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NUCLEIC ACIDS Sem I, 2011/2012 Khadijah Hanim bt Abdul Rahman School of Bioprocess Eng, UniMAP Week 12: 30/11 & 1/12/2011 [email protected] Learning Outcomes DISCUSS basic structures, properties and functions of nucleic acids. DISCUSS DNA isolation methods Definitions DNA stands for deoxyribonucleic acid. It is the genetic code molecule for most organisms. RNA stands for ribonucleic acid. RNA molecules are involved in converting the genetic information in DNA into proteins. In retroviruses, RNA is the genetic material. DNA structure : Watson and Crick Watson and Crick 1953 1st proposed the double helix as 3-D structure of DNA Two polynucleotide chains wind around a common axis to form a double helix. The two strands of DNA are antiparallel, but each forms a right-handed helix. The bases occupy the core of the helix and sugar-phosphate chains run along the periphery, thereby minimizing the repulsions between charged phosphate groups. DNA Consists of 2 polynucleotide strands wound around each other to form a right-handed double helix Each nucleotide monomer in DNA is composed of: - Nitrogenous base (purine @ pyrimidine) - Deoxyribose sugar (pentose, 5C) - Phosphate Mononucleotides are linked to each other by 3’,5’phosphodiester bonds These bonds join the 5’-hydroxyl group of the deoxyribose of 1 nucleotide to the 3’-OH group of the sugar unit of another nucleotide thru a phosphate group. PENTOSE SUGAR In ribonucleotides, the pentose is ribose In deoxyribonucleotide (or deoxynucleotides) the sugar is 2’-deoxyribose – the carbon at position 2’ lacks a hydroxyl group Nucleic acid structure The antiparallel orientation of the 2 polynucleotide strands allows H bond to form between nitrogenous bases that are oriented toward the helix interior. There are 2 types of base pairs (bp) in DNA: - Adenine (A- purine) pairs with thymine (Tpyrimidine)- 2 hydrogen bonds - Guanine (G- purine) pairs with cytosine (Ccytosine)- 3 hydrogen bonds If 1 strand has the base sequence AGGTCCG, so the other strand must have sequence TCCAGGC These hydrogenbonding interactions, a phenomenon known as complementary base pairing, result in the specific association of the two chains of the double helix. The overall structure of DNA resembles a twisted staircase. The Dimension of crystalline DNA have been precisely measured : 1) one turn of double helix span 3.4nm and consist 10.4 base pairs. 2) diameter of double helix is 2.4nm- interior space of double helix- suitable for base-pairing purinepyrimidine. 3) distance between adjacent base pairs is 0.34nm. Noncovalent bonding that contribute to the stability of DNA helical structure : 1) Hydrophobic interactions. The base ring π cloud of electrons between stacked purine & pyrimidine bases is nonpolar. The clustering of bases component of nucleotide within double helix stabilize structure, because it minimize their interaction with water. 2) Hydrogen bond-between nucleotides.Base pairs, on close approach form hydrogen bond, three between GC pairs and two between ATkeeps the strands in correct complementary orientation. 3) Base stacking. Stacking interactions are a form of van der waals interaction. Base stacking interactions are among the aromatic nucleobases. Interaction between stacked G and C bases are greater than those between stacked A and T bases, which largely accounts for the greater thermal stability of DNAs with a high G+C content 4) Electrostatic interaction. DNA external surface, sugar-phosphate backbone possesses –ve charged phosphate group. Repulsion between nearby phosphate groups- potentially destabilizing force- minimized by shielding effects of divalent cations ie. Mg2+. The DNA helix The geometry of DNA The biologically most common form of DNA is known as B-DNA, - structural features first noted by Watson and Crick together with Rosalind Franklin and other. DNA is flexible molecule. It can assume several distinct structural depending on its base pair sequence and/or isolation conditions. Each molecular form possesses the same no. of base pairs. DNA can assume different conformations becoz deoxyribose is flexible and the C1-N- glycosidic linkages rotates. A-DNA When DNA become partially dehydrated, it assumes the A form. The base pairs no longer at right angle They tilt 20° away from the horizontal Distance between adjacent base pairs slightly reduced (11bp helical turn instead or 10.4bp found in B form) Each turn of double helix occur in 2.5nm, instead of 3.4nm Diameter swell to 2.6nm instead of 2.4 nm The A form of DNA is observed when it is extracted with solvents such as ethanol. Significance of A-DNA under cellular conditionsstructure