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Nucleic Acids are the chemical carriers of a cell

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Solution Leu-Thr-Ser-Gly-Ser-Pro Worked Example 24.2 Predicting the Amino Acid Sequence Transcribed from DNA Methods for sequencing immense DNA chains First step in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Nucleic Acids are the chemical carriers of a cell


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2
Nucleic Acids
  • Nucleic Acids are the chemical carriers of a
    cells genetic information
  • Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
  • Holds the information that determines the nature
    of a cell
  • Controls cell growth and division
  • Directs biosynthesis of the enzymes and other
    proteins required for cellular functions
  • Ribonucleic acid (RNA)
  • Nucleic acid derivatives such as ATP are involved
    as phosphorylating agents in many biochemical
    pathways
  • Several important coenzymes, including NAD, FAD,
    and coenzyme A, have nucleic acid components

3
24.1 Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids
  • Nucleic acids are biopolymers
  • Composed of nucleotides which are joined together
    to form a long chain
  • Nucleotide
  • Composed of nucleosides bound to a phosphate
    group
  • Nucleoside
  • Composed of an aldopentose sugar linked through
    its anomeric carbon to the nitrogen atom of a
    heterocyclic purine or pyrimidine base

4
Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids
  • DNA
  • Sugar component is 2'-deoxyribose (the prefix
    2'-deoxy indicates that oxygen is missing from
    the 2' position of ribose)
  • Contains four different amino bases
  • Two substituted purines (adenine and guanine)
  • Two substituted pyrimidines (cytosine and
    thymine)
  • RNA
  • Sugar component is ribose
  • Contains adenine, guanine, and cytosine
  • Thymine is replaced by a closely related
    pyrimidine base called uracil

5
Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids
  • The pyrimidines and purines found in DNA and RNA

6
Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids
  • Structures of the four deoxyribonucleotides

7
Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids
  • Structures of the four ribonucleotides

8
Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids
  • In naming and numbering nucleotides, positions on
    the sugars are given a prime superscript to
    distinguish them from positions on the amine base
  • DNA and RNA differ dramatically in size
  • Molecules of DNA have molecular weights up to 75
    billion
  • Molecules of RNA are much smaller, containing as
    few as 21 nucleotides, and have a molecular
    weight as low as 7,000

9
Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids
  • Nucleotides are linked together in DNA and RNA by
    phosphodiester bonds between the phosphate group
    at C5' on one nucleotide and the 3'-hydroxyl
    group of the sugar of another nucleotide
  • C3' is one free hydroxyl group at the end of the
    nucleic polymer (the 3' end)
  • C5' is another free hydroxyl group at the other
    end of the nucleic polymer (the 5' end)
  • Sequence of nucleotides in a chain is described
    by starting at the 5' end and identifying the
    bases in order of occurrence (using G, C, A, T or
    U)

10
24.2 Base Pairing in DNA The Watson- Crick
Model
  • Samples of DNA isolated from different tissues of
    the same species have the same proportions of
    heterocyclic bases
  • Samples of DNA from different species often have
    greatly different proportions of bases
  • Composition of human DNA
  • 30 each of adenine and thymine
  • 20 each of guanine and cytosine
  • Composition of the bacterium Clostridium
    perfringens
  • 37 each of adenine and thymine
  • 13 each of guanine and cytosine

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Base Pairing in DNA The Watson-Crick Model
  • In 1953, James Watson and Francis Crick proposed
    the secondary structure of DNA
  • DNA under physiological conditions consists of
    two polynucleotide strands
  • Strands run in opposite directions and coil
    around each other in a double helix
  • The helix is 20 Å wide
  • The two strands are complementary and are held
    together by hydrogen bonds between specific pairs
    of bases
  • A with T
  • C with G

