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Structure of Informational Molecules: DNA and RNA
Stryer Short course Chapter 33
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Nucleic Acid Structure
Nucleobase Nucleoside Nucleotide Nucleic acid Chromatin Chromosome
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Polymeric Structure Polymer ideal for informational molecule
Ribose and deoxyribose Numbering system
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Directionality 5’ 3’ directionality by convention
3’ 5’ phosphodiester linkage
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Base Structure Purines and pyrimidines Aromatic Tautomers
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Nucleosides Ribonucleosides and deoxyribonucleoside
Purine = osine; pyrimidine = idine (watch cytosine)
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Nucleotides Phosphorylated on 2’, 3’, or 5’ 5’ unless noted
Letter abbreviations Draw these: dA ADP ppAp
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Nucleotides pA is normally called _______ or ____________
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Problem List 4 ways that ATP differs from 3’-dGMP.
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Polynucleotides Phosphate diesters polyanion
Abbreviation is pdApdGpdTpdC Tetranucleotide Oligonucleotide Exonucleases and endonucleases
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Double Helix B-DNA Chargoff’s Rule Antiparallel
Right handed twist ladder
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Complementary Base Pairs
Mismatching may occur with tautomers
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Double Helix Structure
Dimensions-10 bp/turn Major/minor grooves Sugar phosphate backbone toward solvent Base pairs stacked, perpendicular Edges of bases exposed in grooves for recognition
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Weak Forces Stabilize Double Helix
Stacking interactions (vdW forces) Hydrophobic effect Charge-charge Hydrogen bonding Little contribution to stability Large contribution to selectivity
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Denaturation Melting point Melting curve UV-absorption cooperative
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Problem True or False: Because a G:C base pair is stabilized by three hydrogen bonds, whereas an A:T base pair is stabilized by only two hydrogen bonds, GC rich DNA is harder to melt than AT-rich DNA.
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A/T Rich and G/C Rich strands
GC rich strands harder to denature due to STACKING (not H-bonds) Cooperativity due to initial unstacking, which exposes bases to water, which destabilizes H-bonds, which leads to further denaturation
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Helical Forms B- form is major
A-form is similar to RNA/RNA and hybrid DNA/RNA structures Z-DNA not understood, but shows flexibility of structure
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Major/Minor Groove in B-DNA
Many pictures show ladder with backbone at 180o Actually a distorted ladder with poles closer to each other, on one side
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Semiconservative Replication
Meselson and Stahl Density gradient equilibrium centrifugation
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Explain the Results
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Bacterial DNA Closed, circular DNA Supercoiling
Topology and topoisomerases
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Eukaryotic DNA Highly compacted (by factor of 104) into chromatin (DNA/protein complex)
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RNA Structure
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RNA Structure, Stability, and Function
Structural difference of 2’ hydroxyl H-bonding in RNA structure Reactions of catalytic RNA (rare) Hydrolysis Structure dictates role difference in DNA/RNA
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Why does DNA not contain U?
DNA damage from UV light, hydrolysis, oxidation If DNA contained U, it would be unable to recognize a hydrolyzed cytosine In RNA, damage not as important, and T production is costly
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Recombinant DNA Techniques
Optional Lecture
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DNA Sequencing DNA Polymerase: 5’ 3’ Sanger method
dideoxynucleotides
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Pyrosequencing Attach DNA to a solid surface
Run dNTPs over DNA one at a time If reaction occurs, PPi is produced Linked to a luciferase Light detected
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Polymerase Chain Reaction
PCR Denature Anneal primer Polymerase Repeat Taq polymerase Exponential production
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Recombinant DNA technology
Allows incorporation of gene(s) into other DNA Cut with exonucleases, anneal, and ligate Recombinant DNA serves as a cloning vector Incorporate into cells Select cells that have been transformed
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Catalytic Hydrolysis: Nucleases
Enzymes can catalyze hydrolysis Very important reactions! Nucleases RNase vs DNase Single/double strand Exonuclease vs Endonuclease Orientation of hydrolysis
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Endonuclease
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Restriction Enzyme Endonucleases recognize palindromes
Sticky ends and blunt ends
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Problem Restriction enzymes are used to construct restriction maps of DNA. These are diagrams of specific DNA molecules that show the sites where the restriction enzymes cleave the DNA. To construct a restriction map, purified samples of DNA are treated with restriction enzymes, either alone or in combination, and then the reaction products are separated by agarose gel electrophoresis. Use the results of this gel to construct a restriction map for this sample of DNA.
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Making a Cloning Vector
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Making a Cloning Vector
ampR is gene for ampicillin resistance LacZ encodes galactosidase
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Selecting Transformed Bacteria
Some plasmids are recombinant, and some are not Some cells accept a plasmid, some accept recombinant plasmid, and some don’t accept any Transformed cells selected by growing on a petri dish with ampicilin and galactose derivative Explain
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Site-directed Mutagenesis
Point mutations Examine importance of a residue Modify protein function
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