Genetic Material-DNA - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Genetic Material-DNA

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DNA Repair ... The human genome has already revealed 130 genes whose products participate in DNA repair. ... Missed ones are subject to mismatch repair! ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Genetic Material-DNA


1
Genetic Material-DNA
  • 6 November 2003
  • ReadingThe Cell Chapter 5,
  • pages 192-201

2
DNA Repair
  • In the living cell, DNA undergoes frequent
    chemical change, especially when it is being
    replicated. Most of these changes are quickly
    repaired.
  • A failure to repair DNA produces a mutation
  • The human genome has already revealed 130 genes
    whose products participate in DNA repair.

3
Agents that Damage DNA
  • Certain wavelengths of radiation
  • ionizing radiation such as gamma rays and x-rays
  • ultraviolet rays, especially the UV-C rays (260
    nm) that are absorbed strongly by DNA but also
    the longer-wavelength UV-B that penetrates the
    ozone shield.
  • Highly-reactive oxygen radicals produced during
    normal cellular respiration as well as by other
    biochemical pathways.

4
Agents that Damage DNA
  • Chemicals in the Environment
  • many hydrocarbons, including some found in
    cigarette smoke
  • some plant and microbial products
  • Chemicals used in chemotherapy, especially
    chemotherapy of cancers

5
Types of DNA Damage
  • All four of the bases in DNA (A, T, C, G) can be
    covalently modified at various positions.

6
Types of DNA Damage
  • Spontaneous damage to DNA.
  • One of the most frequent is the loss of an amino
    group ("deamination") - resulting, for example,
    in a C being converted to a U.

7
Types of DNA Damage
  • Spontaneous damage to DNA.
  • Depurination cleavage of the bond between the
    purine bases and the sugar, leaving apurinic site
    (AP) in DNA

8
Types of DNA Damage
  • DNA damage induced by radiation and chemicals.
  • Formation of pyrimidine dimers.

9
Types of DNA Damage
  • Alkylation addition of methyl or ethyl groups to
    various positions on the DNA bases. Instead of C,
    T is put to complement G.

10
Types of DNA Damage
  • Reaction with carcinogens many carcinogens
    results in the addition of bulky groups to the
    DNA molecule

11
What can be done to repair the damage?
12
DNA Repair
  • Direct reversal of of the chemical reaction that
    causes DNA damage
  • Removal of the damaged base.

13
Types of DNA Damage
  • DNA damage induced by radiation and chemicals.
  • Formation of pyrimidine dimers.

14
Direct Reversal of Base Damage
  • Pyrimidine dimers
  • UV-induced damage causes skin cancers.
  • Cyclobutane ring results from the saturation of
    the double bonds between carbons 5 and t.
  • Formation of such dimers distort DNA structure
  • Photoreactivaton provides energy to break the
    cyclobutane ring. Humans lack this mechanism.

15
Types of DNA Damage
  • Alkylation addition of methyl or ethyl groups to
    various positions on the DNA bases. Instead of C,
    T is put to complement G.

16
Direct Reversal of Base Damage
  • Alkylated guanine residues results from exposure
    to alkylating agents.
  • They can transfer methyl or ethyl groups to DNA.
  • O6 -methylguanine transferase transfers a methyl
    group from DNA to a cysteine residue in its
    active site. Humans have this mechanism.

17
Excision Repair
  • General means to repair DNA.
  • Damaged DNA is recognized and removed as free
    bases or as nucleotides.
  • The resulting gap is filled.
  • Uracil is occationally incorporated in place of
    Tymine and should be removed.
  • Uracil can be formed by deamination of cytosine.

18
Base Excision Repair
  • Removal of the damaged base. Base excision
    repair. This is done by a DNA glycosylase.
  • Removal of its deoxyribose phosphate in the
    backbone, producing a gap.
  • Replacement with the correct nucleotide. This
    relies on DNA polymerase ?,
  • Ligation of the break in the strand with DNA
    ligase. This requires ATP to provide the needed
    energy.

19
Nucleotide excision repair
  • Widespread form of DNA repair.
  • Damaged bases are removed as part of an
    oligonucleotide containing the lesion.
  • UV induced pyrimidine dimers and bulky group
    addition can be repaired by this mechanism.

20
Nucleotide excision repair
  • The damage is recognized by one or more protein
    factors that assemble at the location.
  • Cuts are made on both the 3' side and the 5' side
    of the damaged area so the tract containing the
    damage can be removed.
  • DNA synthesis - using the intact (opposite)
    strand as a template - fills in the correct
    nucleotides.
  • A DNA ligase covalent binds the fresh piece into
    the backbone

21
In E.coli
  • Three genes, uvrA, uvrB, uvrC.
  • What happens if these genes are mutated?
  • The bacteria become highly sensitive to UV (gets
    damaged by it).
  • UvrA-recognizes the damaged DNA and recruits UvrB
    and UvrC to the damaged area.
  • UvrB and UvrC then cleave the 3 and 5 sides of
    the damaged site.
  • UvrABC comples is called exinuclease (excise an
    oligonucleotide).
  • Helicase is needed to remove the damaged area
    gap is filled with polymerase and ligase.