12
Base Pairing in DNA The Watson-Crick Model
  • There are 10 base pairs per turn
  • Each turn is 34 Å in length
  • The two strands of the double helix coil in such
    a way that two kinds of grooves result
  • A major groove 12 Å wide
  • A minor groove 6 Å wide
  • The grooves are lined with
    hydrogen
    bond donors and
    acceptors
  • A variety of flat, polycyclic
    aromatic
    molecules are able
    to slip
    sideways, or intercalate,
    between the stacked
    bases
  • An organisms genetic

    information is stored as a

    sequence of deoxyribonucleotides strung together
    in the DNA chain

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Base Pairing in DNA The Watson-Crick Model
  • Central dogma of molecular genetics
  • The function of DNA is to store information and
    pass it to RNA
  • The function of RNA is to read, decode, and use
    the information received from DNA to make
    proteins
  • Three fundamental processes take place
  • Replication process by which identical copies
    of DNA are made so the information can be
    preserved and handed down to offspring
  • Transcription the process by which the genetic
    messages are read and carried out of the cell
    nucleus to ribosomes, where protein synthesis
    occurs
  • Translation the process by which the genetic
    messages are decoded and used to synthesize
    proteins

14
Worked Example 24.1Predicting the
Complementary Base Sequence in Double-Stranded
DNA
  • What sequence of bases on one strand of DNA is
    complementary to the sequence TATGCAT on another
    strand?

15
Worked Example 24.1Predicting the
Complementary Base Sequence in Double-Stranded
DNA
  • Strategy
  • Remember that A and G form complementary pairs
    with T and C
  • Go through the sequence replacing A by T, G by C,
    T by A, and C by G
  • Remember that the 5' end is on the left and the
    3' end is on the right in the original strand

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Worked Example 24.1Predicting the
Complementary Base Sequence in Double-Stranded
DNA
  • Solution
  • Original (5') TATGCAT (3')
  • Compliment (3') ATACGTA (5') or
  • (5') ATGCATA (3')

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24.3 Replication of DNA
  • Replication
  • An enzyme-catalyzed process
  • Begins with a partial unwinding of the double
    helix
  • Bases become exposed
  • New nucleotides line up on each strand in a
    complementary manner (A with T and C with G)
  • Two new strands begin to grow
  • Each new strand is complementary to its old
    template strand
  • Two identical DNA helices are produced
  • The process is described as semiconservative
    replication because each of the new DNA molecules
    contains one old strand and one new strand

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Replication of DNA
  • A representation of semiconservative DNA
    replication

19
Replication of DNA
  • Addition of nucleotides to the growing chain
  • Takes place in the 5'?3' direction
  • Catalyzed by DNA polymerase
  • Key step is the addition of a nucleoside
    5'-triphosphate to the free 3'-hydroxyl group of
    the growing chain, with loss of a diphosphate
    leaving group

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Replication of DNA
  • Both new strands are synthesized in the 5'?3'
    direction
  • They cannot be made in exactly the same way
  • One strand must have its 3' end near the point of
    unraveling (the replication fork), while the
    other strand has its 5' end near the replication
    fork
  • The complement of the original 5'?3' strand is
    synthesized continuously in a single piece
  • The compliment of the original 3'?5' strand is
    synthesized discontinuously in small pieces that
    are often then linked by DNA ligases

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24.4 Transcription of DNA
  • RNA
  • Similar to DNA but contains ribose instead of
    deoxyribose and uracil instead of thymine
  • Three primary kinds
  • Messenger RNA (mRNA) carries genetic messages
    from DNA to ribosomes,
  • Small granular particles in the cytoplasm of a
    cell where protein synthesis takes place
  • Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) complexed with protein
    provides the physical makeup of the ribosomes
  • Transfer RNA (tRNA) transports amino acids to the
    ribosomes where they are joined together to make
    proteins

22
Transcription of DNA
  • Genetic information in DNA is contained in
    segments called genes
  • Each gene consists of a specific nucleotide
    sequence that encodes a specific protein
  • Conversion of DNA information into proteins
    begins with transcription of DNA to mRNA

