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The Flow of Genetic Information replication MBLG1001 Lecture 7 DNA DNA Transcription Nucleic Acid Properties RNA Translation Protein Folding, modification, translocation Functional protein History • First isolated by a Swiss Biochemist Fredrich Miescher circa 1860 from pus on bandages. • The new polymer contained the usual suspects C, O, H and N and also Phosphorus (this is not in protein). History • It was named nucleic acid because it was first isolated in the nucleus and it was acidic • It was not thought to be the genetic material. That role was thought to be fulfilled by proteins as they contained more potential for variation (20 different amino acids rather than 4 different nucleotides). The Role of DNA as genetic material • Work by Griffith then MacLeod, McCartney and Avery. • Using Pneumococcus they were able to transform the bacterium from the rough (R) non-pathogenic form to the smooth (S) pathogenic form by adding a killed lysate of S bacteria. By a process of elimination the active ingredient in the killed S bacterial lysate was identified as DNA. 1 The Role of DNA as genetic material • This was further confirmed by the Waring Blender experiment (Hersey and Chase). • The bacteriophage T2 which infects certain bacteria was labeled with 35S (which labels protein only) and 32P (which only labels DNA). The Chemistry of DNA The Role of DNA as genetic material • The 35S was found in the supernatant, not the pellet. Hence the protein part of the phage was not transferred to the bacteria. • The 32P was found in the pellet, indicating the DNA was transferred to the bacteria. The birth of the double helix Chargaff’s Rules: • A = T; G = C • The amount of purine = pyrimidine. • The #sugars (deoxyribose) = # phosphates = # bases Sodium deoxyribose nucleate from calf thymus, Structure B, Photo 51, taken by Rosalind E. Franklin and R.G. Gosling. Rosalind Franklin - March 1956 Erwin Chargaff 1930 Watson and Crick • The original paper describing the structure of DNA. 2 Properties of DNA explained by the Watson and Crick Model • Ability to store genetic information • Ability to transfer a faithful copy of this information to daughter cells • Physical and chemical stability so that information can be stored for long periods of time • There is potential for small changes, which could be inherited, without the loss of parental information Terminology: • Base: the purine or pyrimidine like ring structure; adenine, guanine, cytosine, thymine, uracil • Nucleoside: base + sugar • Nucleotide: base + sugar + phosphate. B DNA B DNA The same piece of DNA highlighting a guanine nucleotide. The sugar phosphate backbone is purple The bases are green The schematic diagrams show the backbone only B DNA B DNA: Backbone Deoxyribose (sugar) •Yellow is Phosphorus •Red is Oxygen •White is Carbon Phosphate Phosphate (PO4) Guanine base Sugar 3 B DNA: Backbone Base 5’ Phosphate A schematic diagram of one strand of DNA Purine P Phosphodiester linkage Base H H Sugar O -O Base P P Pyrimidine Phosphate P OH H O P O CH2 H OOH O H H OH H H Pyrimidine = Cytosine or Thymine 3’OH Base O O- Sugar = deoxyribose Sugar H O H Purine = Adenine or Guanine B DNA: Backbone 5’ Phosphate O Phosphoester linkage N -O NH N O P O H Sugar NH2 Base OH P Pyrimidine O H O- N A schematic diagram of one strand of DNA Purine P CH2 Base P H Sugar = deoxyribose Sugar Pyrimidine = Cytosine or Thymine H H 3’OH Purine = Adenine or Guanine B DNA: Backbone The 5' phosphate is attached here via a phosphoester bond, forming a nucleotide. The nucleotide is linked here to the 3' hydroxyl of the ajoining nucleotide in DNA and RNA by a second phosphoester bond (phosphodiester). 