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DNA: Structure, Dynamics and Recognition

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Tm increases with GC content. DNA energetics - I ... UU -2.7. TT -2.4. Base pairing and stacking. Separating a GC basepair in water. Stofer et al. J. Am. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: DNA: Structure, Dynamics and Recognition


1
DNA Structure, Dynamics and Recognition
L2 Introductory DNA biophysics and biology
Les Houches 2004
2
STRUCTURE DETERMINATION
3
X-RAY DIFFRACTION
  • X-ray l 1 Å atomic separation
  • requires crystals
  • phase problem (homologous structures, or heavy
    atom doping)

4
Crystallographic resolution
1.2 Å
2 Å
3 Å
- Resolution limit l/2.Sin qmax - R-factor S
Fobs - Fcal/Fobs (0.15-0.25 implies
good agreement)
5
Crystal packing effects
Doucet et al. Nature 337, 1989, 190
6
Crystallographic curvature
DiGabriele et al. PNAS 86, 1989, 1816
7
NMR SPECTROSCOPY
  • Can excite atoms with nuclear spins, 1H, 13C,
    15N, 31P
  • Relaxation leads to RF emissions which depend on
    the local environment
  • 1D spectra of macromolecules suffer from
    overlapping signals

8
2D NMR SPECTRA
COSY (COrrelation SpectroscopY) - covalently
coupled atoms NOESY (Nuclear Overhauser Effect) -
through space coupling
9
Sequential Resonance Assignments
Biomolecular NMR Spectroscopy J.N.S. Evans
(1995).
10
STRUCTURE FROM NMR DATA
  • identify residues in contact (gt5 Å)
  • model structure using distance torsional
    constraints and known valence geometry
  • check quality by reconstructing NMR spectrum
  • a range of structures generally fit the data
    (accounting for flexibility)
  • not easy to define resolution
  • problems of crystallisation are replaced with
    problems of solubility and size
  • may need isotopic labelling

11
OTHER SPECTROSCOPIC TECHNIQUES
12
Absorption Spectroscopy
  • Simple inexpensive technique
  • Optical density of sample compared to buffer
    solution
  • IR - molecular vibrations,
  • UV - electronic transitions
  • Macromolecules give broad spectra formed of many
    overlapping transitions

13
Absorption Spectroscopy
UV
  • More disorder? more absorption (e.g. diamonds)
  • ds DNA ? ss DNA more absorption

14
Absorption Spectroscopy
IR
  • Raman scattering gives acces to vibrations
    without water peak
  • can identify percentages of sugar puckers,
    glycosidic conformations, ...

15
Circular dichroism (CD)
  • Measures the difference in absorption between
    left- and right-handed circularly polarized light
    (ellipticity)
  • Sensitive to molecular chirality
  • ms resolution
  • simple experiments

poly(dG-dC).poly(dG-dC)
0.2 M NaCl
3.0 M NaCl
Pohl Jovin J. Mol. Biol. 67, 1972, 675
16
Neutron scattering spectroscopy
DNA/D2O
  • Access to dynamics in ps?ns timescale
  • Vibrational density of states
  • Needs a lot of material and a reactor
  • H/D exchange for selective studies

Slow relaxation in solvent gt 210 K
Sokolov et al. J. Biol. Phys. 27, 2001, 313
17
FRET - fluorescent resonance energy transfer
  • varies as r -6
  • detection 5-10 Å

18
HN3 imino proton
Still to come .... Hydrogen exchange Single
molecule experiments
19
STABILIZATION OF THE DOUBLE HELIX
20
Biological energy scale
Chemical bonds C-H 105 kcal.mol-1 CC 172   
 Ionic hydration Na -93 Ca2 -373    Hydrogen
bonds OH -5 (in vacuum)     Protein folding
2-10 (in solution)    Protein-DNA binding
5-20 (200 Å2 contact)
21
Helix ? Coil
22
  • UV melting curve for a bacterial DNA sample