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Transcription of DNA
  • Promoter site
  • A specific base sequence found within a DNA chain
    typically consisting of around 40 base pairs
    located upstream (5') of the transcription start
    site
  • Consists of two hexameric consensus sequences,
    one located 10 base pairs upstream and the second
    located 35 base pairs upstream from the beginning
    of the coding region
  • Signals the beginning of a gene
  • Other base sequences signal a stop near the end
    of the gene

24
Transcription of DNA
  • Transcription
  • The process by which genetic information encoded
    in DNA is read and used to synthesize RNA in the
    nucleus of the cell
  • Several turns of the DNA double helix unwind,
    forming a bubble and exposing the bases of the
    two strands
  • Ribonucleotides line up in the proper order by
    hydrogen bonding to their complementary bases on
    DNA
  • Bond formation occurs in the 5' 3' direction
  • The growing RNA molecule unwinds from DNA

25
Transcription of DNA
  • Only one of the two DNA strands is transcribed
    into mRNA
  • The strand that contains the gene is called the
    coding strand, or sense strand
  • The strand that gets transcribed is called the
    template strand, or antisense strand
  • The RNA molecule produced during transcription is
    the complement of the DNA antisense strand and is
    therefore a copy of the DNA coding strand (except
    T has been replaced with U)

26
Transcription of DNA
  • Genes are not continuous segments of the DNA
    chain
  • A gene begins in an exon, a small section of DNA
  • Genes are interrupted by noncoding sections
    called introns
  • Genes take up again further down the chain in
    another exon
  • The final mRNA molecule results after the
    noncoded sections are cut out and the remaining
    pieces are spliced together
  • 90 of human DNA seems to be made up of introns
  • 10 of DNA contains coding instructions

27
24.5 Translation of RNA Protein Biosynthesis
  • Primary cellular function of mRNA
  • Direct biosynthesis of the thousands of diverse
    peptides and proteins required by an organism
  • The mechanics of protein biosynthesis take place
    on ribosomes, small granular particles in the
    cytoplasm of a cell that consist of about 60
    ribosomal RNA and 40 protein
  • The specific ribonucleotide sequence in mRNA
    forms a codon that determines the order in which
    amino acid residues are joined
  • Each codon consists of a sequence of three
    ribonucleotides that is specific for a given
    amino acid
  • The series UUC on mRNA is a codon directing
    incorporation of the amino acid phenylalanine
    into the growing protein
  • 64 possible triplets of the four bases in RNA
  • 61 code for specific amino acids
  • 3 code for chain termination

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Translation of RNA Protein Biosynthesis
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Translation of RNA Protein Biosynthesis
  • Translation
  • The process by which the genetic information
    transcribed from DNA onto mRNA is read by tRNA
    and used to direct protein synthesis
  • There are 61 different tRNAs, one for each of the
    61 codons that specifies an amino acid
  • A typical tRNA is single-stranded and
    cloverleaf-shaped
  • On the middle leaf it contains an anticodon, a
    sequence of three ribonucleotides complementary
    to the codon sequence
  • Contains about 70 to 100 ribonucleotides
  • Bonded to a specific amino acid by an ester
    linkage through the 3' hydroxyl on ribose at the
    3' end of the tRNA

30
Translation of RNA Protein Biosynthesis
  • The codon sequence UUC present on mRNA is read by
    a phenylalanine-bearing tRNA having the
    complementary anticodon base sequence GAA
  • Nucleotide sequences are written in the 5'?3'
    direction so the sequence in an anticodon must be
    reversed

31
Translation of RNA Protein Biosynthesis
  1. Successive codons on mRNA are read
  2. Different tRNAs bring the correct amino acids
    into position for enzyme-mediated transfer to the
    growing peptide
  3. When synthesis of the proper protein is
    completed, a stop codon signals the end
  4. The protein is released from the ribosome

