DNA Replication and Recombination

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
DNA: The Genetic Material Chapter
Advertisements

DNA Replication and Recombination
Berg • Tymoczko • Stryer
Structure (chapter 10, pages 266 – 278) and Replication of DNA (chapter 12, pages 318 – 334)
(CHAPTER 11- Brooker Text) DNA Replication Sept 18 & 20, 2007 BIO 184 Dr. Tom Peavy.
1 Review of directionality in DNA Now, for DNA replication.
1 Replication of the Genetic Material Genetic material must be duplicated for transfer into daughter cells. Complementary double-stranded DNA makes this.
GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION GENETICS ESSENTIALS Concepts and Connections SECOND EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce © 2013 W. H.
DNA Form & Function.
DNA REPLICATION We know we need to copy a cells DNA before a cell can divide, but how is DNA copied? There were 3 possible models for DNA copies to be.
 All cells undergo DNA replication and cell division in order to give rise to a new generation of cells Mitosis- Division of the nucleus of a eukaryotic.
DNA Replication: A Closer Look
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings The Basic Principle: Base Pairing to a Template Strand Since the two strands of.
Chapter 12 Outline 12.1 Genetic Information Must Be Accurately Copied Every Time a Cell Divides, All DNA Replication Takes Place in a Semiconservative.
AP Biology DNA Replication Ch.12.2 AP Biology DNA Replication  Purpose: cells need to make a copy of DNA before dividing so each daughter.
DNA, AND IN SOME CASES RNA, IS THE PRIMARY SOURCE OF HERITABLE INFORMATION Genetic information is transmitted from one generation to the next through DNA.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings DNA Replication chapter 16 continue DNA Replication a closer look p.300 DNA: Origins.
DNA Replication Lecture 7. DNA Replication  Synthesis of two new DNA duplexes based on complementary base sequences with parental DNA.  Is progressive,
Genetics DNA Replication Genetics Why do cells divide…  for reproduction  One celled organisms (clones)  for growth & development  From.
AP Biology Synthesis of DNA June
DNA REPLICATION BIT 220 MCCC Chapter 11. Replication Meselson and Stahl.
DNA: The Genetic Material Chapter The Genetic Material Griffith’s results: - live S strain cells killed the mice - live R strain cells did not kill.
Molecular Genetics 2: DNA Replication WHAT IS DNA REPLICATION? The process of making two identical DNA molecules from an original, parental DNA molecule.
Structure, Replication and Recombination of DNA. Information Flow From DNA DNA RNA transcription Protein translation replication.
DNA Replication. When? S (synthesis) phase of cell cycle Creates copy of DNA and two copies are held together by centromere. Thousands of times per second.
The Molecular Basis of Heredity Chapter 16. Learning Target 1 I can explain why researchers originally thought protein was the genetic material.
DNA REPLICATION SBI4U Ms. Manning. DNA Replication  Produces two identical copies of the chromosome during S phase of interphase  Catalyzed by many.
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc DNA Is Reproduced by Semiconservative Replication.
Chapter 6 Molecular Biology of DNA Replication and Recombination Jones and Bartlett Publishers © 2005.
DNA Replication during cell division in eukaryotic cells, the replicated genetic material is divided equally between two daughter cells. it is important.
Structure, Replication and Recombination of DNA. Information Flow From DNA DNA RNA transcription Protein translation replication.
Chapter 12 Topics Chapter 12 Topics Models of Replication Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Replication Models of Recombination: read pp
Structure, Replication and Recombination of DNA. Information Flow From DNA DNA RNA transcription Protein translation replication.
DNA Metabolism DNA replication: processes which DNA is being faithfully duplicated. DNA recombination: processes which the nucleotide sequence of DNA is.
DNA Replication Lecture 11 Fall Read pgs
DNA Replication. Warm-UP  What is the cell cycle? When does DNA replicate during the cell cyle?
DNA Replication Lesson 2. Label the ends of DNA strand as either 5’ or 3’. 5’
DNA Replication and Recombination
Alternative models of DNA replication (Fig 3.1):
DNA Replication and Recombination
Chapter 10 DNA Metabolism: Replication, Recombination, and Repair.
The Molecular Basis of Heredity Chapter Nucleic acids store, transmit, and help express hereditary information.
Replication – copying of DNA The cell invests enormous resources in making sure that replication (copying DNA) is as accurate as possible including elaborate.
DNA RNA protein transcriptiontranslationreplication reverse transcription Central dogma.
DNA Metabolism –DNA replication –DNA repair –DNA recombination Key topics:
GENETICS A Conceptual Approach FIFTH EDITION GENETICS A Conceptual Approach FIFTH EDITION Benjamin A. Pierce CHAPTER 12 DNA Replication and Recombination.
Chapter 3: DNA Replication
Chapter 3: DNA Replication
Advanced Molecular Genetics
DNA REPLICATION IN PROKARYOTES
DNA REPLICATION.
DNA Replication Md. Habibur Rahaman (HbR) Dept. of Biology & Chemistry
Replication of DNA Notes & Animations.
DNA Structure & Replication
DNA And protein synthesis
DNA Replication and Recombination
More on DNA Chromosomes and Replication
DNA Replication.
The Basic Principle: Base Pairing to a Template Strand
DNA REPLICATION AND REPAIR
5 end 3 end 3 end 5 end Hydrogen bond 3.4 nm 1 nm 0.34 nm (a)
BIOL 2416 CH 3: DNA Replication
KEY CONCEPT DNA replication copies the genetic information of a cell.
Chapter 3: DNA Replication
DNA Replication Chapter 12 Section 2.
DNA REPLICATION.
KEY CONCEPT DNA replication copies the genetic information of a cell.
DNA Replication and Repair - INTRO
DNA Replication Making copies.
Dna replication SBI4U.
Presentation transcript:

DNA Replication and Recombination Benjamin A. Pierce GENETICS A Conceptual Approach FIFTH EDITION CHAPTER 12 DNA Replication and Recombination © 2014 W. H. Freeman and Company

The happy tree, Camptotheca acuminata, contains camptothecin, a substance used to treat cancer. Camptothecin inhibits cancer by blocking an important part of the replication machinery.

Replication has to be extremely accurate: 12.1 Genetic Information Must Be Accurately Copied Every Time a Cell Divides Replication has to be extremely accurate: One error/million bp leads to 6400 mistakes every time a cell divides, which would be catastrophic. Replication also takes place at high speed. E. coli replicates its DNA at a rate of 1000 nucleotides/second.

12.2 All DNA Replication Takes Place in a Semiconservative Manner Proposed DNA Replication Models: Conservative replication model Dispersive replication model Semiconservative replication

Figure 12.1 Three proposed models of replication are conservative replication, dispersive replication, and semiconservative replication.

12.2 All DNA Replication Takes Place in a Semiconservative Manner Meselson and Stahl’s Experiment: Two isotopes of nitrogen: 14N common form; 15N rare heavy form E.coli were grown in a 15N media first, then transferred to 14N media Cultured E.coli were subjected to equilibrium density gradient centrifugation

Figure 12.3 Meselson and Stahl used equilibrium density gradient centrifugation to distinguish between heavy 15N DNA and lighter 14N DNA.

Figure 12.3 Meselson and Stahl demonstrated the DNA replication is semiconservative.

Concept Check 1 How many bands of DNA would be expected in Meselson and Stahl’s experiment after two rounds of conservative replication? 9

Concept Check 1 How many bands of DNA would be expected in Meselson and Stahl’s experiment after two rounds of conservative replication? Two bands 10

12.2 All DNA Replication Takes Place in a Semiconservative Manner Modes of Replication Replicons: Units of replication. Replication origin Theta replication: circular DNA, E. coli; single origin of replication forming a replication fork, and it is usually a bidirectional replication. Rolling-circle replication: virus, F factor of E.coli; single origin of replication.

Figure 12. 4 Theta replication is a type of replication common in E Figure 12.4 Theta replication is a type of replication common in E. coli and other organisms possessing circular DNA.

Figure 12.5 Rolling circle replication takes place in some viruses and in the F factor of E. coli.

12.2 All DNA Replication Takes Place in a Semiconservative Manner Linear eukaryotic replication Eukaryotic cells Thousands of origins A typical replicon: ~ 200,000-300,000 bp in length. Fig. 12.6

Figure 12.6 Linear DNA replication takes place in eukaryotic chromosomes.

12.2 All DNA Replication Takes Place in a Semiconservative Manner Linear eukaryotic replication: Requirements of replication A template strand Raw material: nucleotides Enzymes and other proteins

Figure 12.7 New DNA is synthesized from deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates (dNTPs). The newly synthesized strand is complementary and antiparallel to the template strand; the two strands are held together by hydrogen bonds between the bases.

12.2 All DNA Replication Takes Place in a Semiconservative Manner Linear eukaryotic replication: Direction of Replication: DNA polymerase add nucleotides only to the 3 end of growing strand. The replication can only go from 5  3 Continuous and discontinuous replication Figs. 12.8 and 12.9

Figure 12.8 DNA synthesis takes place in opposite directions on the two DNA template strands. DNA replication at a single replication fork begins when a double-stranded DNA molecule unwinds to provide two single-strand templates.

12.2 All DNA Replication Takes Place in a Semiconservative Manner Linear eukaryotic replication: Direction of replication Leading strand: undergoes continuous replication. Lagging strand: undergoes discontinuous replication. Okazaki fragment: the discontinuously synthesized short DNA fragments forming the lagging strand.

Figure 12.9 DNA synthesis is continuous on one template strand of DNA and discontinuous on the other.

Figure 12.10 The direction of synthesis in different models of replication.

