dna and replication ap biology mr. beaty 2007. the great debate which chemical is used to store and...

43
DNA and DNA and Replication Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007

Upload: isaac-clark

Post on 31-Dec-2015

214 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

DNA and DNA and ReplicationReplication

AP Biology

Mr. Beaty

2007

Page 2: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

The Great DebateThe Great Debate

Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information?

Protein or DNA

Most Scientists of the day agreed that the substance must be protein.

Page 3: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Evidence for DNA as genetic Evidence for DNA as genetic materialmaterial Griffith, 1928 - In his work with Streptococcus

pneumoniae, Griffith realized that some “transforming” agent was exchanged between bacteria which enabled to acquire traits from one another.

The use of heat to inactivate cells suggested that the agent was not protein.

This phenomenon is now called transformation - a change in phenotype by taking genetic material from the environment.

Page 4: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Griffith ExperimentGriffith Experiment

Page 5: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Avery’s ExperimentAvery’s Experiment

Avery, et al., 1944 - isolated various chemicals from bacteria and used them to try transform bacteria. Only DNA worked.

Page 6: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Viruses are made of nucleic acid and Viruses are made of nucleic acid and proteinprotein

Page 7: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Hershey Chase Experiment (1952)Hershey Chase Experiment (1952)

Page 8: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Chargaff (1947)Chargaff (1947)

Adenine pairs Thymine; Cytosine pairs Guanine

If a mixture made from cells contained 20% Adenine, then what is the percentage of Guanine?

Page 9: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Structure of DNA Structure of DNA

Wilkins and Franklin used X-ray diffraction to attempt to find the structure of DNA.

Page 10: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

The Structure of DNA was The Structure of DNA was discovereddiscovered

Watson and Crick (1953)

Double Helix Sides: phosphate

and sugar Rungs:

nitrogenous bases held together by hydrogen bonds

Page 11: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

DNA NucleotideDNA Nucleotide

OO=P-O O

PhosphatePhosphate GroupGroup

NNitrogenous baseNitrogenous base (A, G, C, or T)(A, G, C, or T)

CH2

O

C1C4

C3 C2

5

SugarSugar(deoxyribose)(deoxyribose)

Page 12: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Nitrogenous BasesNitrogenous Bases

Double ring Double ring PURINESPURINESAdenine (A)Adenine (A)Guanine (G)Guanine (G)

Single ring Single ring PYRIMIDINESPYRIMIDINESThymine (T)Thymine (T)Cytosine (C)Cytosine (C) T or C

A or G

Page 13: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

DNA StraDNA Strands are Anti-parallelnds are Anti-parallel

P

P

P

O

O

O

1

23

4

5

5

3

3

5

P

P

PO

O

O

1

2 3

4

5

5

3

5

3

G C

T A

Page 14: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Base-PairingsBase-PairingsPurines only pair with

PyrimidinesThree hydrogen bonds

required to bond Guanine & Cytosine

CG

3 H-bonds

Page 15: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

T A

•TwoTwo hydrogen bonds are hydrogen bonds are required to bond Adenine & required to bond Adenine & ThymineThymine

Page 16: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Question:Question:

If there is 30% AdenineAdenine, how much CytosineCytosine is present?

Page 17: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Answer:Answer:There would be 20%

CytosineCytosineAdenine (30%) = Adenine (30%) =

Thymine (30%)Thymine (30%)Guanine (20%) = Guanine (20%) =

Cytosine (20%)Cytosine (20%)Therefore, Therefore, 60% A-T and 60% A-T and

40% C-G40% C-G

Page 18: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Structure of DNAStructure of DNA

Page 19: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

DNA Replication (Semiconservative Model)DNA Replication (Semiconservative Model)

Page 20: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Semiconservative ModelSemiconservative Model

Page 21: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

DNA Replication VideoDNA Replication Video

Page 22: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Origin of Replication Origin of Replication

Origin of replication (“bubbles”): beginning of replication Replication fork: ‘Y’-shaped region where new strands of DNA are elongating Helicase:catalyzes the untwisting of the DNA at the replication fork DNA polymerase:catalyzes the elongation of new DNA

Page 23: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

DNA Replication, IIDNA Replication, II

Antiparallel nature: • sugar/phosphate backbone runs in opposite directions (Crick); • one strand runs 5’ to 3’, while the other runs 3’ to 5’; • DNA polymerase only adds nucleotides at the free 3’ end, forming new DNA strands in the 5’ to 3’

direction only

Page 24: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

DNA Replication, IIIDNA Replication, III Leading strand:

synthesis toward the replication fork (only in a 5’ to 3’ direction from the 3’ to 5’ master strand)

Lagging strand: synthesis away from the replication fork (Okazaki fragments); joined by DNA ligase (must wait for 3’ end to open; again in a 5’ to 3’ direction)

Initiation: Primer (short RNA sequence~w/primase enzyme), begins the replication process

Page 25: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

DNA Replication: the leaning strandDNA Replication: the leaning strand

QuickTime™ and aCinepak decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 26: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

DNA Replication: the lagging strandDNA Replication: the lagging strand

QuickTime™ and aCinepak decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 27: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

DNA RepairDNA Repair

Mismatch repair: DNA polymerase

Excision repair:Nuclease

Telomere ends:telomerase

Page 28: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Elongating a new strandElongating a new strand

After the strands are separated, DNA polymerase “reads” the exposed bases on the template strand and attaches new bases by complementary base pairing.

