1 / 16

DNA Replication

DNA Replication. During DNA Replication, an exact copy of DNA is made. Replication of DNA occurs during the S Phase of Interphase during the cell cycle. Each strand of DNA holds specific information to create the other strand in the base-pairing pattern. But….how does it replicate?.

yoko
Télécharger la présentation

DNA Replication

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DNA Replication • During DNA Replication, an exact copy of DNA is made. • Replication of DNA occurs during the S Phase of Interphase during the cell cycle. • Each strand of DNA holds specific information to create the other strand in the base-pairing pattern.

  2. But….how does it replicate? • Conservative Model • Semiconservative Model • Dispersive Model

  3. SO which is it?

  4. DNA Replication • Replication occurs in segments, call replication bubbles. • Each new strand consists of one old strand and one new strand, making it a semi-conservative process.

  5. Steps to replciate DNA • There are numerous replication bubbles along a strand of DNA • Helicase unwinds the DNA at the replication fork. • Single strand binding proteins bind to the separate strands to stabilize them

  6. Topoisomerase – helps relieve the strain ahead of the replication fork

  7. Fig. 16-12b Origin of replication Double-stranded DNA molecule Parental (template) strand Daughter (new) strand 0.25 µm Replication fork Bubble Two daughter DNA molecules (b) Origins of replication in eukaryotes

  8. Fig. 16-13 Primase Single-strand binding proteins 3 Topoisomerase 5 3 RNA primer 5 5 3 Helicase

  9. RNA Primase creates an RNA primer (5-10 nts long) • DNA polymerase adds nucleotides to preexisting DNA chain. This is done in the 5’ to 3’ direction. (Leading strand) • Lagging strand is created discontinuously is segments. (Okasaki fragments )

  10. Okasaki fragments 1000-2000nt in prokaryotes and 100-200 in eukaryotes • Nucleotides added 500nt/sec in bacteria and 50nt/sec in humans • DNA polymerase I removes the primer nucleotides and replaces with DNA nucleotides • DNA ligase joins the sugar phosphate backbones of Okasaki fragments

  11. A closer look at DNA replication • How Nucleotides are added • Replication Fork

  12. Thank goodness for spell check! • Proofreading Enzymes repair damaged or mismatched nucleotides • What causes the damage?

  13. Interesting Fact!Chromosome s… • DNA and protein material • Bacterial chromosome consists of approximately 4.6 million nucleotides and 4400 genes • Humans have approximately 1000 gene/chromosomes.

  14. Interesting Fact!Telomeres/Telomerase… • Protects our genes • TTAGGG repeats of 100x – 1000x • Telomerase protects cells from shortening during division by lengthening the ends. Found in gametes and a few somatic cells

  15. What if telomerase was in every cell? • The fountain of youth!

More Related