Discontinuous replication is a result of which property of DNA? Concept Check 2 Discontinuous replication is a result of which property of DNA? Complementary bases Antiparallel nucleotide strands A charged phosphate group Five-carbon sugar 23

Discontinuous replication is a result of which property of DNA? Concept Check 2 Discontinuous replication is a result of which property of DNA? Complementary bases Antiparallel nucleotide strands A charged phosphate group Five-carbon sugar 24

Bacterial DNA Replication 12.3 Bacterial Replication Requires a Large Number of Enzymes and Proteins Bacterial DNA Replication Initiation: 245 bp in the oriC. (single origin replicon) an initiation protein (DnaA in E.coli) Unwinding: Initiator protein DNA helicase Single-strand-binding proteins (SSBs) DNA gyrase (topoisomerase)

Figure 12.11 E. coli DNA replication begins when initiator proteins bind to oriC, the origin of replication.

Fig. 12.12. DNA helicase unwinds DNA by binding to the lagging strand template at each replication fork and moving in the 5’ 3’ direction.

12.3 Bacterial Replication Requires a Large Number of Enzymes and Proteins Elongation: Primers: an existing group of RNA nucleotides with a 3-OH group to which a new nucleotide can be added. It is usually 10- 12 nucleotides long. Primase: RNA polymerase

Figure 12.13 Primase synthesizes short stretches of RNA nucleotides, providing a 3’-OH group to which DNA polymerase can add DNA nucleotides.

12.3 Bacterial Replication Requires a Large Number of Enzymes and Proteins Elongation: carried out by DNA polymerase III Removing RNA primer: DNA polymerase I Connecting nicks after RNA primers are removed: DNA ligase Termination: when replication fork meets or by termination protein.

Figure 12.14 DNA ligase seals the break left by DNA polymerase I in the sugar-phosphate backbone.

12.3 Bacterial Replication Requires a Large Number of Enzymes and Proteins The fidelity of DNA Replication Proofreading: DNA polymerase I: 3  5 exonuclease activity removes the incorrectly paired nucleotide. Mismatch repair: corrects errors after replication is complete.

Concept Check 3 Which mechanism requires the ability to distinguish between newly synthesized and template strands of DNA? Nucleotide selection DNA proofreading Mismatch repair All of the above 35

Concept Check 3 Which mechanism requires the ability to distinguish between newly synthesized and template strands of DNA? Nucleotide selection DNA proofreading Mismatch repair All of the above 36

Eukaryotic DNA Replication 12.4 Eukaryotic DNA Replication Is Similar to Bacterial Replication but Differs in Several Aspects Eukaryotic DNA Replication Autonomously replicating sequences (ARSs) 100–120 bps Origin-recognition complex (ORC) binds to ARSs to initiate DNA replication. The licensing of DNA replication by the replication licensing factor MCM: Minichromosome maintenance Eukaryotic DNA polymerase

12.4 Eukaryotic DNA Replication Is Similar to Bacterial Replication but Differs in Several Aspects Eukaryotic DNA complexed to histone proteins in nucleosomes Nucleosomes reassembled quickly following replication Creation of nucleosomes requires: Disruption of original nucleosomes on the parental DNA Redistribution of preexisting histones on the new DNA The addition of newly synthesized histones to complete the formation of new nucleosomes

12.4 Eukaryotic DNA Replication Is Similar to Bacterial Replication but Differs in Several Aspects The location of DNA replication within the nucleus: DNA polymerase is fixed in location and template RNA is threaded through it. Replication at the ends of chromosomes: Telomeres and telomerase. Fig. 12.18 Fig. 12.19

Figure 12.18 DNA synthesis at the ends of circular and linear chromosomes must differ.

Figure 12.19 The enzyme telomerase is responsible for the replication of chromosome ends.

Concept Check 4 What would be the result if an organism’s telomerase were mutated and nonfunctional? No DNA replication would take place. The DNA polymerase enzyme would stall the telomerase. Chromosomes would shorten each generation. RNA primers could not be removed. 43

Concept Check 4 What would be the result if an organism’s telomerase were mutated and nonfunctional? No DNA replication would take place. The DNA polymerase enzyme would stall the telomerase. Chromosomes would shorten each generation. RNA primers could not be removed. 44

12.5 Recombination Takes Place Through the Breakage, Alignment, and Repair of DNA Strands Homologous recombination: exchange is between homologous DNA molecules during crossing over. Holliday junction and single-strand break The double-strand break model of recombination

12. 20 The Holliday model of homologous recombination 12.20 The Holliday model of homologous recombination. In this model, recombination takes place through a single-strand break in each DNA duplex, strand displacement, branch migration, and resolution of a single Holliday junction.

12. 20 The double-strand-break model of recombination 12.20 The double-strand-break model of recombination. In this model, recombination takes place through a double-strand break in one DNA duplex, strand displacement, DNA synthesis, and resolution of two Holliday junctions.

Gene conversion arises through heteroduplex formation 12.5 Recombination Takes Place Through the Breakage, Alignment, and Repair of DNA Strands Gene conversion: process of nonreciprocal genetic exchange produces abnormal ratios of gametes Gene conversion arises through heteroduplex formation

Figure 12.22 Gene conversion takes place through the repair of mismatched bases in heteroduplex DNA.