of RNA duplexes and RNA/DNA duplexes formed during transcription. Z-DNA Named for it zigzag conformation Diameter = 1.8nm, slimmer than B-DNA= 2.4 nm. Twisted into left-handed spiral with 12bp per turn, B DNA= 10.4 bp Each turn occur in 4.5nm compared with 3.4 nm for BDNA. DNA segments with alternating purine-pyrimidines bases (CGCGCG) are most likely to adopt a Z configuration. Regions of DNA rich in GC repeats are often regulatory, binding specific proteins that initiate/block transcription. Genome structure The genome of each living organism- full inherited instructions required to sustain living processes Genome size: the no of base-paired nucleotides, varies over an enormous range from less than 1 million bp in Mycoplasma to greater than 1010 bp in certain plants. Prokaryotic Genomes Genome size - The genomes are relatively small - Considerably fewer genes than eukaryotes. Eg: the E. coli chromosome contains about 4.6 Mb that code for 4300 genes. Coding capacity - Genes are compact and continuous- that is they contain little, if any, concoding DNA either between/ within gene sequences. Gene expression - The regulation of many functionally related genes is enhanced by organizing them into operons. An operon is a set of linked genes that are regulated as a unit. Prokaryotes possess additional small pieces of DNA- plasmids. Plasmids- have genes that are not present on the main chromosome. Genes that are not essential for growth and survival but genes that provide growth/survival advantage: antibiotic resistance genes, unique metabolic capacities (N2 fixation, degradation of aromatic compounds) and virulence (toxins) Eukaryotic genomes - - - Organization of genetic information in eukaryotic chromosomes- more complex. Genome size: Larger than prokaryotes but size does not necessarily a measure of the complexity of the organism. Some species accumulated vast amounts of non-coding DNA. Coding capacity Although there is enormous coding capacity- majority of DNA sequences in eukaryotes do not have coding functions- do not possess intact regulatory regions to initiate transcription. The function is unknown- some may have regulatory/structural roles. Not more than 1.5% of human genome codes for protein. Coding - - - continuity Eukaryotic genes are discontinuous. Noncoding sequences (introns) are interspersed between sequences called exons. Exons- code for a gene product. Intron sequences are removed from premRNA transcript by splicing mechanism to produce functional mRNA molecules. RNA Ribonucleic acid is a class of polynucleotides, involved in protein synthesis. RNA molecules are synthesized in a process referred as transcription. During transcription- RNA is synthesized thru complementary base pair formation. The sequence of bases in RNA is therefore specified by the base sequence in one of 2 strands in DNA. Only 1 DNA strand that acts as template for synthesis of RNA molecule- referred as antisense (non-coding strand). The nontranscribed DNA strand is called sense strand (coding). The base sequence of the sense strand is the DNA version of the mRNA used to synthesize the polypeptide product of gene. For example, the antisense DNA sequence 5’- CCGATTACG-3’ is transcribed into the RNA sequence 3’- GGCUAAUGC-5’. RNA molecules differ from DNA: The sugar moiety of RNA is ribose. DNA=deoxyribose. The nitrogenous bases in RNA differ from those observed in DNA. Instead of thymine, RNA molecules use uracil (Adenine base pairing with uracil). In contrast to double helix DNA, RNA exists as a single strand. Secondary structure of RNA RNA exist as single strand. RNA can coil back on itself and form a unique secondary structure The shape of these structures determined by complementary base pairing by specific RNA sequence, as well as base stacking The most prominent types of RNA: Transfer RNA (tRNA) Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) Messenger RNA (mRNA) Differences between DNA & RNA RNA DNA Sugar moiety is ribose Sugar moiety is deoxyribose Nitrogenous base Adenine, Urasil, Guanine, Cytosine Exist in single strand Nitrogenous base Adenine, Thyamine, Guanine, Cytosine Exist in double helix Content of A and U, as well as G and C are equal Content of A and T, as well as G and C are equal Exercise Consider the following antisense DNA: 5’-CGCTATAGCGTTTCAT-3’ - Determine the sequence of its complementary strand - Determine the mRNA transcript - Determine the antisense mRNA sequences. QUIZ When DNA is heated, it denatures, that is the strands separate. Determine which of the following molecules will denature first as the temperature is raised. Why? a) 5’- GCATTTCGGCGCGTTA-3’ 3’- CGTAAAGCCGCGCAAT-5’ b) 5’- ATTGCGCTTATATGCT-3’ 