5’ Phosphate Purine P Base HO 5 OH CH2 O 4 Reacts with the aldehyde from C1 forming an acetal ring. C H 3 C H 2 1 C P Pyrimidine OH This is the 3' hydroxyl. The 5' phosphate of the ajoining nucleotide links here by a phosphoester bond Base P H The hydroxyl is absent at this position in DNA A schematic diagram of one strand of DNA Sugar The base is attached here by an N-glycosidic bond, forming a nucleoside. C H OH Phosphate Sugar Phosphate Sugar = deoxyribose Pyrimidine = Cytosine or Thymine 3’OH Purine = Adenine or Guanine 4 Purine The Bases: • The two purine bases, adenine and guanine are based on the heterocyclic (a fancy chemical name for a ring structure containing both carbon and nitrogen) compound, purine . Note the numbering conventions for the ring atoms. 6 C 7 1 5 2 4 N C N 8 C C 3 N C 9 N H attaches to sugar The amino group (δ+ve) acts as an H-bond donor The oxygen is very electronegative (δ-ve) and acts as an H-bond acceptor NH2 N The ring N (pKa ~4) acts as an H-bond acceptor at physiological pH N N N H O The pKa of the ring N is ~9. It will act as an H-bond donor at physiological pH The amino group (δ+ve) acts as an H-bond donor N HN H2 N N N H Guanine Adenine Pyrimidine The amino group (δ+ve) is an H-bond donor 4 C 3 5 N C 2 The ring N has a pKa~4.5. It acts as an H-bond acceptor at pH 7. NH2 N 6 C C 1 The keto group acts as an H-bond acceptor N attaches to sugar O N H Cytosine 5 Differences between DNA and RNA: The keto group acts as an H-bond acceptor O The ring N has a pKa~9. It acts as an H-bond donor. This carbon is methylated in thymine HN N H O The keto group acts as an H-bond acceptor Uracil Methyl added to 5-carbon O CH3 HN -O P N O O O O OH H H OH H H • The sugar is deoxyribose, which has no –OH at position 2’ • The uracil is methylated at position 5 forming thymine • These differences at first seem subtle but are not accidental. What forces maintain the double helix? • Nucleotides joined by a phosphodiester bond (5’ P joins to the 3’ –OH) • Hydrophobic interactions resulting in base stacking • Hydrogen bonding • Ionic interactions • Van der Waal’s forces No Hydroxyl (-OH) at 2’ Base Stacking • The bases are flat and aromatic in character quite hydrophobic. • They tend to be “buried” in the interior of the molecule. Because they are flat the bases can stack favorably on top of each other at a distance of ~3.4 A. Base Stacking • This interaction is actually more energetically important than hydrogen bonding. Van der Waals forces become significant at this close proximity, with mutual distortion of the electron clouds. • The nature of this base stacking interaction is poorly understood. It is not quite the same as the hydrophobic interactions that operate with proteins. 6 Hydrogen bonding • Hydrogen bonding between the bases when they are in their correct tautomeric form gives the double helix its specificity. • Adenine pairs with thymine; the amine group on adenine acts as a donor to the keto group of thymine (provided both bases are in these forms) and the ring N of adenine acts as an acceptor; the ring N of thymine (and uracil) is protonated at physiological pH and acts as a donor. NH 2 N N Ionic or electrostatic interactions. HN N N O deoxyribose Adenine base paired to Thymine O N N deoxyribose • Likewise the amine groups on guanine and cytosine act as donors and the keto groups as acceptors. If the wrong tautomeric forms of the bases exist then the base pairing is altered. O N deoxyribose Hydrogen bonding H 2N NH N NH 2 O N N deoxyribose • Theses forces give the DNA its twist. The phosphate group in each residue is negatively charged at physiological pH and hence they actually repel each other. So you have some conflict here. The bases actually want to associate together but the phosphates want to be as far as possible away from each other. The net result is the twist to accommodate both forces. If the molecule twists the phosphates can be separated while still maintaining the base pairing. Guanine base paired to Cytosine The general statistics: • • • • Right handed double helix 10 residues per turn diameter ~20 Å vertical distance between turns 3.4 nm or 34 Å • contains a major and minor groove Major Groove NH2 CH3 O N C N H O H N C N H C C C C HN C C N H O O H H Minor Groove H H OH H HO H 7 Major and Minor Grooves Major and Minor Grooves Major groove Minor groove 8