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Nucleic Acid Structure Andy Howard Introductory Biochemistry 7 October 2008 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct 10/02/08 What we’ll discuss Small RNAs DNA & RNA Hydrolysis RNA, DNA Restriction enzymes DNA sequencing DNA secondary structure: A, B, Z Folding kinetics Supercoils Nucleosomes Chromatin and chromosomes Lab synthesis of genes tRNA & rRNA structure 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 2 of 38 Other small RNAs 21-28 nucleotides Target RNA or DNA through complementary base-pairing Several types, based on function: Small interfering RNAs (q.v.) microRNA: control developmental timing Small nucleolar RNA: catalysts that (among other things) create the oddball bases QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. snoRNA77 courtesy Wikipedia 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 3 of 38 siRNAs and gene silencing QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. Small interfering RNAs block specific protein production by base-pairing to complementary seqs of mRNA to form dsRNA DS regions get degraded & removed This is a form of gene silencing or RNA interference RNAi also changes chromatin structure and has long-range influences on expression 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct Viral p19 protein complexed to human 19-base siRNA PDB 1R9F 1.95Å 17kDa protein p. 4 of 38 Do the differences between RNA and DNA matter? Yes! DNA has deoxythymidine, RNA has uridine: cytidine spontaneously degrades to uridine dC spontaneously degrades to dU The only dU found in DNA is there because of degradation: dT goes with dA So when a cell finds dU in its DNA, it knows it should replace it with dC or else synthesize dG opposite the dU instead of dA 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 5 of 38 Ribose vs. deoxyribose Presence of -OH on 2’ position makes the 3’ position in RNA more susceptible to nonenzymatic cleavage than the 3’ in DNA The ribose vs. deoxyribose distinction also influences enzymatic degradation of nucleic acids I can carry DNA in my shirt pocket, but not RNA 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 6 of 38 Backbone hydrolysis of nucleic acids in base (fig. 10.29) Nonenzymatic hydrolysis in base occurs with RNA but not DNA, as just mentioned Reason: in base, RNA can form a specific 5-membered cyclic structure involving both 3’ and 2’ oxygens When this reopens, the backbone is cleaved and you’re left with a mixture of 2’- and 3’-NMPs 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 7 of 38 Enzymatic cleavage of oligoand polynucleotides Enzymes are phosphodiesterases Could happen on either side of the P 3’ cleavage is a-site; 5’ is b-site. Endonucleases cleave somewhere on the interior of an oligo- or polynucleotide Exonucleases cleave off the terminal nucleotide 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 8 of 38 An a-specific exonuclease 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 9 of 38 A b-specific exonuclease 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 10 of 38 Specificity in nucleases Some cleave only RNA, others only DNA, some both Often a preference for a specific base or even a particular 4-8 nucleotide sequence (restriction endonucleases) These can be used as lab tools, but they evolved for internal reasons 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 11 of 38 Variety of nucleases 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 12 of 38 Restriction endonucleases Evolve in bacteria as antiviral tools “Restriction” because they restrict the incorporation of foreign DNA into the bacterial chromosome Recognize and bind to specific palindromic DNA sequences and cleave them Self-cleavage avoided by methylation Types I, II, III: II is most important I and III have inherent methylase activity; II has methylase activity in an attendant enzyme 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 13 of 38 What do we mean by palindromic? In ordinary language, it means a phrase that reads the same forward and back: Madam, I’m Adam. (Genesis 3:20) Eve, man, am Eve. Able was I ere I saw Elba. (Napoleon) A man, a plan, a canal: Panama! (T. Roosevelt) With DNA it means the double-stranded sequence is identical on both strands 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 14 of 38 Quirky math question to ponder Numbers can be palindromic: 484, 1331, 727, 595… Some numbers that are palindromic have squares that are palindromic… 222 = 484, 1212 = 14641, . . . Question: if a number is perfect square and a palindrome, is its square root a palindrome? (answer will be given orally) 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 15 of 38 Palindromic DNA G-A-A-T-T-C Single strand isn’t symmetric: but the combination with the complementary strand is: G-A-A-T-T-C C-T-T-A-A-G These kinds of sequences are the recognition sites for restriction endonucleases. This particular hexanucleotide is the recognition sequence for EcoRI. 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 16 of 38 Cleavage by restriction endonucleases Breaks can be cohesive (if they’re off-center within the sequence) or non-cohesive (blunt) (if they’re at the center) EcoRI leaves staggered 5’-termini: cleaves between initial G and A PstI cleaves CTGCAG between A and G, so it leaves staggered 3’-termini BalI cleaves TGGCCA in the middle: blunt! 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 17 of 38 iClicker question: Which of the following is a potential restriction site? (a) ACTTCA (b) AGCGCT (c) TGGCCT (d) AACCGG (e) none of the above. 