DNA chain will form a helix
but - Each base has a number of hydrogen donors and
acceptors - Donors like to form hydrogen bonds with acceptors
- Like this..
17Watson-Crick base pairs
- A with T
- G pairs with C
- Why?
- Complementary pattern of hydrogen donors and
acceptors - GC stronger than AT
- From http//users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/Bio
logyPages/B/BasePairing.html
18The double helix
19The double helix
- Two chains with extended sequence that can pair
together, or is complementary, may form a
double helix - Constraints of backbone structure permits double
helices only when complementary sequence is of
the opposite polarity. - i.e.5GGTCA3 will pair with 5TGACC3, but NOT
5CCAGT3
20The double helix
21Association/disassociation of the double helix
- Hydrogen bonds between paired bases are weak
- Sensitive to temperature, salt concentration
- Heating will separate, denature, or melt a double
helix into two separate stands (single stranded,
or ssDNA) - Denaturation occurs at a specific temperature
(melting temperature, or Tm) - Tm defined by length (longer comlementary
sequencehigher Tm) and sequence (higher
GChigher Tm) - Separation of strands required for replication,
transcription - instead of heat, these processes use ATP for
energy to break base pairs
22Secondary structure
Secondary structure
hairpins (intra-molecular pairing of single
strand) heteroduplex (double stranded DNA with
the occasional mismatch, forms bubbles in
double helix. Can be caused by renaturation of
partially complementary sequence, or replication
errors
23Helical shape
- Helical parameters
- Screw sense left handed, or right handed
- Twist degrees rotation, along the horizontal
axis, between successive base pairs - Rise elevation, along the vertical axis, between
successive base pairs - Tilt degrees of inclination of base pair from
the horizontal access (in most double helices
base pairs are not significantly tilted )
24Helical forms
- A form
- Formed in DNA under dehydrating conditions
- Major form of RNA double helix
- B form
- Standard DNA double helix
- Z DNA
- Forms in vitro primarily at GC rich regions
25Forms of the double helix
26Helical forms
- A form
- Shorter, fatter than B form DNA
- High degree of base pair tilt
- B form
- Standard DNA double helix
- About 34o twist, 3.4 angstrom rise, very little
tilt - Z DNA
- Only left handed helix
- Kinked backbone (does not smoothly conform to
helical shape) - Much greater rise, reduced twist relative to B DNA
27Forms of the double helix