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Page 1: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and

Replication

Ms. Gaynor

Honors Genetics

Page 2: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

DNA and Its Structure (Part 2)

•From 1953

Page 3: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

Recall…•DNA and RNA are nucleic acids

•An important macromolecule in organisms that stores and carries genetic information

Page 4: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

What is the Double Helix?

•Shape of DNA•Looks like a twisted ladder

•2 coils are twisted around each other

•Double means 2•Helix means coil

Page 5: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

The Structure of DNA • Made out of nucleotides

•Includes a phosphate group, nitrogenous base and 5-carbon pentose sugar

Nucleotide Structure

1 “link” in a DNA chain

Page 6: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

A Polynucleotide

• MANY nucleotides (“links”) bonded togetherDNA has a

overall negative

charge b/c of the PO4

-3 (phosphate

group)

Page 7: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

The Structure of DNA Backbone = alternating P’s and sugar

•Held together by COVALENT bonds (strong)•Inside of DNA molecule = nitrogen base pairs

•Held together by HYDROGEN bonds (weaker)

Backbone

Page 8: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

• Phosphodiester Bond

–The covalent that holds together the backbone

–Found between P & deoxyribose sugar

–STRONG!!!

Page 9: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

Major Groove

Minor Groove

Page 10: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

DNA is antiparallel• Antiparallel means that the

1st strand runs in a 5’ 3’ direction and the 2nd 3’ 5’ direction – THEY RUN IN OPPOSITE

or ANTIPARALLEL DIRECTIONS

• P end is 5’ end (think: “fa” sound)

• -OH on deoxyribose sugar is 3’ end– 5’ and 3’ refers to the carbon

# on the pentose sugar that P or OH is attached to

Page 11: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

DNA in Cells• 2 broad categories of cells1. Eukaryotic cells: have nucleus

with DNA– DNA is contained in

structure called a chromosome

– Chromosomes are a LINEAR (line) shape with ENDS called telomeres (protective “caps”)

2. Prokaryotic cells: no nucleus (nucleoid region instead) which contains DNA– DNA is a CIRCULAR shaped

chromosome without ENDS (no telomeres)

Page 12: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

DNA Bonding• Purines (small word, big base)

– Adenine– Guanine

• Pyrimidines– (big word, small base)

– Cytosine

– Thymine

• Chargaff’s rules– A=T, C=G– Hydrogen BondsHydrogen Bonds attractions between the

stacked pairs; WEAK bonds

Page 13: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

Why Does a Purine Always Bind with A Pyrimidine?

Page 14: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

DNA Double Helix• http://www.sumanasinc.com/webcontent/animations/content/DNA_structure.html• Watson & Crick said that…

– strands are complementary; nucleotides line up on template according to base pair rules (Chargaff’s rules)

• A to T and C to G

•LET’S PRACTICE…– Template: 5’AATCGCTATAC3’

– Complementary strand: 3’ TTAGCGATATG5’

Page 15: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

DNA Replication(Part 3A-initiation)

Page 16: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

DNA Replication• DNA Replication =

DNA DNA– Parent DNA makes 2

exact copies of DNA– Why??

•Occurs in Cell Cycle before MITOSIS so each new cell can have its own FULL copy of DNA

Page 17: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

http://www.sumanasinc.com/webcontent/animations/content/meselson.html

Models of DNA Replication

Page 18: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

DNA Replication• How does it occur?

• Matthew Meselson & Frank Stahl

– Discovered replication is semiconservative– PROCEDURE varying densities of radioactive nitrogen (Nitrogen is in DNA)

Page 19: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

Meselson & Stahl Experiment**DNA is semiconservative

http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072437316/student_view0/chapter14/animations.html

Page 20: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

DNA Replication: a closer look

http://henge.bio.miami.edu/mallery/movies/replication.mov

Page 21: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

DNA Replication Steps:• Initiation

– involves assembly of replication fork (bubble) at origin of replication • sequence of DNA found at a specific

site • Elongation

– Parental strands unwind and daughter strands are synthesized.

– the addition of bases by proteins• Termination:

– the duplicated chromosomes separate from each other. Now, there are 2 IDENTICAL copies of DNA.

Page 22: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

Segments of single-stranded DNA are called template strands.

Copied strand is called the complement strand (think “c” for copy)

BEGINNING OF DNA REPLICATION(INITIATION)

• Gyrase (type of topoisomerase) – relaxes the supercoiled DNA.

• DNA helicase (think “helix”) – binds to the DNA at the replication fork – untwist (“unzips”) DNA using energy from ATP– Breaks hydrogen bonds between base pairs

• Single-stranded DNA-binding proteins (SSBP) – stabilize the single-stranded template DNA

during the process so they don’t bond back together.

