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Chapter 4 DNA, RNA and the Flow of Genetic Information Nucleic Acids • DNA and RNA are unbranched linear polymers built up from similar units. • Each monomer unit within the polymer consists of three components : a sugar, a phosphate, and a base Backbone • Phosphodiester bond • (-) charges protect “P” from being attacked by nucleophiles. • Absence of 2’ –OH in DNA increase its resistance to hydrolysis (akaline conditions) • Histones provide (+) charges for neutralization. Bases : Purines & Pyrimidines linkage with sugar through N9 linkage with sugar through N1 A, G, C, T for DNA A, G, C, U for RNA Nucleoside Sugar-Base Linkages between C1-OH of Sugars and N9 of Purines or C1-OH of Sugars and N1 of Pyrimidines Sugar-Phosphate Linkages between C3-OH of Sugar and Phosphate or C5-OH of Sugar and Phosphate Nucleoside Phosphate; Nucleotide Polarity of DNA Chain • • • • 5’ end OH is usually occupied by a phosphate group. 3’ end OH is usually open as unmodified. By convention, DNA base sequence is 5’  3’ direction. pACG ≠ pGCA DNA Double Helix : Watson & Crick • Right-handed coiled helix with two polynucleotide chains • Base : Inside • Sugar & Phosphate : Outside • Bases are perpendicular to the helical axis. • Adjacent bases separated by 3.4Å • The same helical structure repeats every 34Å. • 10 bases per turn of helix • Rotation of 36 degree per base • Diameter of the helix : 20Å • Hydrophobic interactions between bases inside; hydrophilic polar surface Maurice Wilkins, Rosalind Franklin – X-ray diffraction photograph of a hydrated DNA fiber Watson-Crick Base Pairing in DNA by Hydrogen Bondings 1-5 kcalmol-1 Chargaff’s rule • Under physiological condition, most DNA is in the B form. • A-form helix is less-hydrated DNA. Z-DNA is a left-handed double helix in which backbone phosphates zigzag. • Third type of DNA; From the structure of CGCGCG. • Left-handed, phosphates in the backbone zigzagged; called Z-DNA • Z-DNA-binding proteins required for viral pathogenesis. Stacking of Base pairs for stability • Hydrophobic effect just like protein • van der Waals forces - (0.5-1 kcalmol-1) • π–π stacking The Double helix facilitates the accurate transmission of Hereditary information Semiconservative replication test by Dr. Meselson and Dr. stahl : upon DNA replication, one of the chains of each daughter DNA is newly Synthesized, whereas the other is passed unchanged from the parent DNA. Complementary & Semi-Conservative DNA Replication Genomic DNA Labeling with 15NH Cl  4 Density Gradient Centrifugation with CsCl Differ in density by about 1% Melting & Annealing of DNA Hypochromism by Base Pairing DNA sequence similarity between different organisms (i.e. relatedness) can be determined by the degree of hybridization. Denaturation of DNA by heat, acid or alkali Tm : the temperature at which half the helical structure is lost DNA Topology Linearity of DNA Circular DNA vs. Linear DNA Prokaryotic vs. Eukaryotic Mitochondrial vs. Genomic DNA Supercoiling Helix vs. Superhelix Relaxed Circular DNA Topoisomerase Structural Stability of Cellular DNA Regulation of Gene Expression DNA in vivo Packing Fold : 1000 times Supercoiled Circular DNA Complex Structures Formed by Single Strand Nucleic Acids Stem-Loop (Hairpin) Unusual Base Pairing between Three Bases (Long Range Interaction) Replication by DNA Polymerase • Take instructions from templates (pre-existing DNA strands) • DNA synthesis through complementary base pairing • Step-by-step addition of deoxyribonucleotide to a DNA chain (DNA)n + 5’-dNTP  (DNA)n+1 + PPi • Template Primer strand with a free 3’-OH group Nucleotides : dATP, dGTP, dCTP, TTP Divalent metal ion : Mg2+ DNA Polymerase Reaction 1. Complementary Base Pairing between template and incoming dNTP (DNA Polymerase : Template-Directed Enzyme) 2. Nucleophilic attack by 3’-OH of the primer strand on the innermost phosphorous atom of the incoming dNTP 3. Subsequent pyrophosphate (PPi) hydrolysis by pyrophosphatase provides further driving force for the reaction. 