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Chapter 9 The Mutability and Repair of DNA

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Transitions:a kind of the simplest mutations which are pyrimidine-to-pyrimidine ... by transposon or by aberrant action of cellular recombination processes. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 9 The Mutability and Repair of DNA


1
Chapter 9 The Mutability and Repair of DNA
Outline
  • 1.replication errors and their repair
  • 2. DNA damage
  • 3.Repair of DNA damage

2
Section 1replication errors and their repair
  • Important definations
  • Transitionsa kind of the simplest mutations
    which are pyrimidine-to-pyrimidine and
    purine-to-purine substitutions
  • Tranversionsthe other kind of mutation which are
    pyrimidine-to-purine and purine-to-pyrimidine
    substitutions

3
  • Point mutationsmutations that alter a single
    nucleotide
  • DNA microsatellites Mutation-prone sequence in
    human genome are repeats of simple di-, tri- or
    tetranucleotide sequences, known as DNA
    microsatellites

4
The Nature of Mutations
Base change substitutions
transitions
transversions
5
  • Other kinds of mutations(which cause more
    drastic changes in DNA)
  • Insertions
  • Deletions
  • Gross rearrangements of chromosome

These mutations might be caused by insertion by
transposon or by aberrant action of cellular
recombination processes.
6
Some Replication Errors Escape Proofreading
  • The 3-5 exonuclease component of replisome
    only improves the fidelity of DNA replication by
    a factor of about 100.
  • But, thats not enough
  • The misincorporated nucleotide needs to be
    detected and replaced, otherwise it will cause
    mutation.

7
A mutation may be introduced by misincorporation
of a base in the first round of replication.In
the second round of replication,the mutation
becomes permanently incorporated in the DNA
sequence.
8
Mismatch Repair Removes Errors That Escape
Proofreading
  • Mismatch repair systema system that increases
    the accuracy of DNA synthesis by an additional
    two to three orders of magnitude.
  • This system faces 2 challenges(1)rapidly find
    the mismatches/mispairs
  • (2) Accurately correct the
    mismatch

9
Important parts of mismatch repair system
  • MutSa dimer of the mismatch repair protein which
    detects mismatches

Fuctions of MutS 1. MutS scans the DNA,
recognizes the mismatch from the distortion they
cause in the DNA backbone
10
Functions of MutS
  • 2.MutS embraces the mismatch-containing DNA,
    inducing a pronounced kink in the DNA and a
    conformational change in MutS itself

11
Crystal structure of MutS
12
Further steps of miamatch repair,we must pay
attention to the other two important parts of the
mismatch repair system---MutL and MutH
13
How these three parts interact
  • MutS-mismatch-containing DNA complex recruits
    MutL, MutL in turn activates MutH, an enzyme
    causing an incision or nick on one strand near
    the site of the mismatch. Nicking is followed by
    the specific helicase and one of three
    exonucleases.

14
Then we talk about
  • how does the E.coli mismatch repair system
    know which of the two mismatched nucleotides to
    replace?

(Dam)methylation
15
  • Dam methylasethe E.coli enzyme that methylases A
    residues on both strands of the sequence
    5-GATC-3.
  • The newly synthesized strand is not methylated
    by Dam methylase in a few minutes after the
    synthesis.

16
a.Replication generates hemimethylated DNA in
E.coli. b.MutH makes incision in unmethylated
daughter strand.
Dam methylation at replication fork
17
Different exonucleases are used to remove
single-strand DNA between the nick created by
MutH and the mismatch.
18
Eukaryotic cells
  • In fact,eukaryotes have multiple MutS-like
    proteins with different specificities.
  • MSH proteins MutS homologs

19
Section 2DNA Damage
  • There are mainly three kinds of ways that DNA is
    damaged
  • DNA undergoes damage spontaneously from
    hydrolysis and deamination
  • DNA is damaged by Alkylation,Oxidation and
    Radiation
  • Mutations are also caused by base analogs and
    intercalating agents

20
1st kind, Hydrolysis Deamination
a.Deamination that Cytosine to Uracil which
explain why DNA contains T instead of U
21
  • Answer
  • If DNA naturally contained uracil instead of
    thymine,the deamination of cytosine will create a
    natrual base which the repair system will not
    easily recognize.

