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Why Structural Biology

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Oswald Avery - DNA is unit of inheritance. Erwin Chargaff - Base Pairing ... The composition of DNA based on the findings of Erwin Chargaff ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Why Structural Biology


1
Why Structural Biology?
2
Today
  • Nucleic Acids History of Discovery and
    Structural Parameters

3
The Key Figures
  • Oswald Avery - DNA is unit of inheritance
  • Erwin Chargaff - Base Pairing
  • Francis Crick - DNA structure
  • James Watson - DNA structure

4
The Key Figures
  • Rosalind Franklin -
  • Fiber Diffraction Data
  • Maurice Wilkins -
  • Fiber Diffraction Data
  • Alexander Rich -
  • Crystallographic Analysis
  • Jacques van Boom -
  • Solid State Synthesis

5
DNA as the Heritable Material
6
The composition of DNA based on the findings of
Erwin Chargaff
  • The base composition of DNA varies from one
    species to another.
  • DNA from different tissues of the same species
    has the same base composition. This does not
    change with age or other environmental factors.
  • AT CG, AGTG
  • The base composition is similar from closely
    related species and very different from divergent
    species.

7
Braggs law
p/2
p/2
Plane A
d
q
Plane B
Every red line is one wavelength (l) longer than
the black line Every photon that is diffracted
by angle q off a plane B that is at distance
d from plane A is in phase with every photon
diffracted by angle q off plane A if l/d
2sinq
8
Fiber Diffraction
9
Resulting Layer Lines
The points in 3D space where beams from a 3D
object constructively interfere.
10
Diffraction from a Fiber
Continuous and discontinues helices.
reciprocal
real
The unit cell of a fiber.
The resulting diffraction pattern.
11
The Real Thing!
12
Watson and Cricks Model
Nature, 1953, v. 171 p.737
Note This is purely a schematic model they have
proposed. It is based on the fiber diffraction
data AND the biochemical data of Chargaff.
13
The Structure of FranklinA DNA
1953
14
The First Atomic Resolution Look at a Double
Helix by Alexander Rich
  • 1973 crystals of GpC and ApU (RNA)
  • GpC had three H-bonds between bases, not two as
    predicted by Watson and Crick.
  • Also in 1973, low resolution (4 Å) structure of
    tRNA
  • 1974, 3 Å structure showed some of the details.

15
The First Atomic Resolution Structure of the DNA
double helix Z DNA!
Jacques van Boom chemistry Alexander Rich
Crystallography
1979
16
Finally B DNA at atomic resolution!
1980, 27 years after Watson-Crick model!
17
The Components of DNA
18
The Sugar
19
DNA Sugar Pucker
Crystal Structure of Z DNA 1DCG
20
Subtle Changes Big Differences
  • B-form DNA is C2 endo
  • A-form DNA is C3 endo the P-P difference is
    therefore reduced to 5.5-7Å.
  • RNA is generally C3 endo but can assume C2 endo
    at special points. This transition is
    energetically unfavored and therefore must be
    balanced by something else.

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23
Some common chemical modifications found in DNA.
24
The bases are linked via a phosphodiester
bridge. Because the phosphate bridge links the 5
carbon on one side to the 3carbon on the other,
the chain has a chemical directionality.
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The shape of both base pairs is the same.
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29
Bond representation.
Space-filling representation.
30
Dihedral angles in nucleic acids.
31
The conformation of the bases in nucleic acids.
32
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33
Overview of the 3 forms of DNA.
Syn for purines
34
Its possible to have greater levels of
complexity than simply duplex DNA. Here you see
Hoogsteen base pairing in triplex DNA. In DNA
where there is a higher than normal amount of
purines, triplex and even quadruplex pairing can
take place. These structures are critical for the
proper replication of chromosomal DNA and repair
of damaged DNA.
35
Bond representation of triplex DNA. This view is
down the long axis. The third strand is colored.
36
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39
tRNA CPK
40
tRNA bonds
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Take-Home Lessons
  • Nucleic acids are built from 5 basic building
    blocks, each of which consists of a 5 carbon
    ribose sugar to which a purine or pyrimide base
    is attached to the 1 carbon and a phosphate to
    the 5 carbon.
  • The sugar pucker in RNA is normally 3 endo with
    a rather large energy barrier limiting transition
    to 2 endo. In DNA the deoxyribose is generally
    2 endo with only a small energy penalty
    encountered with transition to 3 endo. The sugar
    pucker plays an important role in the
    conformation of the backbone.
  • DNA is normally found in the B-form but depending
    on solution conditions and base sequence, can
    convert into the Z-form which has important
    regulatory functions within the cell. You should
    be familiar with the structural parameters of
    both types of helices.
  • The Watson-Crick structure of DNA was actually a
    model based on chemical and biological data as
    well as fiber diffraction studies of DNA.
  • DNA within the cell can form triplex and
    quadraplex structures. These structures have
    specific roles in recombination or in telomere
    maintenance.
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