Tm T at which 50 of DNA is melted
23
  • Tm increases with GC content

24
DNA energetics - I
Stabilising factors Base pairing (hydrogen
bonds)   Base stacking (hydrophobic)   Ion
binding (electrostatics)   Solvation
entropy      Destabilising factors Phosphate
repulsion (electrostatics)   Solvation
enthalpy (electrostatics/ LJ)   DNA strand
entropy
25
Base pairing and stacking
Pairing in vacuum Yanson, et. al. 18 (1979)
1149   Bases DH CG -21.0 AU -14.5   Pairing in
chloroform Kyoguku et al. BBA 179 (1969)
10   Bases DH CG -10.0 ? -11.5 AU -6.2 AA -4.0
  Stacking in water (stronger than pairing)
Tso 1974 Bases DH AA -6.5 UU -2.7 TT -2.4  
     
 
26
Separating a GC basepair in water
Stofer et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 121, 1999, 9503
27
DNA energetics - II
Breslauer empirical equation for ss ? ds
(Biochemistry 83, 3748, 1986)   DGp (Dgi
Dgsym) Sk Dgk Stack Dgk   GG -3.1 AA -1.9 G
G A A T T C C GA -1.6 C C T T A A G
G CG -3.6 GC -3.1 DGp (5.0 0.4) - 2 x 3.1
TG -1.9 - 2 x 1.9 - 2 x 1.6 -
1.5 AG -1.6 AT -1.5 GT -1.3 DGp -9.3
Kcal/mol TA -0.9 DGexp -9.4 Kcal/mol
28
DNA energetics -III
s1 CGCATGAGTACGC Vesnaver and Breslauer
PNAS 88, 3569, 1991 s2 GCGTACTCATGCG   ds ss(h)
ss(r)
Kcal/mol ds ? ss(r) s1(h?r) s2(h?r) Sum   DG 20.0
0.5 1.4 1.9 DH 117.0 29.1 27.2 56.3 TDS 97.0 28.6
25.8 54.4
29
  • ... and now for something completely different ...

30
DNA TRANSCRIPTION
31
Biological time scale
Bond vibrations 1 fs (10-15 s) Sugar
repuckering 1 ps (10-12 s) DNA bending 1
ns (10-9 s) Domain movement 1 ?s (10-6 s) Base
pair opening 1 ms (10-3 s) Transcription 20 ms /
nucleotide Replication 1 ms / nucleotide Protein
synthesis 6.5 ms / amino acid Protein folding
10 s
32
CENTRAL DOGMA
TRANSCRIPTION
TRANSLATION
33
DNA Transcription
NTPs
snRNP
  • Regulation by transcription factor binding
  • Initiation (at a promoter site)
  • Formation of a transcription bubble
  • Elongation (3'?5' on template strand, 50 s-1)
  • Termination (at termination signal)
  • Many RNA polymerases can function on 1 gene
  • (parallel processing)

Splice out introns
34
Transcription Factors (TAFs)
  • Activators specific DNA-binding proteins that
    activate transcription
  • Repressors specific DNA-binding proteins that
    repress transcription
  • Some regulatory proteins can work as both
    activators and repressors for different genes
  • TAF sites are more difficult to locate than genes
  • Nucleosome positioning influences gene
    transcription

35
  • s factor associates with -10 (TATA box) and -35
  • RNA polymerase binds
  • Bubble forms at -10?3

Prokaryote transcription - initiation
36
RNA polymerase
E.Coli. pol II, resolution 2.8Å
Cramer et al. Science 292, 2001, 1863
37
5'
3'
5'
  • form 10 bp RNA-DNA hybrid
  • 5'-end of RNA dissociates
  • s factor dissociates and recycles

Prokaryote transcription - elongation
38
  • inverted repeat preceding A-rich region
  • hairpin formation competes with RNA-DNA hybrid
  • RNA transcript dissociates
  • Can also involve RNA-binding protein Rho

Prokaryote transcription - termination
39
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40
EukaryoteTranscriptosome
41
DNA REPLICATION
42
DNA Replication
43

Semiconservative
  • E.coli 1000 bp.s-1
  • Replication is bidirectional
  • Prokaryotes have a single origin of replication
  • (AT-rich repeats)

