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Chapter Ten Biosynthesis of Nucleic Acids: Replication

Chapter Ten Biosynthesis of Nucleic Acids: Replication. Replication of DNA. Naturally occurring DNA exists in single-stranded and double-stranded forms, both of which can exist in ________ and ________ forms Difficult to generalize about all cases of DNA replication

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Chapter Ten Biosynthesis of Nucleic Acids: Replication

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  1. Chapter TenBiosynthesis of Nucleic Acids: Replication

  2. Replication of DNA • Naturally occurring DNA exists in single-stranded and double-stranded forms, both of which can exist in ________ and ________ forms • Difficult to generalize about all cases of DNA replication • We will study the replication of ________ ________ ________ DNA and then of ________ ________ ________ DNA • most of the details we discuss were first investigated in ________, particularly ________ ________

  3. Flow of Genetic Information in the Cell • Mechanisms by which information is transferred in the cell is based on the “________ ________”

  4. Prokaryotic Replication • Challenges in duplication of ________________ double-stranded DNA • achievement of continuous ________ and separation of the two DNA strands • ________ of ________ portions from attack by ________ that attack single-stranded DNA • synthesis of the DNA ________ from one 5’ -> 3’ strand and one 3’ -> 5’ strand • efficient protection from ________ in replication

  5. Prokaryotic Replication (Cont’d) • Replication involves ________ of the two original strands and ________ of two new daughter strands using the ________ strands as ________ • _________________ replication: each daughter strand contains one template strand and one newly synthesized strand • Incorporation of isotopic label as sole _________ source (15NH4Cl) • Observed that 15N-DNA has a higher density than 14N-DNA, and the two can be separated by density-gradient ______________

  6. Which Direction does Replication go? • DNA double helix unwinds at a specific point called an ______________________________ • Polynucleotide chains are synthesized in both directions from the origin of replication; DNA replication is _______________ in most organisms • At each origin of replication, there are two _________ _____________, points at which new polynucleotide chains are formed • There is ______ origin of replication and ________ replication forks in the circular DNA of prokaryotes • In replication of a _______________ chromosome, there are several origins of replication and two replication forks at each origin

  7. DNA Polymerase • DNA is synthesized from its 5’ -> 3’ end (from the 3’ -> 5’ direction of the template) • the ________ strandis synthesized continuously in the 5’ -> 3’ direction toward the replication fork • the ________ strandis synthesized __________ (________ fragments) also in the 5’ -> 3’ direction, but away from the replication fork • lagging strand fragments are joined by the enzyme DNA ___________

  8. DNA Polymerase

  9. DNA Polymerase Reaction • The 3’-OH group at the end of the growing DNA chain acts as a _______________. • The ______________ adjacent to the sugar is attacked, and then added to the growing chain.

  10. Properties of DNA Polymerases • There are at least _______ types of DNA polymerase (Pol) in E coli, _______ of which have been studied extensively

  11. Function of DNA Polymerase • DNA polymerase function has these requirements: • all four deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates: dTTP, dATP, dGTP, and dCTP • Mg2+ • an _________ - a short strand of RNA to which the growing polynucleotide chain is covalently bonded in the early stages of replication • DNA-Pol I: repair and patching of DNA • DNA-Pol III: responsible for the polymerization of the newly formed DNA strand • DNA-Pol II, IV, and V: proofreading & repair enzymes

  12. Supercoiling and Replication • DNA _________ (class II topoisomerase) catalyzes rxn involving relaxed circular DNA: • creates a _______ in relaxed circular DNA • a slight unwinding at the point of the nick introduces _______ • the nick is _______ • The energy required for this process is supplied by ____________________

  13. Replication with Supercoiled DNA • Replication of supercoiled circular DNA • DNA gyrase has different role here. It introduces a nick in supercoiled DNA • a _______ point is created at the site of the _______ • the gyrase opens and _______ the swivel point in advance of the replication fork • the newly synthesized DNA automatically assumes the ___________ form because it does not have the nick at the swivel point • _______, a helix-destabilizing protein, promotes unwinding by binding at the replication fork • single-stranded binding (SSB) protein_______ single-stranded regions by _______ tightly to them

  14. Primase Reaction • The primase reaction • RNA serves as a _______ in DNA replication • _______ activity first observed in-vivo. • Primase - catalyzes the copying of a short stretch of the DNA template strand to produce RNA primer sequence • __________ and _________ of new DNA strands • begun by DNA polymerase III • the newly formed DNA is linked to the 3’-OH of the RNA primer • as the replication fork moves away, the RNA primer is removed by DNA polymerase I

  15. Replication Fork General Features

  16. DNA Replication in Prokaryotes • DNA synthesis is bidirectional • DNA synthesis is in the 5’ -> 3’ direction • the leading strand is formed continuously • the lagging strand is formed as a series of Okazaki fragments which are later joined • Five DNA polymerases have been found to exist in E. coli • Pol I is involved in synthesis and repair • Pol II, IV, and V are for repair under unique conditions • Pol III is primarily responsible for new synthesis

  17. DNA Replication in Prokaryotes • Unwinding • DNA gyrase introduces a swivel point in advance of the replication fork • a helicase binds at the replication fork and promotes unwinding • single-stranded binding (SSB) protein protects exposed regions of single-stranded DNA • Primase catalyzes the synthesis of RNA primer • Synthesis • catalyzed by Pol III • primer removed by Pol I • DNA ligase seals remaining nicks

  18. Proofreading and Repair • DNA replication takes place only once each generation in each cell • Errors in replication (mutations) occur spontaneously only once in every 109 to 1010 base pairs • Can be lethal to organisms • Proofreading - the removal of incorrect nucleotides immediately after they are added to the growing DNA during replication (Figure 10.10) • Errors in hydrogen bonding lead to errors in a growing DNA chain once in every 104 to 105 base pairs

  19. Proofreading Improves Replication Fidelity • ____________________: catalyzed by Pol I: cutting is removal of the RNA primer and patching is incorporation of the required deoxynucleotides • ______________________: Pol I removes RNA primer or DNA mistakes as it moves along the DNA and then fills in behind it with its polymerase activity • ______________________: enzymes recognize that two bases are incorrectly paired, the area of mismatch is removed, and the area replicated again • ______________________: a damaged base is removed by DNA glycosylase leaving an AP site; the sugar and phosphate are removed along with several more bases, and then Pol I fills the gap

  20. DNA Polymerase Repair

  21. Mismatch Repair in Prokaryotes • Mechanisms of mismatch repair encompass:

  22. Eukaryotic Replication • Not as understood as prokaryotic. Due in part to higher level of complexity. • Cell growth and division divided into phases: M, G1, S, and G2

  23. Eukaryotic Replication • Best understood model for control of eukaryotic replication is from yeast. • DNA replication initiated by chromosomes that have reached the G1 phase

  24. Eukaryotic DNA Polymerase • At least 15 different polymerases are present in eukaryotes (5 have been studied more extensively)

  25. Structure of the PCNA Homotrimer • PCNA is the eukaryotic equivalent of the part of Pol III that functions as a sliding clamp ().

  26. The Eukaryotic Replication Fork The general features of DNA replication in eukaryotes are similar to those in prokaryotes. Differences summarized in Table 10.5.

  27. Telomerase and Cancer (Biochemical Connections) • Replication of linear DNA molecules poses particular problems at __________________ of the molecules • Ends of eukaryotic chromosomes called ______________________:__________________________________________ • See figures on p. 282-283

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