Note that this process is decreasing entropy greatly so it must require energy.

 

Page 29: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Similar to ATP!!Similar to ATP!! The energy to add new nucleotides comes from the substrates themselves which are nucleoside triphosphates.

The loss of two phosphates from the substrate provides the energy to drive the reaction.

Page 30: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Elongating a new strandElongating a new strand

DNA polymerase can only attach the 5' phosphate (P) of one nucleotide to the 3' hydroxyl (OH) of another nucleotide that is already part of a strand.

The enzyme can only work by building a new strand in the 5' 3' ➝direction.

Page 31: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

The two strands of DNA are antiparallel.

Page 32: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Problem of antiparallel strandsProblem of antiparallel strands

The C5 phosphate of one nucleotide is attached to the C3 hydroxyl of an adjacent nucleotide.

Therefore, the strand has a free 3' OH at one end and a free 5' P at the other.

Remember, the molecule is arranged with the strands going in opposite directions so the 3' end of one strand is aligned with the 5' end of the other.

Page 33: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Problem of antiparallel strandsProblem of antiparallel strands

DNA polymerase adds nucleotides only to the 3' end but can only do this on one strand, the leading strand.

The other strand has a 5' P at the end rather than the 3' OH DNA polymerase needs.

This strand, the lagging strand, must be made in an overall 3' 5' direction. ➝

To do this, the new strand is made in short fragments, called Okazaki fragments, going in the opposite direction from the leading strand.

Another enzyme, DNA ligase, then fills in the gaps to join the fragments together.

Page 34: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Synthesis of Leading and Lagging strand during DNA replication

Page 35: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Priming DNA SynthesisPriming DNA Synthesis

Remember that DNA can only attach the 5' phosphate (P) of one nucleotide to the 3' hydroxyl (OH) of another nucleotide that is already part of a strand.

A primer is a short piece of RNA that is constructed on the template to serve as a starting point for DNA polymerase.

The enzyme primase builds the primers, which are about 10 nucleotides long.

Later, the primers are replaced by DNA.

Page 36: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

DNA Polymerase cannot initiate a polynucleotide strand; it can only add to the 3’ end of an already-started strand.

The primer is a short segment of RNA synthesized by the enzyme primase.

Each primer is eventually replaced by DNA

Page 37: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most
Page 38: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Summary of DNA ReplicationSummary of DNA Replication

1. Helicase unwinds the paretental double helix.2. Single-strand binding proteins stabilize the

unwound parental DNA.3. The leading strand is synthesized continuously

in the 53 direction by DNA polymerase.4. The lagging strand is synthesized

discontinuously. Primase synthesizes a short RNA primer, whichis extended by DNA polymerase to form an Okazaki fragment.

5. Another DNA polymerase replaces the RNA primer with DNA.

6. DNA Ligase joins the Okazaki framents to the growing strand.

Page 39: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

DNA Replication SummaryDNA Replication Summary

Page 40: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Error rateError rate

Complementary base pairing allows an error rate of 1 in 10,000 bp.

DNA polymerase checks for these errors by checking the width of the helix and reduces the rate to 1/10,000.

DNA is constantly exposed to chemicals, viruses, and radiation which cause damage.

This damage is repaired by>50 known enzymes that constantly check DNA for errors.

These combined efforts reduce the error rate to 1 in a billion.

Page 41: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

DNA RepairDNA Repair

A team of enzymes detects and repairs damaged DNA.

Example of repairing a thymine dimer, caused from UV radiation .

Page 42: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

The End Replication ProblemThe End Replication Problem

When a linear DNA molecule replicates, a gap is left at the 5’end of each new strand because DNA polymerase can only add nuceotids to a three end.

As a aresult with each round of replication, the DNA molecules get slightly shorter.

Page 43: DNA and Replication AP Biology Mr. Beaty 2007. The Great Debate Which chemical is used to store and transmit genetic information? Protein or DNA Most

Telomeres and Telomeres and TelomeraseTelomerase

Eukaryotes deal with the end-replication issue by having expendable, noncoding sequences called telomeres at the ends of their DNA and the enzyme telomerase in some of their cells