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Biochemistry Lecture 6
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Functions of Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids Nucleotide Functions: –Energy for metabolism (ATP) –Enzyme cofactors (NAD + ) –Signal transduction (cAMP) Nucleic Acid Functions: –Storage of genetic info (DNA) –Transmission of genetic info (mRNA) –Processing of genetic information (ribozymes) –Protein synthesis (tRNA and rRNA)
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Discovery of DNA Structure One of the most important discoveries in biology Why is this important – " This structure has novel features which are of considerable biological interest “ --- Watson and Crick, Nature, 1953 Good illustration of science in action: –Missteps in the path to a discovery –Value of knowledge –Value of collaboration –Cost of sharing your data too early
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Covalent Structure of DNA (1868-1935) Friedrich Miescher isolates “nuclein” from cell nuclei Hydrolysis of nuclein: –phosphate –pentose –and a nucleobase Chemical analysis: –phosphodiester linkages –pentose is ribofuranoside Structure of DNA: 1929 (Levene and London) Structure of DNA: 1935 (Levene and Tipson)
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Road to the Double Helix Franklin and Wilkins: –“Cross” means helix –“Diamonds” mean that the phosphate- sugar backbone is outside – Calculated helical parameters Watson and Crick: – Missing layer means alternating pattern (major & minor groove) – Hydrogen bonding: A pairs with T G pairs with C Double helix fits the data! Watson, Crick, and Wilkins shared 1962 Nobel Prize Franklin died in 1958
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Other forms of DNA
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NucleotideNucleosideNucleobase
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Pyrimidine Nucleobases
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Purine Nucleobases
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N-Glycosidic Bond
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Polynucleotides
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Hydrolysis of RNA
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Hydrogen Bonding!
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The Central Dogma
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DNA Replication “It has not escaped our notice that the specific pairing we have postulated immediately suggests a possible copying mechanism for the genetic material” Watson and Crick, in their Nature paper,1953
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Using DNA Structure
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Why detect Transcription Factor targets? Transcription factors are medically relevant –~10% of human genes –Crucial roles in development and cell life cycle –Misregulation and mutation cause disease –Critically, most cancers involve TF overactivity Darnell, Nature Reviews Cancer 2, 740 (2002)
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Traditional methods for Transcription Factor detection Expression Microarrays Gel Shift Assays The challenge: Most of these methods are indirect, slow (hours), or can’t differentiate active and inactive protein. Western Blots
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Bio-mimicry is a powerful motivation Velcro: inspired by burrs Conformation Switching Probes Marvin J S et al. PNAS 1997;94:4366- 4371
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Optical Conformation Switching TF Switch Sensors
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Rationally Tuning TF Sensors % switches open KS = 10 KS = 1 KS = 0.1 KS = 0.01 KS = 0.001 KS = [ ] KS [target] KD (1+ KS) + KS [target] % switches open = KD = [ ] Target [M]
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TF Beacon Actual Performance
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Quantitative Detection in 4 easy steps
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Thermal Denaturation
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Molecular Mechanisms of Spontaneous Mutagenesis Deamination Very slow reactions Large number of residues The net effect is significant: 100 C U events /day in a mammalian cell Depurination N-glycosidic bond is hydrolyzed Significant for purines: 10,000 purines lost/day in a mammalian cell Cells have mechanisms to correct most of these modifications.
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UV Absorption of Nucleobases
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Pyrimidine Dimers from UV http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/olc/dl/120082/micro18.swf
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DNA Technologies
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DNA Cloning
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Restriction Enzymes
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PCR Polymerase Chain Reaction
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Antibiotic Selection Antibiotics, such as penicillin and ampicillin, kill bacteria Plasmids can carry genes that give host bacterium a resistance against antibiotics Allows growth (selection) of bacteria that have taken up the plasmid
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Site-Directed Mutagenesis
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Expression of Cloned Genes
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Protein Purification
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Eukaryotic Gene Expression in Bacteria An eukaryotic gene from the eukaryotic genome will not express correctly in the bacterium Eukaryotic genes have –Exons: coding regions –Introns: noncoding regions Introns in eukaryouric gene pose problems Bacteria cannot splice introns out mRNA is intron-free genetic material
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cDNA
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DNA Electrophoresis
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DNA Sequencing
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Shotgun Sequencing
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Electrochemical Sequencing http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yVf2295JqUg
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DNA Fingerprinting
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DNA Microarrays: Applications DNA Microarrays allow simultaneous screening of many thousands of genes: high-throughput screening genome wide genotyping –Which genes are present in this individual? tissue-specific gene expression –Which genes are used to make proteins? mutational analysis –Which genes have been mutated?
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DNA Microarrays: Design Two fundamental approaches One-color array –Patented and commerialized by Affymetrix –Photolitographic synthesis of probe DNA on the chip –Targets are biotin labeled –Bound targets detected using streptavidin-fluorofore complex –Widely used in industry Two-color array –Developed by Stanford University, 1996 –Probes sometimes pipetted on the chip –Targets linked to either green or red fluorescent labels –Used often in academia
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