22
2nd kind,Alkylation Oxidation and Radiation
DNA is subject to attack from Reactive oxygen
species (O2-, H2O2, OH)
23
UV(???) induces a cyclobutane between adjacent
thymines
24
3rd kind,base analogs intercalating agents
  • Base analogs similar enough to the normal bases
    to be processed by cells and incorporated into
    DNA during replication.
  • But they base pair differently, leading to
    mistake during replication.
  • The most mutagenic base anolog is
    5-bromouracil,an anolog of thymine.

25
5-bromouracil,base anolog of thymine,can mispair
with guanine
26
Intercalating agents
  • Intercalating agents are flat molecules
    containing several polycyclic rings that interact
    with the normal bases in DNA through hydrogen
    bonds and base stacking.

???
???
???
27
Section 3Repair of DNA Damage
  • There are two consequences of DNA damage
  • Some kinds of damage create impediments to
    replication or transcription
  • Other kinds of damage create altered bases that
    cause mispairing which results a permanent
    alternation to DNA

28
Systems that repair damage to DNA
  • A repair enzyme simply reverses the damage
  • Excision repair systems,in which damaged
    nucleotide is not repaired but removed from
    DNA(more elaborate step),composed of base
    excision repair and nucleotide excision repair

29
Systems that repair damage to DNA
  • Recombinational repair,which is employed when
    both strands of DNA are damaged,also known as
    double-strand break repair.(more elaborate)
  • Translesion DNA synthesis,the last way cells
    choose

30
Direct reversal of DNA damage
For example,photoreactivation,which directly
reverses pyrimidine dimers
31
Direct reversal od DNA damage
Another example,methyltransferase(?????) directly
removes the methyl group from the O6-guanine
residue
32
Base excision repair systems
  • Base excision repair enzymesglycosylase(????)
    recognize and remove damaged bases by a
    base-flipping mechanism,hydrolyzing the
    glycosidic bond.
  • DNA glycosylases are lesion-specific.

33
1.The AP site is created by the hydrolysis of
glycosylase bond. 2.AP endonucleaseexonuclease
cut out the 5 phosphate. 3.DNA polymerase fill
in the gap.
34
The enzyme
The damaged base which is filpped out
The DNA
35
Nucleotide excision repair systems
  • What is the difference between the two kinds of
    excision repair systems?
  • Also,how does the nucleotidework?
  • Recognize distortions to the shape of the DNA
    double helix
  • Remove a short single-stranded segment that
    includes the lesion.
  • DNA polymerase/ligase fill in the gap.

36
Once encountering a distortion UvrA exits the
complex and UvrB melts the DNA to create a
single-strand bubble around the lesion.
Next,UvrB recruits UvrC,and UvrC creates two
incisions in different positions on one strand.
Finally,DNA polymerase and ligase fill in the
gap.
37
Recombinational repair
  • This is the very essencial way that cells repair
    double-strand breaks in DNA in which both strands
    of the duplex are broken.
  • We call it double-strand break(DSB)repair
    pathway,which retrieve sequence information from
    sister chromosome.

38
Translesion DNA synthesis
  • When cells cannot repair certain
    lesions,there is a fail-safe mechanism that
    allows the replication machinery to bypass these
    sites of damage----translesion synthesis
  • Translesion synthesis is catalyzed by a
    specialized class of DNA polymerases that
    synthesize DNA directly across the damage site.
  • Translesion polymerase is produced by cell in
    response to the DNA damage
  • Translesion polymerases are expressed as part of
    the SOS response pathway.

39
Crystal structure of a translesion polymerase.
40
Translesion DNA synthesis in E. coli
41
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