3’- TAACGCGAATATACGA-5’ QUIZ Consider the following sense DNA sequence: 5’-GCATTCGAATTGCAGACTCCT-3’ a) b) Determine the sequence of its complementary strand Determine the mRNA and antisense RNA sequences Transfer RNA (tRNA) Transfer RNA tRNA transport amino acids to ribosomes for assembly into protein Comprising about 15% of cellular RNA, Average length of tRNA = 75 nucleotides tRNA molecules bound to a specific amino acid- cells possess at least 1 type of tRNA for each of the 20 amino acids commonly found in protein. tRNA- cloverleaf structure. The structure allows it to perform 2 important functions: - The 3’-terminus- forms a covalent bond to a specific amino acid - Anticodon loop- contains 3-base-pair sequence that is complementary to the DNA triplet code for the specific amino acid. tRNA structure Ribosomal RNA rRNA is the most abundant RNA in living cells rRNA is the component of ribosomes Ribosomes = cytoplasmic structures that synthesized proteins Ribosomes of prokaryotes and eukaryotes are similar in shape and function- differ in size and chemical composition. Both types of ribosome consist of 2 subunits of unequal size. Prokaryotic ribosome: 50 S and 30 S subunit. Eukaryotic ribosome: 60 S and 40 S subunit. Ribosomal RNA Messenger RNA - mRNA is the carrier of genetic information from DNA for the synthesis of protein mRNA is transcribed from a DNA template, and carries coding information to the sites of protein synthesis: the ribosomes Prokaryotic mRNA; polycistronic- contain coding information for several polypeptide chains Are translated into proteins by ribosomes during/immediately after they are synthesized Eukaryotic mRNA: Typically codes for a single polypeptidemonocistronic. Are modified extensively- capping at the 5’-residue, splicing (removing of introns), attachment of poly A tails. Nucleic acid extraction protocol Ruptured bacterial cells or isolate eukaryotic nucleus - to expose the nucleic acid Bacterial nucleic acid can be precipitated by treating cells with alkali and lysozyme (an enzyme that degrades bacterial cell walls by breaking glycosidic bonds) Partially degraded protein is extracted using certain solvents (phenol & chloroform) Eukaryotic nuclei can be treated with detergents/ solvents to release their nucleic acid. Precipitating the DNA with an alcohol - usually ice-cold ethanol or isopropanol. Since DNA is insoluble in these alcohols, it will aggregate together, giving a pellet upon centrifugation. This step also removes alcohol-soluble salt Denaturation and renaturation of DNA Unique properties of nucleic acids- under certain conditions DNA duplexes reversibly melt (separate) and reanneal (base pair to form duplex again) Binding forces that hold the DNA double helix can be disrupted This process = denaturation, promoted by : - heat (most common denaturing method) - low salt concentrations - extremes in pH - The temp at which one-half of a DNA sample is denatured referred as Tm- varies among DNA molecules according to base composition. - Renaturation DNA can be prepared by maintain the temp. ~ 25oC below denaturing temp. - requires some time because the strands explore various configurations until they achieve the most stable one Nucleic acid methods Most of technique used in nucleic acid research are based on differences in molecular weight or shape, base sequences, or complementary base pairing Some of the most useful nucleic acid fractionation procedure are: Chromatography Electrophoresis Ultracentrifugation Chromatography Many of the chromatographic techniques that are used to separate proteins also apply to nucleic acids Several types of chromatography: ion-exchange, gel filtration and affinity. Objectives : purify nucleic acid of interest or isolation of individual nucleic acid sequences A type of column chromatography that uses a calcium phosphate gel called hydroxyapatite been used in nucleic acid research Hydroxyapatite bind tightly to doublestranded nucleic acid than single-stranded nucleic acid molecules So dsDNA can be effectively separate from ssDNA, RNA or other protein contaminants by this method dsDNA can be rapidly isolated by passing a cell lysate through a hydroxyapatite column wash the column with a low concentration of phosphate buffer to release only the ssDNA, RNA and protein Elute the column with a concentrated phosphate buffer tp collect dsDNA hydroxyapatite RNA + protein dsDNA Affinity chromatography is used to isolate specific nucleic acids. For example, most eukaryotic messenger RNAs (mRNAs) have a poly (A) sequences or cellulose to which poly (U) is covalently attached. The poly(A) sequences specifically bind to the complementary poly(U) in high salt and low