22
In eukaryotes
  • RAD genes (radiation sensitivity) mutants have
    increased sensitivity to UV exposure.
  • Inherited diseases that result from deficiencies
    in ability to repair DNA damage.
  • Xeroderma pigmentosum (XP)-sensitive to UV,
    develop skin cancers. They cant carry out
    nucleotide excision repair.
  • XPA to XPG (seven repair genes) highly homologous
    to yeast RAD genes.

23
Mismatch Repair
  • Mismatch repair deals with correcting mismatches
    of the normal bases that is, failures to
    maintain normal Watson-Crick base pairing (A.T,
    C.G)
  • Many of the mismatched bases are removed during
    replication by the proofreading activity of DNA
    polymerase. Missed ones are subject to mismatch
    repair!!!
  • Mutations in either of these genes predisposes
    the person to an inherited form of colon cancer.
    (Do not forget to read the box _at_ page 198.

24
How could the mismatched base be understood?
GGTACGATG CCATTCTAC
25
Mismatch repair in E. coli
  • Scans newly replicated DNA, if found enzymes of
    this system can identify and repair the
    mismatched base from newly replicated DNA.
  • In E.coli, methylation indicates parental strand
    Adenine residues in the sequence GATC forms
    6-methyladenine. Methylation occurs after
    replication.

26
Mismatch repair in E.coli
  • MutS protein initiates repair because it
    recognizes the mismatch and forms a complex with
    two other proteins MutL and MutH.
  • MutH is an endonuclease that can cleave the
    unmethylated DNA strand.
  • MutL and MutS then excise the DNA between the
    strand break and gap is filled with Pol and
    ligase.

27
Mismatch Repair in E.coli
28
Mismatch Repair in mammalian cells
29
Mismatch repair in mammalian cells
  • The old and new strands of DNA is distinguished
    by a different mechanism than methylation.
  • Presence of single strand breaks indicate newly
    replicating DNA or associations between MutS and
    MutL homologs also indicate which strand is new.

30
Colon Cancer
  • Cancers of the colon and rectum (colorectal
    cancers).
  • 140,000 cancer cases per year (10 of total
    cancer cases).
  • Mostly non inherited.
  • Inherited cases
  • Familial adenomatous polyposis (rare, 1)
  • Heretidary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (15).

31
Molecular Basis
  • Mutated genes involved in cell proliferation,
    leading to uncontrolled growth.
  • Mutations occur sporadically in somatic cells.
  • In hereditary cases, inherited germ-line
    mutations predispose the individual to cancer.

32
The gene
  • Human homology of E.coli MutS gene involved in
    mismatch repair of DNA is responsible for 50 of
    HNPCC.
  • Three other genes also involved in repair may be
    responsible.
  • Defects in these genes result in high frequency
    of mutations in other cells.

33
Symptoms
  • Development of the outgrowth of small benign
    polyps, which eventually become malignant.
  • Polyps can be removed surgically. Early
    diagnosis is important.

34
Postreplication Repair
  • Recombinational repair relies on replacement of
    damaged DNA by recombination with an undamaged
    molecule.
  • Happens during replication.

35
Recombinational Repair
  • Normal replication is blocked with a TT dimer.
  • Downstream of the damage replication goes on.
  • Undamaged parental strand (which has been
    replicated) is then used as a template, new
    strand is synthesized based on this.
  • TT dimer later is dealth with an excision repair
    mechanism.

36
Double strand breaks
  • X-rays induce double strand breaks on the
    chromosomes.
  • Ligate the ends of the chromosomes (risky,
    possible errors (loss of bases at the ends).
  • Homologous recombination provides new templates
    at the site of the double strand break.

37
Error-prone repair
  • Reversal and excision repair systems act to
    correct DNA damage before replication.
  • Replicative DNA synthesis requires an undamaged
    DNA strand as a template.
  • What about the damage at the replciation fork,
    when TT dimers for example block the replication.
  • Cells have specialized Polymerases to replicate
    across a damaged site but these polymerases lead
    to a lot mistakes.

38
Error-prone polymerases
  • In E. coli Polymerase V is induced in response to
    UV irradiation and can synthesize a new DNA
    strand across from a thymine dimer.
  • E. coli Pol II and Pol IV are induced by DNA
    damage.
  • Characteristically error-prone DNA polymerases
    exhibit low fidelity (100 to 10,000 times higher
    than replicative polymerases E.coli PolII and
    eurkaryotic epsilon).
  • Error prone polymerases lack 3? 5 proofreading
    activity.
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