Page 23: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

base pairs

5’

5’

3’

3’

Supercoiled DNA relaxed by gyrase & unwound by helicase

Helicase

ATPSSB Proteins

http://media.pearsoncmg.com/bc/bc_campbell_biology_7/media/interactivemedia/activities/load.html?16&F

SSB Proteins

Gyrase

Page 24: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

DNA Replication (Elongation)After SSBP’s bind to each template…• RNA Primase binds to helicase

– primase is required for DNA synthesis– Like a “key” for a car ignition – makes a short RNA primers

• Short pieces of RNA needed for DNA synthesis• DNA polymerase

– adds nucleotides to RNA primer makes POLYNUCLEOTIDES (1st function)

– After all nucleotides are added to compliment strand…• RNA primer is removed and replaced with

DNA by DNA polymerase (2nd function)• DNA ligase

– “seals” the gaps in DNA – Connects DNA pieces by making phosphodiester bonds

Page 25: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

DNA Polymerase

Leading strand

base pairs

5’

5’

3’

3’

Supercoiled DNA relaxed by gyrase & unwound by helicase + proteins:

Helicase

ATP

SSB Proteins

RNA Primer

primase

2DNA Polymerase

1

RNA primer replaced by DNA Polymerase & gap is sealed by ligase

http://media.pearsoncmg.com/bc/bc_campbell_biology_7/media/interactivemedia/activities/load.html?16&F

Gyrase

Page 26: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

ElongationAntiparallel nature: • Sugar (3’end)/phosphate

(5’ end) backbone runs in opposite directions – one strand runs 5’ 3’,– other runs 3’ 5’

• DNA polymerase only adds nucleotides at the free 3’ end of NEW STRAND forming new DNA strands in the 5’ 3’ direction

only!!!

Page 27: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication
Page 28: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

Elongation (con’t)

• Leading (daughter) strand– NEW strand made toward the

replication fork (only in 5’ 3’ direction from the 3’ 5’ master strand

– Needs ONE (1) RNA primer made by Primase

– This new leading strand is made CONTINOUSLY

Page 29: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

Elongation (con’t)Lagging (daughter) strand• NEW strand synthesis away from

replication fork

• Replicate DISCONTINUOUSLY – Creates Okazaki fragments

• Short pieces of DNA

– Okazaki fragments joined by DNA ligase

• “Stitches” fragments together

– Needs MANY RNA primer made by Primase

Page 30: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

3

DNA Polymerase

5’ 3

Leading strand

base pairs

5’

5’

3’

3’

Supercoiled DNA relaxed by gyrase & unwound by helicase + proteins:

Helicase

ATP

SSB Proteins

RNA Primer

primase

2DNA Polymerase

Lagging strand

Okazaki Fragments

1

RNA primer replaced by DNA Polymerase & gap is sealed by DNA ligase

http://media.pearsoncmg.com/bc/bc_campbell_biology_7/media/interactivemedia/activities/load.html?16&F

Gyrase

Page 31: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication
Page 32: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

DNA Replication:Elongation

http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072437316/student_view0/chapter14/animations.html

Page 33: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

DNA Replication(Part 3C-termination)

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Termination (Telomeres)• Telomeres

– Short repeats of “G” base found at END of LINEAR chromosomes in eukaryotes

– protect ends of linear chromosomes

– The repeated sequence of GGGTTA make up the human telomeres.

• Telomerase is the enzyme that makes telomeres.

Page 35: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

Telomeres, Aging & Cancer

• Telomeres get shorter as cell divides leads to aging???

• Most cancers come from body cells.– Cancers cell have ability to divide

indefinitely.– Normal cells limited to ~50-75

divisions stop making telomerase.– 85–90% cancer cells continue to

make high levels of telomerase & are able to prevent further shortening of their telomeres.• Leads to “immortality”

Page 36: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

Mistakes Made during DNA Replication

• Mutation– Change in DNA (genetic material)

•Frameshift(s)

–extra or missing base(s).

•Substitutions

–when the wrong nucleotide is incorporated (mismatch mutation).

•Deletions–Nucleotides are deleted shortening the

DNA

Page 37: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

DNA RepairErrors occur 1/10 billion

nucleotides(Humans have 3 billion base pairs in their DNA)

• Mismatch repair– DNA polymerase (yes…it’s 3rd function)

•“Proofread” new DNA– Like the “delete” key on computer

• Excision (“cut out”) repair– Nuclease

Page 38: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication
Page 39: Chapter 2 & 3: DNA Structure and Replication

DNA Repair


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