4. DNA elongation direction : 5’  3’ 5. Exonuclease activity by DNA polymerase removes mismatched bases during synthesis (3’5’) and after synthesis (5’3’) : proof-reading (Error rate of DNA polymerase = 10-8 per base pair (1억분의 Some Viral Genomes Are Made of RNA RNA Virus single-stranded RNA (viral genome)  Protein RNA-directed RNA polymerase for RNA replication (e.g. Tobacco Mosaic Virus, influenza virus) Retro-Virus single-stranded RNA (viral genome)  RNA-directed DNA synthesis by reverse transcriptase  single-stranded DNA  double-stranded DNA  integrate into the host genome  replication together with the host genome  later, when it is necessary, express viral RNA and proteins  packaging virus particles and exit from the host (e.g. HIV-1) Central Dogma : DNA  RNA  Protein DNA ▪ storage of genetic information ▪ serve only as information source during gene expression processes ▪ minimize the chances of mutation RNA ▪ photocopy of genetic information from DNA ▪ dictate the repertoire of the proteins to be expressed (mRNA) ▪ exist transiently as multiple copies (mRNA) ▪ assist protein translation (rRNA, tRNA) ▪ assist mRNA splicing and nuclear export (snRNA, hnRNA) Crystal Structure of the large ribosomal subunit •2009 Nobel prize in chemistry •Harry Noller at the University of California Santa Cruz •Venki Ramakrishnan at the University of Cambridge, •Thomas Steitz at Yale University RNA Polymerase Reaction • Complementary Base Pairing between DNA template and incoming NTP (RNA Polymerase : DNA-Directed RNA Synthesizing Enzyme) • Step-by-step addition of ribonucleotide to the RNA primer strand (RNA)n + 5’-NTP  (RNA)n+1 + PPi ; Primer is NOT required ; Nucleotides : ATP, GTP, CTP, UTP ; Divalent metal ion : Mg2+, Mn2+ • Nucleophilic attack by 3’-OH on the phosphorous atom of the incoming NTP • Subsequent pyrophosphate (PPi) hydrolysis • RNA elongation direction : 5’  3’ ; No proof-reading function RNA Polymerases Take Instructions from DNA Templates • Base Composition (Viral DNA vs. Viral RNA) • Hybridization Experiments between DNA template and transcribed RNA • Sequence Comparison between RNA and DNA templates (template strand vs. coding strand; anti-sense strand vs. sense strand) Promoter (Transcriptional Initiation) • Binding Sites for RNA Polymerase for Transcriptional Initiation cf. TBP (TATA Binding Protein); TAFs (TBP Associated Factors); Basal Machinery • Binding Sites for Various Transcription Factors for More Complex Regulation of Transcription (Enhancer); quiet distant from the start site, on either 5’ or 3’ side Terminator (Transcriptional Termination) In Bacteria 1. Hairpin Forming Sequences & Poly-U Stretches 2. Transcription Termination Protein : rho Post-Transcriptional Modification of mRNA in Eukaryotes 5’ Capping & 3’ Poly-Adenylation 5’ capping structure; 5’-5’ triphosphate linkage Transfer RNAs Bring Amino Acids to the mRNA Template during Translation (Protein Synthesis by Ribosomes) mRNA protein: Adaptor molecule suggestion by Francis Crick Ester bond Codon in mRNA tRNA charged with amino acid : aminoacyl-tRNA : aa-tRNA By aminoacy-tRNA synthetase Triplet Codons Specify Each Amino Acid • Three nucleotides encode an amino acid. • The code is non-overlapping. • The code is sequentially translated without punctuation. • The genetic code is degenerated. • 43 = 64 = 61 coding codons + 3 stop codons • Codon degeneracy decreases the chances for translational termination (64 = 20 + 44 ?). • Codon degeneracy also reduces protein sequence changes by genetic mutations. • Codon degeneracy is most often found in Wobble position (3rd base in a triplet codon) • Recognition of stop codons by release factor mRNA Contains Start and Stop Signals for Translation Shine-Dalgarno sequence Formylmethionine Conjugated with Initiator tRNA • The first AUG (or GUG) is recognized by fMet-tRNA during translational initiation. • Internal AUGs are recognized by Met-tRNA, and GUGs are by Val-tRNA. • IF (initiation factor) vs. EF (elongation factor) for interactions with aa-tRNA • Location of initiator AUG determines the reading frame for following triplet codons. The Genetic Code Is Nearly Universal • The codon usage is almost invariant throughout the evolution. • Translation of mRNAs from foreign species is usually successful. • BUT, codon preference differs quite a bit between organisms. • Mitochondrial gene expression utilizes slightly different codons. (distinct set of tRNAs) Mosaic Nature of Eukaryotic Genes : Introns & Exons Exon: segments of nascent mRNA retained in the mature mRNA (usu. coding one domain) Intron: segments of nascent mRNA absent in the mature mRNA Splicing Detection of single-stranded DNA upon DNA-mRNA hybridization (electron microscopy) By spliceosome Typical Intron Structure Many Exons Encode Protein Domains Generation of Novel Genes by Exon Shuffling during Evolution • Introns have been removed during evolution Alternative Splicing Allows Generation of Protein Variants from One Gene