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Worked Example 24.2Predicting the Amino Acid
Sequence Transcribed from DNA
  • What amino acid sequence is coded by the
    following segment of a DNA coding strand?
  • (5') CTA-ACT-AGC-GGG-TCG-CCG (3')

33
Worked Example 24.2Predicting the Amino Acid
Sequence Transcribed from DNA
  • Strategy
  • The mRNA produced during translation is a copy of
    the DNA coding strand
  • Each T replaced by U
  • The mRNA has the sequence
  • (5') CUA-ACU-AGC-GGG-UCG-CCG (3')

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Worked Example 24.2Predicting the Amino Acid
Sequence Transcribed from DNA
  • Solution
  • Leu-Thr-Ser-Gly-Ser-Pro

35
24.6 DNA Sequencing
  • Methods for sequencing immense DNA chains
  • First step in sequencing
  • Cleave the DNA chain at known points to produce
    smaller pieces, done through the use of
    restriction endonucleases
  • More than 3500 restriction enzymes are known
  • About 200 restriction enzymes are commercially
    available
  • Each different restriction enzyme cleaves a DNA
    molecule at a point in the chain where a specific
    base sequence occurs
  • The restriction enzyme AluI cleaves between G and
    C in the four-base sequence AG-CT
  • (5'-AGCT-(3') sequence is that same as its
    complement (3')-TCGA-(5') when both are read in
    the same 5'?3' direction

36
DNA Sequencing
  • Two methods of DNA sequencing are available
  • The Maxam-Gilbert method
  • Uses chemical techniques
  • Sanger dideoxy method
  • Uses enzymatic reactions
  • The more commonly used of the two
  • Method responsible for sequencing the entire
    human genome of 2.9 billion base pairs
  • In commercial sequencing instruments, the dideoxy
    method begins with a mixture of the following
  • The restriction fragment to be sequenced

37
DNA Sequencing
  • A small piece of DNA called a primer, whose
    sequence is complementary to that on the 3' end
    of the restriction fragment
  • The four 2'-deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates
    (dNTPs)
  • Very small amounts of the four 2'
    ,3'-dideoxyribonucleoside triphosphates (ddNTPs),
    each of which is labeled with a fluorescent dye
    of a different color
  • (A 2' ,3' -dideoxyribonucleoside triphosphate in
    one in which both 2' and 3' OH groups are
    missing from ribose)

38
DNA Sequencing
  • DNA polymerase is added to the mixture
  • A strand of DNA complementary to the restriction
    fragment begins to grow from the end of the
    primer
  • Most of the time only normal deoxyribonucleotides
    are incorporated into the growing chain
  • Sometimes a dideoxyribonucleotide is incorporated
  • When this occurs, DNA synthesis stops because the
    chain end no longer has a 3' hydroxyl group for
    adding further nucleotides
  • The product
  • Consists of a mixture of DNA fragments of all
    possible lengths, each terminated by one of the
    four dye-labeled dideoxyribonucleotides
  • Mixture is then separated according to the size
    of the pieces by gel electrophoresis

39
DNA Sequencing
  • The identity of the terminal dideoxyribonucleotide
    in each piece and thus the sequence of the
    restriction fragment is identified by noting
    the color with which it fluoresces

40
24.7 DNA Synthesis
  • Synthesis of short DNA segments, called
    oligonucleotides or oligos
  • A nucleotide has multiple reactive sites that
    must be selectively protected and deprotected at
    the proper times
  • Coupling of the four nucleotides must be carried
    out in the proper sequence
  • Automated DNA synthesizers allow the fast and
    reliable synthesis of DNA segments up to 200
    nucleotides in length
  • A protected nucleotide is covalently bonded to a
    solid support
  • One nucleotide at a time is added to the growing
    chain by the use of a coupling reagent
  • After the final nucleotide has been added, all
    the protecting groups are removed and the
    synthetic DNA is cleaved from the solid support

