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Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry

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Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry. Fourth Edition. Chapter 8: Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids ... Nucleotides in Biochemistry. Monomeric units of nucleic acids ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry


1
Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry Fourth
Edition
Chapter 8 Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids
2
(Some) Chapter 8 Objectives
  • To understand the structure of nucleic acids and
    their monomeric composites, nucleotides
  • To become familiar with the forces that
    contribute to the formation of DNA and RNA
  • To discuss the physical and chemical properties
    of nucleic acids and modern DNA synthesis

3
Nucleotides in Biochemistry
  • Monomeric units of nucleic acids
  • NTPs are the end products of most
    energy-producing pathways (High energy
    compounds)
  • Most metabolic pathways are regulated by levels
    of AMP, ADP, and ATP some hormonal signals are
    regulated by cAMP and/or cGMP
  • Adenine nucleotides are components of many
    coenzymes (e.g., FAD, NAD, NADP, CoASH, etc.)

4
Nucleotide Structure
  • Nitrogen-containing base pentose phosphate
    nucleotide
  • Nucleotide (phosphate) nucleoside

HO
HO
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6
Bases
Cytosine, Thymine (Uracil)
Adenine, Guanine
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NOTE There are several naturally occurring
minor bases, modified by addition of heteroatoms
(e.g., S), methylation, and different sites of
sugar attachment and phosphorylation.
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12
DNA and RNA are hydrolyzed slowly in solution,
but only RNA undergoes base-catalyzed rapid
hydrolysis. WHY?
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14
  • Tautermization occurs with changes in pH
  • Highly conjugated ring systems absorb strongly in
    the UV
  • Planar bases stack (?-stacking)

15
The 3-D Structure of DNASome basics
  • Chargoffs rules Base ratios in DNA Known since
    1940 that in DNA, GC and AT (AG CT)
  • Tautomeric forms that predominate were solved via
    NMR, X-ray diffraction
  • Rosalind Franklins X-ray diffraction photograph
    revealed helical structure

16
The DNA Story
  • 1869 Friedrich Miescher isolates nucleic acids
    from dried blood
  • 1928 F. Griffith finds heat-killed virulent
    bacteria transformed live non-virulent bacteria
  • 1944 Avery, MacLeod, and Maclyn report the
    transforming principle to be DNA

17
Griffiths experiment
Pneumococcus (Diplococcus pneumoniae) Wild Type
(S) Polysaccharide coat (smooth) contains O
antigens required for recognition of target
cell Mutant line (R) Lack polysaccharide coat
(rough) non-pathogenic
  • Avery, MacLeod, and Maclyn conclude that DNA
    transformed non-pathogenic bacteria to virulent
    form.
  • How?
  • Had physical and chemical properties of DNA,
  • Highly purified prep contained no protein (was
    not affected by proteases), and
  • DNAse completely inactivated process

18
The DNA Story
  • 1869 Friedrich Miescher isolates nucleic acids
    from dried blood
  • 1928 F. Griffith finds heat-killed virulent
    bacteria transformed live non-virulent bacteria
  • 1944 Avery, MacLeod, and Maclyn report the
    transforming principle to be DNA
  • 1952 A. Hershey and M. Chase provide additional
    evidence that DNA is the carrier of genetic
    material

19
The Hershey-Chase Experiment
20
The DNA Story
  • 1869 Friedrich Miescher isolates nucleic acids
    from dried blood
  • 1928 F. Griffith finds heat-killed virulent
    bacteria transformed live non-virulent bacteria
  • 1944 Avery, MacLeod, and Maclyn report the
    transforming principle to be DNA
  • 1952 A. Hershey and M. Chase provide additional
    evidence that DNA is the carrier of genetic
    material
  • 1950s X-ray diffraction patters, Chargoffs
    rules, structural properties lead Watson and
    Crick to solve the structure (1953)

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Watson-Crick BP
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Some common local DNA motifs
27
Ends of linear chromosomes (telomeres produced
through enzymatic reaction by telomerase) are
rich in G (poly-dG) and thus form tetraplex
structure. Telomeres naturally shorten as part
of the aging process. Thus, the loss of
telomerase function is a basis for aging. Ovarian
cancer cells display high telomerase
activity. Telomerase is inhibited by tetraplex
DNA, so agents that stabilize this structure are
potential candidates as anti-tumor agents.
28
mRNA
Prokaryotic mRNA
Single stranded, right-handed RNA single helix is
the product of transcription.
29
  • RNA structure can be complex
  • Base pairing can form duplex (usually A form)
  • tRNA and rRNA are complex forms combining the
    nucleic acid component with a protein sequence
  • Some enzymes employ sequences of RNA (ribozymes)

30
Physical and Chemical Properties of Nucleic Acids
  • Heat denatures (melts) double-stranded nucleic
    acids
  • Structure is maintained NOT by hydrogen bonds but
    by the hydrophobic effect, although details are
    poorly understood Base stacking

31
Heat (and changes in pH/ionic strength) disrupts
hydrogen bonds and van der Waals and stacking
interactions, causing denaturation. (Covalent
bonds remain intact.) If complete separation does
not occur, the duplex can re-anneal
(spontaneously) under proper conditions. If
strands completely separate, the process is
slower and step-wise.
32
The Hypo(er)chromic Effect
  • Because of high degree of conjugation, pi
    electrons cause high molar extinction
    coefficients
  • Polynucleotides absorb LESS than monomeric
    nucleotides, but at the same wavelength (? 260
    nm) (Hypochromic)
  • Also, single stranded DNA absorbs MORE than
    double stranded
  • This can be used to monitor the kinetics of DNA
    melting

33
QUESTIONS 1. What does the shape of the melting
curve say about the process? 2. a. Why does GC
to AT ratio affect Tm? b. Consider the
following empirical relationship Tm 41.1XGC
16.6 log Na 81.5
34
Some important nucleic acid reactions
  • Degree of hybridization between complimentary DNA
    strands from different organisms is used to
    determine evolutionary relations
  • Spontaneous deamination
  • Cytosine minus amino group uracil
  • What are the implications of this for DNA?
  • Depurination
  • Dimerization

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Some important nucleic acid reactions
  • Degree of hybridization between complimentary DNA
    strands from different organisms is used to
    determine evolutionary relations
  • Spontaneous deamination
  • Cytosine minus amino group uracil
  • What are the implications of this for DNA?
  • Depurination
  • Dimerization (UV light)
  • Methylation (methyl donor is S-Adenosylmethionine
    SAM)

37
DNA Sequencing The Sanger Method
HOMEWORK Problem 11 (p. 304)
38
DNA ElectrophoresisSouthern Blotting
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