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 18 of 38 Example for EcoRI 5’-N-N-N-N-G-A-A-T-T-C-N-N-N-N-3’ 3’-N-N-N-N-C-T-T-A-A-G-N-N-N-N-5’ Cleaves G-A on top, A-G on bottom: 5’-N-N-N-N-GA-A-T-T-C-N-N-N-N-3’ 3’-N-N-N-N-C-T-T-A-AG-N-N-N-N-5’ Protruding 5’ ends: 5’-N-N-N-N-G A-A-T-T-C-N-N-N-N-3’ 3’-N-N-N-N-C-T-T-A-A G-N-N-N-N-5’ 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 19 of 38 How often? 4 types of bases So a recognition site that is 4 bases long will occur once every 44 = 256 bases on either strand, on average 6-base site: every 46= 4096 bases, which is roughly one gene’s worth 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 20 of 38 EcoRI structure Dimeric structure enables recognition of palindromic sequence sandwich in each monomer QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. EcoRI pre-recognition complex PDB 1CL8 57 kDa dimer + DNA 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 21 of 38 Methylases QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. A typical bacterium protects its own DNA against HhaI methyltransferase cleavage by its restriction PDB 1SVU endonucleases by 2.66Å; 72 kDa dimer methylating a base in the restriction site Methylating agent is QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. generally Sadenosylmethionine Structure 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct courtesy steve.gb.com p. 22 of 38 Use of restriction enzymes Nature made these to protect bacteria; we use them to cleave DNA in analyzable ways Similar to proteolytic digestion of proteins Having a variety of nucleases means we can get fragments in multiple ways We can amplify our DNA first Can also be used in synthesis of inserts that we can incorporate into plasmids that enable us to make appropriate DNA molecules in bacteria 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 23 of 38 Sanger dideoxy method Incorporates DNA replication as an analytical tool for determining sequence Uses short primer that attaches to the 3’ end of the ssDNA, after which a specially engineered DNA polymerase Each vial includes one dideoxyXTP and 3 ordinary dXTPs; the dideoxyXTP will be incorporated but will halt synthesis because the 3’ position is blocked. See figs. 11.3 & 11.4 for how these are read out 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 24 of 38 Automating dideoxy sequencing Laser fluorescence detection allows for primer identification in real time An automated sequencing machine can handle 4500 bases/hour That’s one of the technologies that has made large-scale sequencing projects like the human genome project possible 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 25 of 38 DNA secondary structures If double-stranded DNA were simply a straightlegged ladder: Base pairs would be 0.6 nm apart Watson-Crick base-pairs have very uniform dimensions because the H-bonds are fixed lengths But water could get to the apolar bases So, in fact, the ladder gets twisted into a helix. The most common helix is B-DNA, but there are others. B-DNA’s properties include: Sugar-sugar distance is still 0.6 nm Helix repeats itself every 3.4 nm, i.e. 10 bp 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 26 of 38 Properties of B-DNA Spacing between base-pairs along helix axis = 0.34 nm 10 base-pairs per full turn So: 3.4 nm per full turn is pitch length Major and minor grooves, as discussed earlier Base-pair plane is almost perpendicular to helix axis 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 27 of 38 Major groove in B-DNA H-bond between adenine NH2 and thymine ring C=O H-bond between cytosine amine and guanine ring C=O Wide, not very deep 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 28 of 38 Minor groove in B-DNA H-bond between adenine ring N and thymine ring NH H-bond between guanine amine and cytosine ring C=O Narrow but deep 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 29 of 38 Cartoon of AT pair in B-DNA 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 30 of 38 Cartoon of CG pair in B-DNA 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 31 of 38 What holds duplex B-DNA together? H-bonds (but just barely) Electrostatics: Mg2+ –PO4-2 van der Waals interactions - interactions in bases Solvent exclusion Recognize role of grooves in defining DNA-protein interactions 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 32 of 38 Helical twist (fig. 11.9a) Rotation about the backbone axis Successive base-pairs rotated with respect to each other by ~ 32º 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 33 of 38 Propeller twist Improves overlap of hydrophobic surfaces Makes it harder for water to contact the less hydrophilic parts of the molecule 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 34 of 38 A-DNA (figs. 11.10) In low humidity this forms naturally Not likely in cellular duplex DNA, but it does form in duplex RNA and DNA-RNA hybrids because the 2’-OH gets in the way of B-RNA Broader 2.46 nm per full turn 11 bp to complete a turn Base-pairs are not perpendicular to helix axis: tilted 19º from perpendicular 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 35 of 38 Z-DNA (figs. 11.10) Forms in alternating Py-Pu sequences and occasionally in PyPuPuPyPyPu, especially if C’s are methylated Left-handed helix rather than right Bases zigzag across the groove 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 36 of 38 Getting from B to Z Can be accomplished without breaking bonds … even though purines have their glycosidic bonds flipped (anti -> syn) and the pyrimidines are flipped altogether! 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 37 of 38 DNA is dynamic Don’t think of these diagrams as static The H-bonds stretch and the torsions allow some rotations, so the ropes can form roughly spherical shapes when not constrained by histones Shape is sequence-dependent, which influences protein-DNA interactions 10/02/08 Biochemistry: Nucleic Acid Chem&Struct p. 38 of 38