41
DNA Synthesis
  • Step 1 Attachment of a protected deoxynucleoside
    to a silica (SiO2) support
  • Done through an ester linkage to the 3' OH
    group of the deoxynucleoside
  • Both the 5' OH group on the sugar and free NH2
    groups on the heterocyclic bases must be
    protected
  • The deoxyribose 5' OH is protected as its
    p-dimethoxytrityl (DMT) ether

42
DNA Synthesis
  • Adenine and cytosine bases are protected by
    benzoyl groups
  • Guanine is protected by an isobutryl group
  • Thymine requires no protection

43
DNA Synthesis
  • Step 2 Removal of the DMT protecting group by
    treatment with dichloroacetic acid in CH2Cl2
  • Reaction occurs by an SN1 mechanism
  • Reaction proceeds rapidly due to the stability of
    the tertiary, benzylic dimethoxytrityl cation

44
DNA Synthesis
  • Step 3 Coupling of the polymer-bonded
    deoxynucleoside with a protected deoxynucleoside
    containing a phosphoramidite group, R2NP(OR)2, at
    the 3' position
  • Takes place in the polar aprotic solvent
    acetonitrile
  • Requires catalysis by the heterocyclic amine
    tetrazole
  • Yields a phosphite, P(OR)3

45
DNA Synthesis
  • Step 4 Oxidation
  • Phosphite product is oxidized to a phosphate by
    treatment with iodine in aqueous tetrahydrofuran
    in the presence of 2,6-dimethylpyridine
  • The cycle is repeated until oligonucleotide chain
    of the desired sequence is built
  • Deprotection
  • Coupling
  • Oxidation

46
DNA Synthesis
  • Step 5 Final step
  • Removal of all protecting groups
  • Cleavage of the ester bond holding the DNA to the
    silica
  • All reactions are done at the same time by
    treatment with aqueous NH3
  • Purification by electrophoresis yields the
    synthetic DNA

47
24.8 The Polymerase Chain Reaction
  • Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
  • A method for amplifying small amounts of DNA to
    produce larger amounts
  • Invented by Kary Mullis in 1986
  • PCR produces multiple copies of a given DNA
    sequence
  • Makes it possible to obtain several micrograms (1
    ug 10-6 g about 1011 nucleotides) in a few
    hours when starting from less than 1 picogram of
    DNA with a chain length of 10,000 nucleotides
    (1 pg 10-12 g about 100,000 molecules)

48
The Polymerase Chain Reaction
  • Taq polymerase
  • The key to the polymerase chain reaction
  • A heat-stable enzyme isolated from the
    thermophilic bacterium Thermus aquaticus found in
    a hot spring in Yellowstone National Park
  • Able to take a single strand of DNA that has a
    short, primer segment of complementary chain at
    one end and then finish constructing the entire
    complementary strand
  • Overall process takes three steps

49
The Polymerase Chain Reaction
  • The polymerase chain reaction

50
The Polymerase Chain Reaction
  • Step 1 Denaturation of the double-stranded DNA
  • The double-stranded DNA is heated in the presence
    of
  • Taq polymerase
  • Mg2 ion
  • The four deoxynucleotide triphosphate monomers
    (dNTPs)
  • A large excess of two short oligonucleotide
    primers of about 20 bases each
  • Each primer is complementary to the sequence at
    the end of one of the target DNA segments
  • Double-stranded DNA denatures at a temperature of
    95 ºC, spontaneously breaking apart into two
    single strands

51
The Polymerase Chain Reaction
  • Step 2
  • The temperature is lowered
  • Between 37 and 50 ºC
  • Allows primers to anneal by hydrogen bonding to
    their complementary sequence at the end of each
    target strand
  • Step 3
  • Temperature is raised to 72 ºC
  • Taq polymerase catalyzes the addition of further
    nucleotides to the two primed DNA strands
  • When replication is finished, two copies of the
    original DNA exist
  • Automated PCR
  • 30 or so cycles can be carried out in an hour
    resulting in a theoretical amplification factor
    of 230 (109)
  • The efficiency of each cycle is less than 100
  • Experimental amplification is about 106 to 108