DNA Replication
44
  • DNA polymerase I requires NTPs , Mg2 and primer
  • Works in the 5'?3' direction
  • Leads to "Okazaki" fragments (10-1000 bp)
  • Initially these fragments are 10nt RNA primers
  • Fragments are finally joined together by a ligase

DNA Replication
45
DNA polymerases features
  • Right hand palm, fingers, thumb
  • Palm ? phosphoryl transfer
  • Fingers ? template and incoming nucleoside
    triphosphate
  • Thumb ? DNA positioning, processivity and
    translocation
  • Some have 3' ? 5' exonuclease proofreading
    second domain

46
DNA Polymerase variations
Bacteriophage T7 T. gorgorianus
47
  • Processivity is very variable ( 10 ? 105)
  • Fidelity 10-6-10-7 (primer plays an important
    role)
  • DNA polymerases can proofread (increases fidelity
    by 103)
  • Incorrect nucleotide stalls polymerase and leads
    to 3'?5' exonuclease excision

DNA Replication
48
3-component "ring"-type DNA polymerase
49
b-subunit of E.Coli polymerase III
50
  • Replication also requires
  • DNA Helicase - hexameric, unwinds DNA, uses ATP
  • SSB - single-stranded DNA binding protein, stops
    ss re-annealing
  • or behind degraded
  • Gyrase (Topo II) - relaxes ve supercoiling
    ahead of replication fork
  • More complex in eukaryotes (telomeres,
    nucleosomes, ...)

DNA Replication
51
DNA REPAIR
52
Origins of damage
  • Polymerase errors
  • Endogenous damage - oxidation - depurination
  • Exogenous damage - radiation - chemical
    adducts
  • Error-prone DNA repair

53
Spontaneous damage
oxidation
hydrolysis
methylation
54
Mispairing induced by oxidative damage
Adenine deamination
55
UV radiation can create pyrimidine dimers
56
Damage by covalently bound carcinogens
57
Damage control
  • Endogenous errors polymerase base selection,
    proofreading, mismatch repair
  • Endogenous/exogenous damage base excision
    repair, nucleotide excision repair,
    (recombination, polymerase bypass)
  • Recombination and polymerase bypass do not remove
    damage but remove its block to replication.
    Polymerase bypass is itself often mutagenic
  • Apoptosis

58
Mismatch repair
  • Post-replication mismatch repair system
  • Similar in prokaryotes and eukaryotes
  • MMR improve spontaneous mutation rates by up to
    103
  • Defects can lead to cancer in humans
  • Also processes mispairs occurring during
    recombination

59
Mechanism of MMR
60
MutS bound to DNA
  • Recognizes all base
  • substitutions excepts CC
  • Recognizes short
  • frameshift loops
  • Recognizes "new" strand
  • by lack of methylation
  • DNA kinked by 60
  • Opens up minor groove

61
Base excision repair
  • Repair of modified bases, uracil
    misincorporation, oxidative damage
  • DNA glycosylases identify lesion, flip out base
    and create an abasic site
  • AP endonucleases incise phosphodiesterase
    backbone adjacent to AP site
  • AP nucleotide removed by exonuclease/dRPase and
    patch refilled by DNA synthesis and ligation

62
Nucleotide excision repair
  • Recognizes bulky lesions that block DNA
    replication (covalently bound carcinogens,
    pyrimidine photodimers
  • Incision on both sides of lesion
  • Patch excised, resynthesized and ligated
  • Can be coupled to transcription
  • Defects can lead to skin cancer

63
E. Coli system
Excision and repair
Incision
Recognition and binding
3 and 5 nicks by UvrBC
UvrA finds lesion
Helicase releases short fragment
64
Complex human system
65
Lesion bypass polymerization
  • Replication-blocking lesions are difficult to
    repair in ss DNA
  • Bypass polymerases can overcome this problem
  • Error-prone, dissociative (1 nt per binding)
  • No 3' ? 5' proofreading ability
  • Highly regulated as a function of DNA damage

66
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67
Model of Pol I action
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