temperature and can later be released by altering these condition. Electrophoresis Gel electrophoresis separate nucleic acids on the basis of molecular weight and 3-D structure in an electric field The technique involves drawing DNA molecules, which have an overall negative charge, through a semisolid gel by an electric current toward the positive electrode within an electrophoresis chamber. The used gel is typically composed of a purified sugar component of agar called agarose. Electrophoresis Nucleic acids mixture placed in well Nucleic acids are -ve charge (phosphate group) Nucleic acid migrate to anode Rate of migration are proportional to molecular size In genetic engineering, scientists use the technique to isolate fragments of DNA molecules that can then be inserted into vectors, multiplied by PCR, or preserved in a gene library. Southern blotting The unique properties of nucleic acid: under certain conditions DNA duplexes reversibly melt and reanneal. Enable researcher to detect and analyze particular DNA sequence- to locate specific nucleic acid sequences. The basis of detecting specific sequence : nucleic acids hybridization Single-stranded DNA from different sources hybridize if there is a significant sequence homology. Hybridization can be used to locate and/ or identify specific genes or other sequence Eg. ssDNA from two diff sources (tumor cell and normal cell) can be screened for sequence differences Southern blot technique Probe labelling Sequences with known identities- DNA or RNA probe is radioactively/fluorescent labeled. 2) restriction fragment preparation DNA samples to be tested are treated with restriction enzymes that cut at specific nucleotides sequences to produce a restriction fragments 1) Southern blot technique 3) electrophoresis The mixture of restriction fragments from each sample are separated by electrophoresis according to their size Each sample forms a characteristic patterns of band The gel soaked with 0.5M NaOH to convert dsDNA to ssDNA Southern blot technique 3) Blotting The DNA fragments are transferred to nitrocellulose filter paper by placing them on a wet sponge in a tray with a high salt buffer (nitrocellulose bind strongly to ssDNA) As buffer is drawn through the gel and filter paper by capillary action, the DNA is transferred and become permanently bound to nitrocellulose filter 4) hybridization with radioactive probe Nitrocellulose filter is exposed to radioactively labeled probe, which bind to ssDNA with a complementary sequence 4) hybridization with radioactive probe Nitrocellulose filter is exposed to a solution containing radioactively labeled probe. The probe is ssDNA complementary to DNA sequence of interest, and it attaches by base pairing to restriction fragment of complementary sequence Eg: mRNA that codes for B-globin binds specifically to the B-globin gene, even though B-globin mRNA lacks the intron present in the gene- sufficient base pairing. 5) Autoradiography Rinse away unattached probe Autoradiograph showing hybrid DNA fragment Ultracentrifugation Equilibrium density gradient ultracentrifugation in CsCl is one of the most commonly used DNA separation procedures. At high speeds, a linear gradient of CsCl is established. Mixture of DNA, RNA and protein migrating through this gradient separate into discrete bands at position where their densities are equal to density of CsCl. DNA mol. with high Guanine and Cytosine content are more dense than those with a higher proportion of adenine and thyamine. The difference helps separate heterogenous mixtures of DNA fragments Single stranded DNA denser than the double stranded DNA, so the two can be separated by equilibrium density gradient ultracentrifugation. DNA Sequencing To determine the DNA nucleotide sequences. The classical chain-termination method requires a single-stranded DNA template, a DNA primer, a DNA polymerase, normal deoxynucleotidetriphosphates (dNTPs), and modified nucleotides (dideoxyNTPs) that terminate DNA strand elongation. The DNA sample is divided into four separate sequencing reactions, containing all four of the standard deoxynucleotides (dATP, dGTP, dCTP and dTTP) and the DNA polymerase. To each reaction is added only one of the four dideoxynucleotides (ddATP, ddGTP, ddCTP, or ddTTP) which are the chain-terminating nucleotides, lacking a 3'-OH group required for the formation of a phosphodiester bond between two nucleotides, thus terminating DNA strand extension and resulting in DNA fragments of varying length. The newly synthesized and labelled DNA fragments are heat denatured, and separated by size (with a resolution of just one nucleotide) by gel electrophoresis on a denaturing polyacrylamide gel.