52
24.9 Catabolism of Nucleotides
  • Dietary nucleic acids
  • First pass through the stomach to the intestines
  • Hydrolyzed to their constituent nucleotides by a
    variety of different nucleases
  • Dephosphorylation by various nucleotidases gives
    nucleosides
  • A third cleavage by nucleosidases gives the
    constituent bases
  • Bases are catabolized to produce intermediates
    that enter other metabolic processes

53
Catabolism of Nucleotides
  • Purine Catabolism Guanosine
  • Guanosine and deoxyguanosine are both catalyzed
    by a three-step pathway
  • Begins with cleavage to give guanine
  • Guanine is hydrolyzed to yield xanthine
  • Oxidation of xanthine gives uric acid, which is
    excreted in the urine

54
Catabolism of Nucleotides
  • Figure 24.10
  • Pathway for the catabolism of guanosine and
    deoxyguanosine to uric acid

55
Catabolism of Nucleotides
  • STEP 1 OF FIGURE 24.10 PHOSPHOROLYSIS
  • Phosphorolysis of guanosine (or deoxyguanosine)
  • Catalyzed by purine nucleoside phosphorylase
  • Gives b-ribose 1-phosphate (or b-deoxyribose
    1-phosphate) plus guanine
  • Reaction probably occurs by an SN1-like
    replacement of guanine by phosphate ion through
    an oxonium-ion intermediate

56
Catabolism of Nucleotides
  • STEP 2 OF FIGURE 24.10 HYDROLYSIS
  • Hydrolysis of guanine
  • Gives xanthine
  • Catalyzed by guanine deaminase
  • Occurs by nucleophilic addition of water to the
    CN bond followed by expulsion of ammonium ion

57
Catabolism of Nucleotides
  • STEP 3 OF FIGURE 24.10 OXIDATION
  • Xanthine
  • Oxidized by xanthine oxidase
  • A complex enzyme that contains FAD and an
    oxo-molybdenum(VI) cofactor
  • A base deprotonates the Mo-OH group
  • The resulting anion does a nucleophilic addition
    to the CN bond in xanthine
  • The nitrogen anion expels hydride ion
  • Hydride ion adds to an MoS bond, thereby
    reducing the molybdenum center from Mo(VI) to
    Mo(IV)
  • Hydrolysis of the Mo-O bond gives an enol
  • Enol tautomerizes to uric acid
  • The reduced molybdenum is reoxidized by O2 in a
    complex redox pathway

58
Catabolism of Nucleotides
  • The mechanism of step 3 in Figure 24.10,
    oxidation of xanthine to yield uric acid

59
Catabolism of Nucleotides
  • Adenosine (purine nucleotide)
  • Steps are similar to those for guanosine but
    order of steps differs
  • Base in adenosine is first degraded and then
    removed

60
24.10 Biosynthesis of Nucleotides
  • Purine Biosynthesis Adenosine Monophosphate and
    Guanosine Monophosphate
  • Purine nucleotides are formed by the initial
    attachment of an NH2 group to the ribose,
    followed by multistep buildup of the heterocyclic
    base
  • -NH2 attaches by a nucleophilic substitution
    reaction of ammonia
  • Inosine monophosphate (IMP) is the first fully
    formed purine ribonucleotide
  • Adenosine monophosphate (AMP) derived from IMP

61
Biosynthesis of Nucleotides
  • Adenosine monophosphate
  • Biosynthesized from IMP
  • AMP is biosynthesized in a three-step sequence
  • Initial phosphorylation with GTP to form an imino
    phosphate
  • Nucleophilic acyl substitution reaction
  • Reaction with aspartate to give adenylosuccinate
  • Elimination of fumarate
  • E1cB reaction

62
Biosynthesis of Nucleotides
  • Pathway for the conversion of inosine
    monophosphate to adenosine monophosphate
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